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Peroxynitrite Induces Destruction of the Tetrahydrobiopterin and Heme in Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase: Transition from Reversible to Irreversible Enzyme Inhibition
108
Citations
54
References
2010
Year
Peroxynitrite Induces DestructionRedox BiologyOxidative StressInflammationReactive Nitrogen SpecieEnzyme ActivityDimer StabilizationRedox SignalingMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryVascular BiologyEnos DimerReactive Oxygen SpeciePharmacologyHeme DegradationPhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionIrreversible Enzyme InhibitionMedicineNitrosative Stress
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is an important regulator of vascular and cardiac function. Peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) inactivates eNOS, but questions remain regarding the mechanisms of this process. It has been reported that inactivation is due to oxidation of the eNOS zinc-thiolate cluster, rather than the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)); however, this remains highly controversial. Therefore, we investigated the mechanisms of ONOO(-)-induced eNOS dysfunction and their dose dependence. Exposure of human eNOS to ONOO(-) resulted in a dose-dependent loss of activity with a marked destabilization of the eNOS dimer. HPLC analysis indicated that both free and eNOS-bound BH(4) were oxidized during exposure to ONOO(-); however, full oxidation of protein-bound biopterin required higher ONOO(-) levels. Additionally, ONOO(-) triggered changes in the UV/visible spectrum and heme content of the enzyme. Preincubation of eNOS with BH(4) decreased dimer destabilization and heme alteration. Addition of BH(4) to the ONOO(-)-destabilized eNOS dimer only partially rescued enzyme function. In contrast to ONOO(-) treatment, incubation with the zinc chelator TPEN with removal of enzyme-bound zinc did not change the eNOS activity or stability of the SDS-resistant eNOS dimer, demonstrating that the dimer stabilization induced by BH(4) does not require zinc occupancy of the zinc-thiolate cluster. While ONOO(-) treatment was observed to induce loss of Zn binding, this cannot account for the loss of enzyme activity. Therefore, ONOO(-)-induced eNOS inactivation is primarily due to oxidation of BH(4) and irreversible destruction of the heme/heme center.
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