Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D02011 (FAD)
5,530 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) consists of a reductase domain that binds FAD, FMN, NADPH, and calmodulin, and an oxygenase domain that binds heme, tetrahydrobiopterin, and the substrate L-arginine. One flavin in resting nNOS exits as an air-stable semiquinone radical. During NO synthesis, electron transfer occurs between the flavins and heme iron. We have characterized the nNOS heme iron and flavin semiquinone radical by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Under anaerobic conditions, the flavin radical spin relaxation was very slow (8 HZ at 22 K) and was enhanced 13-fold by dissolved dioxygen via spin-spin coupling. The flavin radical, probably the semiquinone FMNH., was shown by progressive microwave power saturation and EPR saturation recovery under anaerobic conditions to be spin-spin coupled with the heme iron located in the nNOS oxygenase domain. Analysis of an nNOS preparation that was devoid of heme but contained the flavin radical revealed that spin-spin coupling increased the rate of flavin radical relaxation by a factor of 15. The presence of bound substrate (L-arginine) or the substate analogue Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (NAME) had no effect on the flavin spin relaxation kinetics. The observed g values of the nNOS heme were 7.68, and 1.81 and were unchanged by occupation of the substrate binding site by L-arginine or NAME. The substrate also had no effect on the heme zero-field splitting parameter, D=5.2cm-1. Together, the data indicate that the flavin and heme redox centers are positioned near each other in nNOS, consistent with their participating in an interdomain electron transfer. The flavin radical is affected by dissolved oxygen, suggesting that its binding site within the reductase domain partially exposed to solvent, but is unaffected when substrate binds to the oxygenase domain. Substrate binding also appears to take place outside the first coordination shell of the nNOS heme iron.
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PMID:EPR spectroscopic characterization of neuronal NO synthase. 861 87

Neuronal nitric-oxide (NO) synthase contains FAD, FMN, heme, and tetrahydrobiopterin as prosthetic groups and represents a multifunctional oxidoreductase catalyzing oxidation of L-arginine to L-citrulline and NO, reduction of molecular oxygen to superoxide, and electron transfer to cytochromes. To investigate how binding of the prosthetic heme moiety is related to enzyme activities, cofactor, and L-arginine binding, as well as to secondary and quaternary protein structure, we have purified and characterized heme-deficient neuronal NO synthase. The heme-deficient enzyme, which had preserved its cytochrome c reductase activity, contained FAD and FMN, but virtually no tetrahydrobiopterin, and exhibited only marginal NO synthase activity. By means of gel filtration and static light scattering, we demonstrate that the heme-deficient enzyme is a monomer and provide evidence that heme is the sole prosthetic group controlling the quaternary structure of neuronal NO synthase. CD spectroscopy showed that most of the structural elements found in the dimeric holoenzyme were conserved in heme-deficient monomeric NO synthase. However, in spite of being properly folded, the heme-deficient enzyme did bind neither tetrahydrobiopterin nor the substrate analog N(G)-nitro-L-arginine. Our results demonstrate that the prosthetic heme group of neuronal NO synthase is requisite for dimerization of enzyme subunits and for the binding of amino acid substrate and tetrahydrobiopterin.
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PMID:Characterization of heme-deficient neuronal nitric-oxide synthase reveals a role for heme in subunit dimerization and binding of the amino acid substrate and tetrahydrobiopterin. 863 54

Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain that binds heme, (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin, and Arg, coupled to a reductase domain that binds FAD, FMN, and NADPH. Activity requires dimeric interaction between two oxygenase domains and calmodulin binding between the reductase and oxygenase domains, which triggers electron transfer between flavin and heme groups. We constructed four different nNOS heterodimers to determine the path of calmodulin-induced electron transfer in a nNOS dimer. A predominantly monomeric mutant of rat nNOS (G671A) and its Arg binding mutant (G671A/E592A) were used as full-length subunits, along with oxygenase domain partners that either did or did not contain the E592A mutation. The E592A mutation prevented Arg binding to the oxygenase domain in which it was present. It also prevented NO synthesis when it was located in the oxygenase domain adjacent to the full-length subunit. However, it had no effect when present in the full-length subunit (i.e. the subunit containing the reductase domain). The active heterodimer (G671A/E592A full-length subunit plus wild type oxygenase domain subunit) showed remarkable similarity with wild type homodimeric nNOS in its catalytic responses to five different forms and chimeras of calmodulin. This reveals an active involvement of calmodulin in supporting transelectron transfer between flavin and heme groups on adjacent subunits in nNOS. In summary, we propose that calmodulin functions to properly align adjacent reductase and the oxygenase domains in a nNOS dimer for electron transfer between them, leading to NO synthesis by the heme.
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PMID:Calmodulin activates intersubunit electron transfer in the neuronal nitric-oxide synthase dimer. 1132 64

Neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) differs from inducible NOS (iNOS) in both its dependence on the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and the production rate of NO. To investigate what difference(s) exist between the two NOS flavin domains at the electron transfer level, we isolated the recombinant human NOS flavin domains, which were co-expressed with human calmodulin (CaM). The flavin semiquinones, FADH* and FMNH*, in both NOSs participate in the regulation of one-electron transfer within the flavin domain. Each semiquinone can be identified by a characteristic absorption peak at 520 nm (Guan, Z.-W., and Iyanagi, T. (2003) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 412, 65-76). NADPH reduction of the FAD and FMN redox centers by the CaM-bound flavin domains was studied by stopped-flow and rapid scan spectrometry. Reduction of the air-stable semiquinone (FAD-FMNH*) of both domains with NADPH showed that the extent of conversion of FADH2/FMNH* to FADH*/FMNH2 in the iNOS flavin domain was greater than that of the nNOS flavin domain. The reduction of both oxidized domains (FAD-FMN) with NADPH resulted in the initial formation of a small amount of disemiquinone, which then decayed. The rate of intramolecular electron transfer between the two flavins in the iNOS flavin domain was faster than that of the nNOS flavin domain. In addition, the formation of a mixture of the two- and four-electron-reduced states in the presence of excess NADPH was different for the two NOS flavin domains. The data indicate a more favorable formation of the active intermediate FMNH2 in the iNOS flavin domain.
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PMID:Mechanistic studies on the intramolecular one-electron transfer between the two flavins in the human neuronal nitric-oxide synthase and inducible nitric-oxide synthase flavin domains. 1277 76