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)

The neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) flavin domain, which has similar redox properties to those of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (P450R), contains binding sites for calmodulin, FAD, FMN, and NADPH. The aim of this study is to elucidate the mechanism of activation of the flavin domain by calcium/calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM). In this study, we used the recombinant nNOS flavin domains, which include or delete the calmodulin (CaM)-binding site. The air-stable semiquinone of the nNOS flavin domains showed similar redox properties to the corresponding FAD-FMNH(&z.ccirf;) of P450R. In the absence or presence of Ca(2+)/CaM, the rates of reduction of an FAD-FMN pair by NADPH have been investigated at different wavelengths, 457, 504 and 590 nm by using a stopped-flow technique and a rapid scan spectrophotometry. The reduction of the oxidized enzyme (FAD-FMN) by NADPH proceeds by both one-electron equivalent and two-electron equivalent mechanisms, and the formation of semiquinone (increase of absorbance at 590 nm) was significantly increased in the presence of Ca(2+)/CaM. The air-stable semiquinone form of the enzyme was also rapidly reduced by NADPH. The results suggest that an intramolecular one-electron transfer between the two flavins is activated by the binding of Ca(2+)/CaM. The F(1)H(2), which is the fully reduced form of the air-stable semiquinone, can donate one electron to the electron acceptor, cytochrome c. The proposed mechanism of activation by Ca(2+)/CaM complex is discussed on the basis of that provided by P450R.
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PMID:Calmodulin activates intramolecular electron transfer between the two flavins of neuronal nitric oxide synthase flavin domain. 1059 72

Midpoint reduction potentials for the flavin cofactors in the reductase domain of rat neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in calmodulin (CaM)-free and -bound forms have been determined by direct anaerobic titration. In the CaM-free form, the FMN potentials are -49 +/- 5 mV (oxidized/semiquinone) -274 +/- 5 mV (semiquinone/reduced). The corresponding FAD potentials are -232 +/- 7, and -280 +/- 6 mV. The data indicate that each flavin can exist as a blue (neutral) semiquinone. The accumulation of blue semiquinone on the FMN is considerably higher than seen on the FAD due to the much larger separation (225 mV) of its two potentials (cf. 48 mV for FAD). For the CaM-bound form of the protein, the midpoint potentials are essentially identical: there is a small alteration in the FMN oxidized/semiquinone potential (-30 +/- 4 mV); the other three potentials are unaffected. The heme midpoint potentials for nNOS [-239 mV, L-Arg-free; -220 mV, L-Arg-bound; Presta, A., Weber-Main, A. M., Stankovich, M. T., and Stuehr, D. J. (1998) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120, 9460-9465] are poised such that electron transfer from flavin domain is thermodynamically feasible. Clearly, CaM binding is necessary in eliciting conformational changes that enhance flavin to flavin and flavin to heme electron transfers rather than causing a change in the driving force.
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PMID:Potentiometric analysis of the flavin cofactors of neuronal nitric oxide synthase. 1060 Jan 1

We colocalized nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity in epithelial cells that surround the salivary gland duct in female Dermacentor variabilis with NADPH diaphorase histochemistry and immunohistochemistry using a polyclonal anti-endothelial NOS. Using size-exclusion chromatography, a fraction with a molecular mass of about 185 kDa that had diaphorase activity was eluted from tick salivary gland homogenate. This fraction converted arginine to citrulline with the production of nitric oxide (NO), which was detected by using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. The complete activity of the diaphorase fraction was dependent on NADPH, FAD, tetrahydrobiopterin, calmodulin, (CaM), and Ca(2+), but was not dependent on dithiothreitol. The arginine analog N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine inhibited the activity of this fraction. NO and arginine activated soluble guanylate cyclase to produce cGMP in dopamine-stimulated isolated salivary glands. Dopamine-stimulated isolated salivary glands treated with tick saline containing either EDTA, the NOS inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, or the calcium/CaM binding inhibitor W-7 showed no increase in cGMP. The NO donor sodium nitroprusside significantly increased cGMP levels in unstimulated isolated salivary glands. A possible function for NO in salivation by this ixodid tick is discussed.
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PMID:Nitric oxide synthase and cGMP activity in the salivary glands of the American dog tick Dermacentor variabilis. 1067 47

The sequences of nitric-oxide synthase flavin domains closely resemble that of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR). However, all nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) isoforms are 20-40 residues longer in the C terminus, forming a "tail" that is absent in CPR. To investigate its function, we removed the 33 and 42 residue C termini from neuronal NOS (nNOS) and endothelial NOS (eNOS), respectively. Both truncated enzymes exhibited cytochrome c reductase activities without calmodulin that were 7-21-fold higher than the nontruncated forms. With calmodulin, the truncated and wild-type enzymes reduced cytochrome c at approximately equal rates. Therefore, calmodulin functioned as a nonessential activator of the wild-type enzymes and a partial noncompetitive inhibitor of the truncated mutants. Truncated nNOS and eNOS plus calmodulin catalyzed NO formation at rates that were 45 and 33%, respectively, those of their intact forms. Without calmodulin, truncated nNOS and eNOS synthesized NO at rates 14 and 20%, respectively, those with calmodulin. By using stopped-flow spectrophotometry, we demonstrated that electron transfer into and between the two flavins is faster in the absence of the C terminus. Although both CPR and intact NOS can exist in a stable, one-electron-reduced semiquinone form, neither of the truncated enzymes do so. We propose negative modulation of FAD-FMN interaction by the C termini of both constitutive NOSs.
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PMID:The C termini of constitutive nitric-oxide synthases control electron flow through the flavin and heme domains and affect modulation by calmodulin. 1087 25

Flavin electron transferases can catalyze one- or two-electron reduction of quinones including bioreductive antitumor quinones. The recombinant neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) reductase domain, which contains the FAD-FMN prosthetic group pair and calmodulin-binding site, catalyzed aerobic NADPH-oxidation in the presence of the model quinone compound menadione (MD), including antitumor mitomycin C (Mit C) and adriamycin (Adr). Calcium/calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM) stimulated the NADPH oxidation of these quinones. The MD-mediated NADPH oxidation was inhibited in the presence of NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (QR), but Mit C- and Adr-mediated NADPH oxidations were not. In anaerobic conditions, cytochrome b5 as a scavenger for the menasemiquinone radical (MD*-) was stoichiometrically reduced by the nNOS reductase domain in the presence of MD, but not of QR. These results indicate that the nNOS reductase domain can catalyze a only one-electron reduction of bivalent quinones. In the presence or absence of Ca2+/CaM, the semiquinone radical species were major intermediates observed during the oxidation of the reduced enzyme by MD, but the fully reduced flavin species did not significantly accumulate under these conditions. Air-stable semiquinone did not react rapidly with MD, but the fully reduced species of both flavins, FAD and FMN, could donate one electron to MD. The intramolecular electron transfer between the two flavins is the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle [H. Matsuda, T. Iyanagi, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1473 (1999) 345-355). These data suggest that the enzyme functions between the 1e- <==> 3e- level during one-electron reduction of MD, and that the rates of quinone reductions are stimulated by a rapid electron exchange between the two flavins in the presence of Ca2+/CaM.
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PMID:One-electron reduction of quinones by the neuronal nitric-oxide synthase reductase domain. 1092 3

Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is composed of an oxygenase domain and a reductase domain. The reductase domain has NADPH, FAD, and FMN binding sites. Wild-type nNOS reduced the azo bond of methyl red with a turnover number of approximately 130 min(-1) in the presence of Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM) and NADPH under anaerobic conditions. Diphenyleneiodonium chloride (DPI), a flavin/NADPH binding inhibitor, completely inhibited azo reduction. The omission of Ca(2+)/CaM from the reaction system decreased the activity to 5%. The rate of the azo reduction with an FMN-deficient mutant was also 5% that of the wild type. NADPH oxidation rates for the wild-type and mutant enzymes were well coupled with azo reduction. Thus, we suggest that electrons delivered from the FMN of the nNOS enzyme reduce the azo bond of methyl red and that this reductase activity is controlled by Ca(2+)/CaM.
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PMID:Azo reduction of methyl red by neuronal nitric oxide synthase: the important role of FMN in catalysis. 1097 94

We recently described that melatonin and some kynurenines modulate the N-methyl-D-aspartate-dependent excitatory response in rat striatal neurons, an effect that could be related to their inhibition of nNOS. In this report, we studied the effect of melatonin and these kynurenines on nNOS activity in both rat striatal homogenate and purified rat brain nNOS. In homogenates of rat striatum, melatonin inhibits nNOS activity, whereas synthetic kynurenines act in a structure-related manner. Kynurenines carrying an NH(2) group in their benzenic ring (NH(2)-kynurenines) inhibit nNOS activity more strongly than melatonin itself. However, kynurenines lacking the NH(2) group or with this group blocked do not affect enzyme activity. Kinetic analysis shows that melatonin and NH(2)-kynurenines behave as noncompetitive inhibitors of nNOS. Using purified rat brain nNOS, we show that the inhibitory effect of melatonin and NH(2)-kynurenines on the enzyme activity diminishes with increasing amounts of calmodulin in the incubation medium. However, changes in other nNOS cofactors such as FAD or H(4)-biopterin, do not modify the drugs' response. These data suggest that calmodulin may be involved in the nNOS inhibition by these compounds. Studies with urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis further support an interaction between melatonin and NH(2)-kynurenines, but not kynurenines lacking the NH(2) group, with Ca(2+)-calmodulin yielding Ca(2+)-calmodulin-drug complexes that prevent nNOS activation. The results show that calmodulin is a target involved in the intracellular effects of melatonin and some melatonin-related kynurenines that may account, at least in part, for the neuroprotective properties of these compounds.
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PMID:Structure-related inhibition of calmodulin-dependent neuronal nitric-oxide synthase activity by melatonin and synthetic kynurenines. 1104 43

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

The nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) are dimeric flavocytochromes consisting of an oxygenase domain with cytochrome P450-like Cys-ligated haem, coupled to a diflavin reductase domain, which is related to cytochrome P450 reductase. The NOSs catalyse the sequential mono-oxygenation of arginine to N-hydroxyarginine and then to citrulline and NO. The constitutive NOS isoforms (cNOSs) are regulated by calmodulin (CaM), which binds at elevated concentrations of free Ca(2+), whereas the inducible isoform binds CaM irreversibly. One of the main structural differences between the constitutive and inducible isoforms is an insert of 40-50 amino acids in the FMN-binding domain of the cNOSs. Deletion of the insert in rat neuronal NOS (nNOS) led to a mutant enzyme which binds CaM at lower Ca(2+) concentrations and which retains activity in the absence of CaM. In order to resolve the mechanism of action of CaM activation we determined reduction potentials for the FMN and FAD cofactors of rat nNOS in the presence and absence of CaM using a recombinant form of the reductase domain. The results indicate that CaM binding does not modulate the reduction potentials of the flavins, but appears to control electron transfer primarily via a large structural rearrangement. We also report the creation of chimaeric enzymes in which the reductase domains of nNOS and flavocytochrome P450 BM3 (Bacillus megaterium III) have been exchanged. Despite its very different flavin redox potentials, the BM3 reductase domain was able to support low levels of CaM-dependent NO synthesis, whereas the NOS reductase domain did not effectively substitute for that of cytochrome P450 BM3.
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PMID:Control of electron transfer in neuronal NO synthase. 1135 43

The synthesis of the free radical gas nitric oxide (NO) is catalyzed by the enzyme NO synthase (NOS). NOS converts arginine and molecular oxygen to NO and citrulline in a reaction that requires NADPH, FAD, FMN, and tetrahydrobiopterin as cofactors. Three types of NOS have been identified by molecular cloning. The activity of the constitutively expressed neuronal NOS (nNOS) and endothelial NOS (eNOS) is Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent, whereas that the inducible NOS (iNOS) is Ca(2+)-insensitive. The predominant NOS isoform in skeletal muscle is nNOS. It is present at the sarcolemma of both extra- and intrafusal muscle fibers. An accentuated accumulation of nNOS is found in the endplate area. This strict sarcolemmal localization of nNOS is due its association with the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, which is mediated by the syntrophins. The activity of nNOS in skeletal muscle is regulated by developmental, myogenic, and neurogenic influences. NO exerts several distinct effects on various aspects of skeletal muscle function, such as excitation-contraction coupling, mitochondrial energy production, glucose metabolism, and autoregulation of blood flow. Inside the striated muscle fibers, NO interacts directly with several classes of proteins, such as soluble guanylate cyclase, ryanodine receptor, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes, as well as radical oxygen species. In addition, NO produced and released by contracting muscle fibers diffuses to nearby arterioles where it acts to inhibit reflex sympathetic vasoconstriction.
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PMID:NO message from muscle. 1174 89


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