Abstract

Nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) are classified functionally, based on whether calmodulin binding is Ca2+-dependent (cNOS) or Ca2+-independent (iNOS). This key dichotomy has not been defined at the molecular level. Here we show that cNOS isoforms contain a unique polypeptide insert in their FMN binding domains which is not shared with iNOS or other related flavoproteins. Previously identified autoinhibitory domains in calmodulin-regulated enzymes raise the possibility that the polypeptide insert is the autoinhibitory domain of cNOSs. Consistent with this possibility, three-dimensional molecular modeling suggested that the insert originates from a site immediately adjacent to the calmodulin binding sequence. Synthetic peptides derived from the 45-amino acid insert of endothelial NOS were found to potently inhibit binding of calmodulin and activation of cNOS isoforms. This inhibition was associated with peptide binding to NOS, rather than free calmodulin, and inhibition could be reversed by increasing calmodulin concentration. In contrast, insert-derived peptides did not interfere with the arginine site of cNOS, as assessed from [3H]NG-nitro-L-arginine binding, nor did they potently effect iNOS activity. Limited proteolysis studies showed that calmodulin's ability to gate electron flow through cNOSs is associated with displacement of the insert polypeptide; this is the first specific calmodulin-induced change in NOS conformation to be identified. Together, our findings strongly suggest that the insert is an autoinhibitory control element, docking with a site on cNOSs which impedes calmodulin binding and enzymatic activation. The autoinhibitory control element molecularly defines cNOSs and offers a unique target for developing novel NOS activators and inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) are classified functionally, based on whether calmodulin binding is Ca2؉-dependent or Ca2؉-independent

  • We show that constitutively expressed isoforms of NOS (cNOSs) isoforms contain a unique polypeptide insert in their FMN binding domains which is not shared with isoform of NOS (iNOS) or other related flavoproteins

  • Our findings strongly suggest that the insert is an autoinhibitory control element, docking with a site on cNOSs which impedes calmodulin binding and enzymatic activation

Read more

Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Protein Modeling—Molecular modeling of the FMN binding module of nitric oxide synthase isoforms was done using the Insight and Homology programs from Biosym (BIOSYM/Molecular Simulations, San Diego, CA) running on a silicon graphics Indigo workstation. After alignment of NOS sequences with homologous FMN binding proteins of known structure (see “Results”), structurally conserved region (SCR) boxes were created corresponding to conserved regions of secondary structure and regions involved directly in FMN binding. These regions were characterized by high positive scores as evaluated by Dayhoff’s mutation matrix [10]. The crude model structure was relaxed to a sterically and energetically reasonable state using the Discover program (BIOSYM/Molecular Simulations) for molecular me-

The Autoinhibitory Domain of cNOSs
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Designation Derivationa
NOS activitya eNOS iNOS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call