Abstract

Nitric oxide (( small middle dot)NO) plays a central role in vascular homeostasis via regulation of smooth muscle relaxation and platelet aggregation. Although mechanisms for ( small middle dot)NO formation are well known, removal pathways are less well characterized, particularly in cells that respond to ( small middle dot)NO through activation of soluble guanylate cyclase. Herein, we report that ( small middle dot)NO is catalytically consumed by prostaglandin H synthase-1 (PGHS-1) through acting as a reducing peroxidase substrate. With purified ovine PGHS-1, ( small middle dot)NO consumption requires peroxide (LOOH or H(2)O(2)), with a K(m)( (app)) for 15(S)hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (HPETE) of 3. 27 +/- 0.35 microm. During this, 2 mol ( small middle dot)NO are consumed per mol HPETE, and loss of HPETE hydroperoxy group occurs with retention of the conjugated diene spectrum. Hydroperoxide-stimulated ( small middle dot)NO consumption requires heme incorporation, is not inhibited by indomethacin, and is further stimulated by the reducing peroxidase substrate, phenol. PGHS-1-dependent ( small middle dot)NO consumption also occurs during arachidonate, thrombin, or activation of platelets (1-2 microm.min(-1) for typical plasma platelet concentrations) and prevents ( small middle dot)NO stimulation of platelet soluble guanylate cyclase. Platelet sensitivity to ( small middle dot)NO as an inhibitor of aggregation is greater using a platelet-activating stimulus () that does not cause ( small middle dot)NO consumption, indicating that this mechanism overcomes the anti-aggregatory effects of ( small middle dot)NO. Catalytic consumption of ( small middle dot)NO during eicosanoid synthesis thus represents both a novel proaggregatory function for PGHS-1 and a regulated mechanism for vascular ( small middle dot)NO removal.

Highlights

  • In the vasculature, strict control of nitric oxide (1⁄7NO) bioactivity is essential for both maintaining vascular tone and inhibiting platelet aggregation

  • Because platelet-derived 1⁄7NO serves a central role in preventing aggregation following activation of soluble guanylate cyclase, these observations indicate that, in addition to the generation of eicosanoids, catalytic consumption of 1⁄7NO by prostaglandin H synthase-1 (PGHS-1) can contribute to its proaggregatory activity

  • Nitric Oxide Is Consumed by Arachidonate or A23187-activated Platelets—Rates of 1⁄7NO consumption by washed platelets (8 ϫ 108 mlϪ1) were not significantly increased over background and followed first order kinetics, indicating that cell-dependent 1⁄7NO uptake does not occur in resting platelets

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Summary

Introduction

Strict control of nitric oxide (1⁄7NO) bioactivity is essential for both maintaining vascular tone and inhibiting platelet aggregation. PGHS-1-dependent 1⁄7NO consumption occurs during arachidonate, thrombin, or A23187 activation of platelets (1–2 ␮M1⁄7min؊1 for typical plasma platelet concentrations) and prevents 1⁄7NO stimulation of platelet soluble guanylate cyclase.

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