Abstract

Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity was measured, by the conversion of arginine to eitrulline, in a preparation from the rat ileum consisting of the myenteric plexus and smooth muscle layers. A variety of incubating media were used in order to establish the optimal conditions required for the assay. NOS activity was present in the soluble fraction and was Ca 2+-and calmodulin-dependent, characteristic of neuronal NOS. Exogenous Ca 2+ was required for activity to be detectable but NOS activity progressively decreased with Ca 2+ concentrations above 1.25 mM. Activity varied with arginine concentration, reaching saturation at 6 μM, and required the addition of the co-substrate NADPH. Endogenous levels of co-factors in the crude soluble fraction were not sufficient to maintain NOS activity. Omission of flavin adenine dinucleotide and tetrahydrobiopterin from the incubation medium reduced activity by 90%, and both co-factors had to be present for maximal activity to occur. These results emphasize the need to control assay conditions when measuring NOS activity in crude preparations from peripheral tissue.

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