Abstract

Eight polar amino acid residues in the putative substrate-binding region from Thr-360 to Val-379 in human endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) (Thr-360, Arg-365, Cys-368, Asp-369, Arg-372, Tyr-373, Glu-377, and Asp-378) were individually mutated. Only two of these residues, Asp-369 and Arg-372, were found to be essential for enzyme activity. A further series of mutants was generated by replacing these two residues with various amino acids and the mutant proteins were expressed in a baculovirus system. Mutant eNOS had a very low L-citrulline formation activity with the exception of D369E and R372K, which retained 27% and 44% of the wild-type enzyme activity, respectively. Unlike the wild-type enzyme, all mutants except D369E, R372K, and R372M had a low spin heme (Soret peak at 416 nm). All the Asp-369 mutants had higher Kd values for L-arginine (1-10 mM) than wild-type eNOS (0.4 microM) and an unstable heme-CO complex, and except for D369E, had a very low (6R)-5,6,7, 8-tetrahydro-L-biopterin (BH4) content. In contrast, each of Arg-372 mutants retained a considerable amount of BH4, had a moderate reduction in L-arginine affinity, and had a more stable heme-CO complex. 1-Phenylimidazole did not bind to wild-type eNOS heme, but bound to all Asp-369 and Arg-372 mutants (Kd ranged from 10 to 65 microM) except R372K. Heme spin-state changes caused by binding of 3, 5-lutidine appeared to depend on both charge and size of the side chains of residues 369 and 372. Furthermore, all Asp-369 and Arg-372 mutants were defective in dimer formation. These results suggest that residues Asp-369 and Arg-372 in eNOS play a critical role in oxygenase domain active-site structure and activity.

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