Abstract

A purification procedure for flavohaemoglobin Hmp (NO oxygenase) is described that gives high yields of protein with equistoichiometric haem and FAD contents. H(2)O(2) accumulated on NADH oxidation by the purified protein and in cell extracts with elevated Hmp contents. H(2)O(2) probably arose by dismutation from superoxide, which was also detectable during oxygen reduction; water was not a product. In the absence of agents that scavenge superoxide and peroxide, the mean K(m) for oxygen was 80 microM; the addition of 15 microM FAD decreased the K(m) for oxygen to 15 microM without a change in V(max) but catalysed cyanide-insensitive oxygen consumption, attributed to electron transfer from flavins to O(2). Purified Hmp consumed NO in the absence of added FAD (approx. 1 O(2) per NO), which is consistent with NO oxygenation. However, half-maximal rates of NO-stimulated O(2) consumption required approx. 47 microM O(2); NO removal was ineffective at physiologically relevant O(2) concentrations (below approx. 30 microM O(2)). On exhaustion of O(2), NO was removed by a cyanide-sensitive process attributed to NO reduction, with a turnover number approx. 1% of that for oxygenase activity. These results suggest that the ability of Hmp to detoxify NO might be compromised in hypoxic environments.

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