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Inactivation of nitric oxide synthase by substituted aminoguanidines and aminoisothioureas.

Authors :
Wolff DJ
Gauld DS
Neulander MJ
Southan G
Source :
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics [J Pharmacol Exp Ther] 1997 Oct; Vol. 283 (1), pp. 265-73.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

A series of substituted aminoguanidines and amino-substituted isothioureas have been examined as inhibitors of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) isoforms. Each of the agents produced a time- and concentration-dependent inactivation of the NO-forming activity of the affinity-purified NOS isoforms. These inactivations required exposure of NOS to the drug under conditions that supported catalysis, consistent with the proposal that they act as alternate substrate, mechanism-based inactivators. Of the aminoguanidines examined, 2-ethylaminoguanidine was the most efficient inactivator, exhibiting vs. iNOS an apparent KI value of 120 microM as measured at 100 microM arginine and a k(inact max) value of 0.48 min(-1) and thus an apparent second-order rate constant for inactivation of 4.0 mM(-1)min(-1). 2-Ethylaminoguanidine displayed a high isoform selectivity for the iNOS compared with the nNOS and eNOS isoforms. 2-Ethylaminoguanidine inactivated NO synthetic activity in cytokine-induced RAW 264.7 cells as measured at 100 microM extracellular arginine with an apparent KI value of 55 microM and a k(inact max) value of 0.09 min(-1). The inactivated RAW 264.7 cell NO synthetic capability was restored over a 3-hr period after drug removal to a value 60% of its pretreatment value. This recovery occurred despite the presence of cycloheximide sufficient to inhibit protein synthesis by >99%. 1-Amino-S-methylisothiourea by contrast with the aminoguanidines was identified as a mechanism-based inactivator selective for the nNOS isoform. In contrast to S-isopropylisothiourea, which was found to be both cell penetrant and reversible, 1-amino-S-methylisothiourea appeared cell impermeable and inhibited NOS enzyme "irreversibly."

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-3565
Volume :
283
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9336332