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Identification of a soluble guanylate cyclase in RBCs: preserved activity in patients with coronary artery disease

Authors :
Christina Panknin
Evanthia Mergia
Johannes-Peter Stasch
John Pernow
Barbara Sitek
Martin Feelisch
George Wolff
Malte Kelm
Wiebke Lückstädt
C. Krämer
Thilo Bracht
Jiangning Yang
Miriam M. Cortese-Krott
Doris Koesling
Source :
Redox Biology, Vol 14, Iss, Pp 328-337 (2018), Redox Biology
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Endothelial dysfunction is associated with decreased NO bioavailability and impaired activation of the NO receptor soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) in the vasculature and in platelets. Red blood cells (RBCs) are known to produce NO under hypoxic and normoxic conditions; however evidence of expression and/or activity of sGC and downstream signaling pathway including phopshodiesterase (PDE)-5 and protein kinase G (PKG) in RBCs is still controversial. In the present study, we aimed to investigate whether RBCs carry a functional sGC signaling pathway and to address whether this pathway is compromised in coronary artery disease (CAD). Using two independent chromatographic procedures, we here demonstrate that human and murine RBCs carry a catalytically active α1β1-sGC (isoform 1), which converts 32P-GTP into 32P-cGMP, as well as PDE5 and PKG. Specific sGC stimulation by NO+BAY 41-2272 increases intracellular cGMP-levels up to 1000-fold with concomitant activation of the canonical PKG/VASP-signaling pathway. This response to NO is blunted in α1-sGC knockout (KO) RBCs, but fully preserved in α2-sGC KO. In patients with stable CAD and endothelial dysfunction red cell eNOS expression is decreased as compared to aged-matched controls; by contrast, red cell sGC expression/activity and responsiveness to NO are fully preserved, although sGC oxidation is increased in both groups. Collectively, our data demonstrate that an intact sGC/PDE5/PKG-dependent signaling pathway exists in RBCs, which remains fully responsive to NO and sGC stimulators/activators in patients with endothelial dysfunction. Targeting this pathway may be helpful in diseases with NO deficiency in the microcirculation like sickle cell anemia, pulmonary hypertension, and heart failure.<br />Graphical abstract fx1<br />Highlights • Human and murine RBCs carry catalytically active α1β1-sGC (isoform 1), PKG and PDE5. • NO-stimulation increases cGMP-levels in intact RBCs in a sGC and PDE-dependent manner, • NO stimulation induces canonical PKG/VASP-dependent signaling. • NO responsiveness of red cell sGC is blunted in α1-sGC KO mice, but is preserved in α2-sGC KO and eNOS KO mice. • Red cell sGC activity is fully preserved in patients with stable coronary artery disease.

Details

ISSN :
22132317
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Redox Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15313d1cbb40c0c3aa9d3a74b64d538c