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Spectroscopic Characterization of Five- and Six-Coordinate Ferrous−NO Heme Complexes. Evidence for Heme Fe−Proximal Cysteinate Bond Cleavage in the Ferrous−NO Adducts of the Trp-409Tyr/Phe Proximal Environment Mutants of Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase

Authors :
Roshan Perera
David B. Goodin
Heather L. Voegtle
Masanori Sono
Dennis J. Stuehr
Masao Ikeda-Saito
John H. Dawson
Takeshi Tomita
Alycen E. Pond
Subrata Adak
Source :
Biochemistry. 42:2475-2484
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2003.

Abstract

Nitric oxide synthases (NOS) are a family of cysteine thiolate-ligated heme-containing monooxygenases that catalyze the NADPH-dependent two-step conversion of L-arginine to NO and L-citrulline. During the catalysis, a portion of the NOS heme forms an inhibitory complex with self-generated NO that is subsequently reverted back to NO-free active enzyme under aerobic conditions, suggesting a downstream regulator role of NO. Recent studies revealed that mutation of a conserved proximal tryptophan-409, which forms one of three hydrogen bonds to the heme-coordinated cysteine thiolate, to tyrosine or phenylalanine considerably increases the turnover number of neuronal NOS (nNOS). To further understand these properties of nNOS on its active site structural level, we have examined the oxygenase (heme-containing) domain of the two mutants in close comparison with that of wild-type nNOS with UV-visible absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Among several oxidation and ligation states examined, only the ferrous-NO adducts of the two mutants exhibit spectra that are markedly distinct from those of parallel derivatives of the wild-type protein. The spectra of the ferrous-NO mutants are broadly similar to those of known five-coordinate ferrous-NO heme complexes, suggesting that these mutants are predominantly five coordinate in their ferrous-NO states. The present results are indicative of cleavage of the Fe-S bond in the nNOS mutants in their ferrous-NO state and imply a significant role of the conserved tryptophan in stabilization of the Fe-S bond.

Details

ISSN :
15204995 and 00062960
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3277556c21bcea435b3e8a98ece5c796
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi0271502