Abstract
Rat platelets served as a model to evaluate quantitatively how guanylate cyclase (GC)-coupled nitric oxide (NO) receptors and phosphodiesterases (here phospho-diesterase-5) interact to transduce NO signals in cells . The platelets expressed mRNA only for the α1 and βBl GC-coupled receptor subunits. In intact platelets, the potency of NO for elevating cGMP (EC 50 = 10 nm) was lower than in lysed platelets (EC50 = 1.7 nm). The limiting activities of GC and phosphodiesterase in intact platelets were both very high, being equivalent to about 100 μ/s. With low phosphodiesterase activity (imposed by 100 μ sildenafil), the cGMP response over time was hyperbolic in shape for a range of NO concentrations or GC activities due to GC desensitization. Without a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, NO generated only brief cGMP transients, peaking after 2-5 s but amounting maximally to about 150 μ cGMP. The transients were caused partly by GC desensitization, which varied in rate (half-time up to 3 s) and extent (up to 80%) depending on the NO concentration, and partly by an enhancement of the phosphodiesterase catalytic activity with time, which was deduced to be up to 30-fold and to occur with a half-time of up to 5 s. The results were simulated by a quantitative model, which also explains the varied shapes of cGMP responses to NO found in other cells. Downstream phosphorylation in platelets was detectable within 2 s, and, with continuous exposure (1 min), this pathway could be engaged by subnanomolar NO concentrations (EC50 = 0.5 nm).
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CITATION STYLE
Mo, E., Amin, H., Bianco, I. H., & Garthwaite, J. (2004). Kinetics of a cellular nitric oxide/cGMP/phosphodiesterase-5 pathway. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(25), 26149–26158. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M400916200
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