Abstract
The oxygenase domain of inducible nitric-oxide synthase exists as a functional tight homodimer in the presence of the substrate L-arginine and the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B). In the absence of H4B, the enzyme is a mixture of monomer and loose dimer. We show that exposure of H4B-free enzyme to NO induces dissociation of the loose dimer into monomers in a reaction that follows single exponential decay kinetics with a lifetime of ∼300 min. It is followed by a faster autoreduction reaction of the heme iron with a lifetime of ∼30 min and the concurrent breakage of the proximal iron-thiolate bond, forming a five-coordinate NO-bound ferrous species. Mass spectrometry revealed that the NO-induced monomerization is associated with intramolecular disulfide bond formation between Cys104 and Cys109, located in the zinc-binding motif. The regulatory effect of NO as a dimer inhibitor is discussed in the context of the structure/function relationships of this enzyme. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Li, D., Hayden, E. Y., Panda, K., Stuehr, D. J., Deng, H., Rousseau, D. L., & Yeh, S. R. (2006). Regulation of the monomer-dimer equilibrium in inducible nitric-oxide synthase by nitric oxide. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(12), 8197–8204. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M507328200
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