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      Identification of caveolin-1-interacting sites in neuronal nitric-oxide synthase. Molecular mechanism for inhibition of NO formation.

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          Abstract

          Caveolin is known to down-regulate both neuronal (nNOS) and endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS). In the present study, direct interactions of recombinant caveolin-1 with both the oxygenase and reductase domains of nNOS were demonstrated using in vitro binding assays. To elucidate the mechanism of nNOS regulation by caveolin, we examined the effects of a caveolin-1 scaffolding domain peptide (CaV1p1; residues (82-101)) on the catalytic activities of wild-type and mutant nNOSs. CaV1p1 inhibited NO formation activity and NADPH oxidation of wild-type nNOS in a dose-dependent manner with an IC(50) value of 1.8 microM. Mutations of Phe(584) and Trp(587) within a caveolin binding consensus motif of the oxygenase domain did not result in the loss of CaV1p1 inhibition, indicating that an alternate region of nNOS mediates inhibition by caveolin. The addition of CaV1p1 also inhibited more than 90% of the cytochrome c reductase activity in the isolated reductase domain with or without the calmodulin (CaM) binding site, whereas CaV1p1 inhibited ferricyanide reductase activity by only 50%. These results suggest that there are significant differences in the mechanism of inhibition by caveolin for nNOS as compared with those previously reported for eNOS. Further analysis of the interaction through the use of several reductase domain deletion mutants revealed that the FMN domain was essential for successful interaction between caveolin-1 and nNOS reductase. We also examined the effects of CaV1p1 on an autoinhibitory domain deletion mutant (Delta40) and a C-terminal truncation mutant (DeltaC33), both of which are able to form NO in the absence of CaM, unlike the wild-type enzyme. Interestingly, CaV1p1 inhibited CaM-dependent, but not CaM-independent, NO formation activities of both Delta40 and DeltaC33, suggesting that CaV1p1 inhibits interdomain electron transfer induced by CaM from the reductase domain to the oxygenase domain.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Biol Chem
          The Journal of biological chemistry
          American Society for Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (ASBMB)
          0021-9258
          0021-9258
          Mar 05 2004
          : 279
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Institute of Multidisciplinary Research for Advanced Materials, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8577, Japan.
          Article
          S0021-9258(17)47784-2
          10.1074/jbc.M310327200
          14681230
          8e0d8f30-ebf4-4302-bd72-c2bb6853f065
          History

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