S. Ghosh et al., INTERACTION BETWEEN CAVEOLIN-1 AND THE REDUCTASE DOMAIN OF ENDOTHELIAL NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE - CONSEQUENCES FOR CATALYSIS, The Journal of biological chemistry, 273(35), 1998, pp. 22267-22271
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is targeted to caveoli throug
h interaction with caveolin-1 (cav-l), cav-l binding to a consensus si
te in the eNOS oxygenase domain is proposed to antagonize calmodulin (
CaM) binding and thereby inhibit eNOS nitric oxide (NO) synthesis. To
study the mechanism, we examined how cav-l scaffolding domain peptide
(amino acids 82-101; cav-1P) would affect NO synthesis, NADPH oxidatio
n, cytochrome c reduction, and ferricyanide reduction by full-length e
NOS or its isolated oxygenase and reductase domains, Cav-1P equivalent
ly inhibited NO synthesis and NADPH oxidation by full-length eNOS in a
manner reversible by CaM but did not affect NADPH-independent NO synt
hesis by full-length eNOS or its oxygenase domain, indicating inhibiti
on required the reductase domain. Similar concentrations of cav-1P inh
ibited cytochrome c reduction by full-length eNOS or the reductase dom
ain (amino acids 492-1205) in a CaM-reversible manner, indicating cav-
1P interaction with reductase or full-length eNOS are equivalent. Ferr
icyanide reduction was unaffected by cav-1P in all cases. Immunoblotti
ng showed that full-length eNOS, eNOS oxygenase, and eNOS reductase al
l bound to an immobilized glutathione S-transferase-cav-l fusion prote
in. Thus, cav-l interacts independently with both oxygenase and reduct
ase domains of eNOS. The reductase interaction occurs independent of a
cav-l binding motif, is CaM-reversible, and is of sufficient affinity
to match cav-1P inhibition of NO synthesis by full-length eNOS. We pr
opose that cav-l binding to eNOS reductase compromises its ability to
bind CaM and to donate electrons to the eNOS heme, thereby inhibiting
NO synthesis.