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Review Article |
The caveolar nitric oxide synthase/arginine regeneration system for NO production in endothelial cells
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, FL 33612, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: lsolomon{at}hsc.usf.edu)
Accepted 6 March 2003
| Summary |
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Key words: nitric oxide, eNOS, endothelial nitric oxide synthase, arginine, citrulline, arginine regeneration system, argininosuccinate synthase, argininosuccinate lyase, caveolae, nitric oxide production
| Introduction |
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The signal for eNOS activation is a transient increase in intracellular
calcium, which activates the enzyme through binding of a calcium-calmodulin
complex (Ca-Cam). Endothelial NOS activation also occurs in response to shear
stress (Govers and Rabelink,
2001
; Maxwell,
2002
). Consistent with the important physiological roles of eNOS,
the enzyme appears to be subject to multiple modes of regulation, in addition
to primary regulation through reversible Ca-Cam binding and activation. These
include reversible phosphorylation and palmitoylation, substrate and cofactor
availability, dimerization of enzyme subunits, intracellular translocation and
protein-protein interactions (Govers and
Rabelink, 2001
). Several of these potential modes of regulation
appear to be interrelated. As a component of caveolae, a subcompartment of the
plasma membrane that serves to sequester proteins involved in cell signaling,
eNOS may transiently interact with several different caveolar components.
Previous work from several different laboratories has suggested that a diverse
group of proteins, including calmodulin, caveolin-1, bradykinin B2 receptor,
heat shock protein 90, argininosuccinate synthase (AS), argininosuccinate
lyase (AL), Raf-1, Akt, extracellular signal-related kinase, eNOS interacting
protein, eNOS traffic inducer and unidentified tyrosine-phosphorylated
proteins (Hellermann et al.,
2000
; Govers and Rabelink,
2001
; Maxwell,
2002
; Nedvetsky et al.,
2002
), may be transiently and functionally associated with
eNOS.
A potential limiting factor for endothelial NO production is the
availability of the substrate, arginine. Intracellular levels of arginine have
been estimated to range from 100 µmol l-1 to 800 µmol
l-1, which is well above the Km value of 5
µmol l-1 for eNOS (Harrison,
1997
). Endothelial NO production can, nonetheless, be stimulated
by exogenous arginine (Vallance and Chan,
2001
). This phenomenon, termed the 'arginine paradox', suggests
the existence of a separate pool of arginine directed to endothelial NO
synthesis. As illustrated in Fig.
1, arginine has a number of metabolic roles in addition to NO
production, including production of major metabolites such as urea,
polyamines, creatine, ornithine and methylarginine derivatives. The observed
stimulation of endothelial NO production by exogenous arginine suggests that
the arginine directed to NO production may be segregated from bulk cellular
arginine utilized for these other metabolic roles.
|
One possible site of control is at the level of arginine uptake. McDonald
et al. (1997
) showed that the
CAT1 transporter, responsible for 60-80% of total carrier-mediated arginine
transport into endothelial cells, colocalizes with eNOS in caveolae. They
proposed that the arginine utilized by eNOS might, at least in part, be
maintained by the CAT1 transporter. Another important mechanism for
controlling the availability of arginine directed to NO production may be the
regeneration of arginine from the other product of the eNOS-catalyzed
reaction, citrulline. Hecker et al.
(1990
) initially demonstrated
that citrulline, produced in the conversion of arginine to NO, can be recycled
to arginine. A possible link between NO production and arginine regeneration
from citrulline was subsequently established for other cell types
(Nussler et al., 1994
;
Shuttleworth et al., 1995
).
This regeneration is catalyzed by the enzymes AS and AL, both of which also
play an essential role in the urea cycle in liver. The potential importance of
this regeneration system for endothelial NO production was supported by a
report of two infants with a deficiency of AL who were shown to be
hypertensive (Fakler et al., 1995). Upon infusion of arginine, the blood
pressure of these infants decreased to near normal levels, suggesting a
critical role for arginine regeneration in the regulation of systemic blood
pressure. More recent evidence from DNA microarray analysis suggests an
important role for the arginine regeneration system by clearly demonstrating
significant and coordinate upregulation of AS-encoding gene expression in
response to shear stress stimulation of endothelial NO production
(McCormick et al., 2001
). It
was concluded that available arginine is a prerequisite for NO production and
that in the absence of synthesis of additional eNOS, shear stress-induced
increases in NO synthesis depend on an increase in synthesis of arginine from
citrulline through increased AS expression. Although supplemental arginine can
be beneficial in some cases (Wu and
Meininger, 2002
), in other cases it may lead to adverse effects
owing to the multiple metabolic roles of arginine
(Chen et al., 2003
;
Loscalzo, 2003
).
Recent work further supports the hypothesis that the arginine regeneration system, comprised of a caveolar complex that includes eNOS, AS and AL, plays an important, and most likely essential, role in the receptor-mediated production of NO by vascular endothelial cells.
| Effects of exogenous arginine and citrulline on endothelial NO production |
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| Caveolar localization of arginine regeneration enzymes with eNOS |
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| Degree of recycling |
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| Molecular basis for functional role and location of endothelial AS |
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Features of mRNA UTRs, specifically uORFs, are regarded as important
determinants of translational efficiency and may have important biological
implications for the regulation of translation. We therefore designed
experiments to determine to what extent the various 5'-UTRs of AS mRNA
influenced translation. Translational efficiencies for the 66 nt and 92 nt AS
5'-UTR constructs were 70% and 25%, respectively, of the translational
efficiency for the 43 nt 5'-UTR AS mRNA. Sequential deletions, starting
with the 5'-terminus of the 92 nt 5'-UTR construct, resulted in a
corresponding increase in translational efficiency, but the most pronounced
effect resulted from mutation of the uORF, which restored translational
efficiency to that observed with the 43 nt species. When the different AS mRNA
5'-UTRs, cloned in front of a luciferase reporter gene, were transfected
into endothelial cells, the pattern of luciferase expression was nearly
identical to that observed for the different 5'-UTR AS mRNAs in
endothelial cells. These results suggest that a complex
transcriptional/translational infrastructure exists to coordinate AS
expression and NO production (Pendleton et
al., 2002
).
| Model for coupling of arginine regeneration to endothelial NO production |
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| Acknowledgments |
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