| Literature DB >> 31167903 |
Daniel Bender1,2, Alexander Tobias Kaczmarek1,2, Dimitri Niks3, Russ Hille3, Guenter Schwarz4,2,5.
Abstract
In addition to nitric oxide (NO) synthases, molybdenum-dependent enzymes have been reported to reduce nitrite to produce NO. Here, we report the stoichiometric reduction in nitrite to NO by human sulfite oxidase (SO), a mitochondrial intermembrane space enzyme primarily involved in cysteine catabolism. Kinetic and spectroscopic studies provide evidence for direct nitrite coordination at the molybdenum center followed by an inner shell electron transfer mechanism. In the presence of the physiological electron acceptor cytochrome c, we were able to close the catalytic cycle of sulfite-dependent nitrite reduction thus leading to steady-state NO synthesis, a finding that strongly supports a physiological relevance of SO-dependent NO formation. By engineering SO variants with reduced intramolecular electron transfer rate, we were able to increase NO generation efficacy by one order of magnitude, providing a mechanistic tool to tune NO synthesis by SO.Entities:
Keywords: mitochondria; molybdenum cofactor; nitric oxide; nitrite reduction; sulfite oxidase
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31167903 DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20190143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857