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Interdomain Interactions Modulate the Active Site Dynamics of Human Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase

Overview
Journal J Phys Chem B
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2022 Sep 3
PMID 36056879
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Abstract

Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is a homodimeric flavohemoprotein responsible for catalyzing the oxidation of l-arginine (l-Arg) to citrulline and nitric oxide. Electrons are supplied for the reaction via interdomain electron transfer between an N-terminal heme-containing oxygenase domain and a FMN-containing (sub)domain of a C-terminal reductase domain. Extensive attention has focused on elucidating how conformational dynamics regulate electron transfer between the domains. Here we investigate the impact of the interdomain FMN-heme interaction on the heme active site dynamics of inducible NOS (iNOS). Steady state linear and time-resolved two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy was applied to probe a CO ligand at the heme within the oxygenase domain for full-length and truncated or mutated constructs of human iNOS. Whereas the linear IR spectra of the CO ligand were identical among the constructs, 2D IR spectroscopy revealed variation in the frequency dynamics. The wild-type constructs that can properly form the FMN/oxygenase docked state due to the presence of both the FMN and oxygenase domains showed slower dynamics than the oxygenase domain alone. Introduction of the mutation (E546N) predicted to perturb electrostatic interactions between the domains resulted in measured dynamics intermediate between those for the full-length and individual oxygenase domain, consistent with perturbation to the docked/undocked equilibrium. These results indicate that docking of the FMN domain to the oxygenase domain not only brings the FMN cofactor within electron transfer distance of the heme domain but also modulates the dynamics sensed by the CO ligand within the active site in a way expected to promote efficient electron transfer.

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