Molecular cloning and functional expression of an inducible nitric oxide synthase from a murine macrophage cell line.

Cheryl Lyons(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Gregory Orloff(Brigham and Women's Hospital), James M. Cunningham(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
March 1, 1992
Cited by 870Open Access
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Abstract

Macrophages activated by exposure to cytokines and/or to endotoxin produce nitric oxide (NO.), a free radical that is a mediator of the host response to infection. Activation induces the expression of nitric oxide synthase, the enzyme that catalyzes formation of NO. from L-arginine and molecular oxygen. We report the cloning of a cDNA encoding the inducible nitric oxide synthase from a murine macrophage cell line, RAW264.7, exposed to interferon-gamma and lipopolysaccharide. Oocytes injected with mRNA transcribed from this cDNA demonstrate arginine-dependent production of nitrite, a stable metabolite of NO.. Nitric production is blocked by the enzyme inhibitor, NG-monomethylarginine, and is independent of calcium/calmodulin. RAW264.7 cells demonstrate rapid accumulation of the nitric oxide synthase-encoding mRNAs upon activation. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence to the calcium/calmodulin-dependent nitric oxide synthase previously purified (Bredt, D. S., and Synder, S.H. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 87, 682-685) and cloned (Bredt, D. S., Hwang, P. M., Glatt, C. E., Lowenstein, C., Reed, R. R., and Synder, S. H. (1991) nature 351, 714-718) from rat brain identifies shared binding sites for the cofactors NADPH and flavins in the C-terminal half of both proteins and an additional conserved region near the N terminus that may recognize L-arginine and/or contribute to the active site.


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