Hypoxia induces a functionally significant and translationally efficient neuronal NO synthase mRNA variant

Michael E. Ward(University of Toronto), Mourad Toporsian(McGill University), Jeremy A. Scott(St. Michael's Hospital), Hwee Teoh(University of Toronto), Vasanthi Govindaraju(Christie (Canada)), Adrian Quan(University of Toronto), Avraham D. Wener(University of Toronto), Guilin Wang(University of Toronto), Si′n C. Bevan(St. Michael's Hospital), Derek C. Newton(University of Toronto), Philip A. Marsden(University of Toronto)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
November 1, 2005
Cited by 111Open Access
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Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that induction of neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) impairs vascular smooth muscle contractility after hypoxia. nNOS protein was increased in aorta, mesenteric arterioles, pulmonary arteries, brain, and diaphragm from rats exposed to 8% O2 for 48 hours and in human aortic SMCs after hypoxic incubation (1% O2). Ca-dependent NO synthase activity was increased in endothelium-denuded aortic segments from hypoxia-exposed rats. N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester enhanced the contractile responses of endothelium-denuded aortic rings and mesenteric arterioles from hypoxia-exposed but not normoxic rats (P < 0.05). The hypoxia-inducible mRNA transcript expressed by human cells was found to contain a novel 5'-untranslated region, consistent with activation of transcription in the genomic region contiguous with exon 2. Translational efficiency of this transcript is markedly increased compared with previously described human nNOS mRNAs. Transgenic mice possessing a lacZ reporter construct under control of these genomic sequences demonstrated expression of the construct after exposure to hypoxia (8% O2, 48 hours) in the aorta, mesenteric arterioles, renal papilla, and brain. These results reveal a novel human nNOS promoter that confers the ability to rapidly upregulate nNOS expression in response to hypoxia with a functionally significant effect on vascular smooth muscle contraction.


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