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Departments of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences and of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Magee-Womens Research Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213
A standard approach
to assessing nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity in tissue homogenates
is 1) removal of small-molecular-weight substances by
size-exclusion chromatography, 2) adding back of substrates/cofactors in precise concentrations with a radioactive isotope of arginine (Arg), and 3) quantification of labeled
citrulline (Cit) after separation of Arg and Cit by cation-exchange
column chromatography. Using this approach and
L-[2,3-3H]Arg, we found that the major
product(s) was not Cit in cortical homogenates prepared from rat,
mouse, and human kidneys. The product(s) mimicked Cit, insofar as it
passed freely through cation-exchange columns and comigrated with Cit
on both one-dimensional and two-dimensional straight-phase thin-layer
chromatography systems. However, it was clearly resolved from
Cit by precolumn derivatization and reverse-phase HPLC. The maximum
velocity and Michaelis-Menten constant were approximately 100 pmol · mg
protein
1 · min
1 and 100 µM,
respectively, in renal cortical homogenates from rats. The enzyme
activity was the same in the presence or absence of cofactors including
Ca2+, calmodulin, tetrahydrobiopterin, and NADPH. It
was only modestly inhibited by L-Arg analogs and was mainly
in the supernatant after a 100,000 g centrifugation. These
enzyme characteristics contrasted markedly with those simultaneously
obtained for NOS activity in placental homogenates. Thus results from
the conventional NOS activity assay should be viewed cautiously.
kidney; renal cortex; human placenta; rats; mice; humans; nitric oxide synthase; arginine; arginine analogs; chromatography
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