Papers

International journal
Mar 18, 2011

Regulation of inducible nitric-oxide synthase by the SPRY domain- and SOCS box-containing proteins.

The Journal of biological chemistry
  • Tadashi Nishiya
  • ,
  • Kazuma Matsumoto
  • ,
  • Satoshi Maekawa
  • ,
  • Emi Kajita
  • ,
  • Takahiro Horinouchi
  • ,
  • Masahiro Fujimuro
  • ,
  • Kouetsu Ogasawara
  • ,
  • Takashi Uehara
  • ,
  • Soichi Miwa

Volume
286
Number
11
First page
9009
Last page
19
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M110.190678

Inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOS, NOS2) plays a prominent role in macrophage bactericidal and tumoricidal activities. A relatively large amount of NO produced via iNOS, however, also targets the macrophage itself for apoptotic cell death. To uncover the intrinsic mechanisms of iNOS regulation, we have characterized the SPRY domain- and SOCS box-containing protein 1 (SPSB1), SPSB2, and SPSB4 that interact with the N-terminal region of iNOS in a D-I-N-N-N sequence-dependent manner. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that these SPSB proteins can induce the subcellular redistribution of iNOS from dense regions to diffused expression in a SOCS box-dependent manner. In immunoprecipitation studies, both Elongin C and Cullin-5, components of the multi-subunit E3 ubiquitin ligase, were found to bind to iNOS via SPSB1, SPSB2, or SPSB4. Consistently, iNOS was polyubiquitinated and degraded in a proteasome-dependent manner when SPSB1, SPSB2, or SPSB4 was expressed. SPSB1 and SPSB4 had a greater effect on iNOS regulation than SPSB2. The iNOS N-terminal fragment (residues 1-124 of human iNOS) could disrupt iNOS-SPSB interactions and inhibit iNOS degradation. In lipopolysaccharide-treated macrophages, this fragment attenuated iNOS ubiquitination and substantially prolonged iNOS lifetime, resulting in a corresponding increase in NO production and enhanced NO-dependent cell death. These results not only demonstrate the mechanism of SPSB-mediated iNOS degradation and the relative contributions of different SPSB proteins to iNOS regulation, but also show that iNOS levels are sophisticatedly regulated by SPSB proteins in activated macrophages to prevent overproduction of NO that could trigger detrimental effects, such as cytotoxicity.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.190678
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21199876
PubMed Central
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3058989
ID information
  • DOI : 10.1074/jbc.M110.190678
  • Pubmed ID : 21199876
  • Pubmed Central ID : PMC3058989

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