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An Improved Assay for Measurement of Nitric Oxide Synthase Activity in Biological Tissues

โœ Scribed by Roberto R. Giraldez; Jay L. Zweier


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
124 KB
Volume
261
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2697

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โœฆ Synopsis


While the L-arginine conversion assay has been utilized to measure nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity in isolated enzyme and pure cell preparations, this method often fails to provide accurate measurements in whole tissues. Biological tissues contain variable amounts of unlabeled substrate and enzymes are present which can compete for substrate or independently form the product L-citrulline.

NOS-independent conversion of radiolabeled L-arginine to L-citrulline occurs due to arginase-and ornithine transcarbamylase-mediated reactions and this limits the accuracy of this assay for measurement of NOS activity.

In heart tissue, NOS-independent L-citrulline formation was observed which could not be blocked by the NOS inhibitor L-NAME but was blocked by the arginase inhibitor L-ornithine. To eliminate the effect of arginasemediated L-citrulline formation, KCl-washed membrane particulate fractions were obtained by high-speed centrifugation. While arginase-mediated nonspecific activity was 85% concentrated in the cytosol, 93% of NOS activity was localized within the particulate fraction of the heart. The remaining arginase activity found in the crude pellet was mostly removed by a one-step KCl wash purification and when incubation periods of 8 min were utilized specific and accurate measurements of NOS activity were obtained. NOS enzymatic properties were defined for rat heart preparations with a K m of 2.9 M for L-arginine. All NOS activity detected was calcium-dependent suggesting it originated from the constitutive endothelial isoform. Thus, NOS-independent activity can be largely eliminated from the heart tissue by assaying KCl-washed membrane particulate fractions and this enables accurate quantitation of NOS activity.


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