Volume 17, Number 19,
Issue of October 1, 1997
pp. 7245-7251
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Molecular Mechanism of the Inactivation of Tryptophan Hydroxylase
by Nitric Oxide: Attack on Critical Sulfhydryls that Spare the Enzyme
Iron Center
Received May 27, 1997; revised July 14, 1997; accepted July 16, 1997.
Donald M. Kuhn1, 2 and
Robert Arthur Jr1
1 Cellular and Clinical Neurobiology Program,
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, and
2 Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Wayne State
University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201
Tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH), the initial and rate-limiting enzyme
in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-HT), is
irreversibly inactivated by nitric oxide (NO). We have expressed brain
TPH as a recombinant glutathione-S-transferase fusion
protein and delineated the catalytic domain of the enzyme as the region spanning amino acids 99-444. Highly purified TPH catalytic core, like
the native enzyme from brain, is inactivated by NO in a
concentration-dependent manner. Removal of iron from TPH produces an
apoenzyme with low activity that can be reconverted to its highly
active holo-form by the addition of ferrous iron. Apo-TPH exposed to NO
cannot be reactivated by iron. Treatment of holo-TPH (iron-loaded) with the disulfide 5,5
-dithio-bis (2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) causes an
inactivation of TPH that is readily reversed by dithiothreitol (DTT).
DTNB-treated TPH [sulfhydryl (SH)-protected] exposed to NO is
returned to full activity by thiol reduction with DTT. The inactivation
of native TPH by NO cannot be reversed by either iron or DTT. These
data indicate that NO inactivates TPH by selective action on critical
SH groups (i.e., cysteine residues) while sparing catalytic iron sites
within the enzyme. The results are interpreted with reference to the
substituted amphetamines, which are neurotoxic to 5-HT neurons, that
inactivate TPH in vivo and are now known to produce NO
and other reactive oxygen species in vivo.
Key words:
tryptophan hydroxylase;
nitric oxide;
sulfhydryls;
catalytic iron site;
serotonin;
neurotoxic amphetamines