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Single-molecule spectroscopy reveals how calmodulin activates NO synthase by controlling its conformational fluctuation dynamics
Authors:Yufan He  Mohammad Mahfuzul Haque  Dennis J. Stuehr  H. Peter Lu
Affiliation:aCenter for Photochemical Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, 43403;;bDepartment of Pathobiology, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, 44195
Abstract:Mechanisms that regulate the nitric oxide synthase enzymes (NOS) are of interest in biology and medicine. Although NOS catalysis relies on domain motions, and is activated by calmodulin binding, the relationships are unclear. We used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) spectroscopy to elucidate the conformational states distribution and associated conformational fluctuation dynamics of the two electron transfer domains in a FRET dye-labeled neuronal NOS reductase domain, and to understand how calmodulin affects the dynamics to regulate catalysis. We found that calmodulin alters NOS conformational behaviors in several ways: It changes the distance distribution between the NOS domains, shortens the lifetimes of the individual conformational states, and instills conformational discipline by greatly narrowing the distributions of the conformational states and fluctuation rates. This information was specifically obtainable only by single-molecule spectroscopic measurements, and reveals how calmodulin promotes catalysis by shaping the physical and temporal conformational behaviors of NOS.Although proteins adopt structures determined by their amino acid sequences, they are not static objects and fluctuate among ensembles of conformations (1). Transitions between these states can occur on a variety of length scales (Å to nm) and time scales (ps to s) and have been linked to functionally relevant phenomena such as allosteric signaling, enzyme catalysis, and protein–protein interactions (24). Indeed, protein conformational fluctuations and dynamics, often associated with static and dynamic inhomogeneity, are thought to play a crucial role in biomolecular functions (511). It is difficult to characterize such spatially and temporally inhomogeneous dynamics in bulk solution by an ensemble-averaged measurement, especially in proteins that undergo multiple-conformation transformations. In such cases, single-molecule spectroscopy is a powerful approach to analyze protein conformational states and dynamics under physiological conditions, and can provide a molecular-level perspective on how a protein’s structural dynamics link to its functional mechanisms (1221).A case in point is the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes (2224), whose nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis involves electron transfer reactions that are associated with relatively large-scale movement (tens of Å) of the enzyme domains (Fig. 1A). During catalysis, NADPH-derived electrons first transfer into an FAD domain and an FMN domain in NOS that together comprise the NOS reductase domain (NOSr), and then transfer from the FMN domain to a heme group that is bound in a separate attached “oxygenase” domain, which then enables NO synthesis to begin (22, 2527). The electron transfers into and out of the FMN domain are the key steps for catalysis, and they appear to rely on the FMN domain cycling between electron-accepting and electron-donating conformational states (28, 29) (Fig. 1B). In this model, the FMN domain is suggested to be highly dynamic and flexible due to a connecting hinge that allows it to alternate between its electron-accepting (FAD→FMN) or closed conformation and electron-donating (FMN→heme) or open conformation (Fig. 1 A and B) (28, 3036). In the electron-accepting closed conformation, the FMN domain interacts with the NADPH/FAD domain (FNR domain) to receive electrons, whereas in the electron donating open conformation the FMN domain has moved away to expose the bound FMN cofactor so that it may transfer electrons to a protein acceptor like the NOS oxygenase domain, or to a generic protein acceptor like cytochrome c. In this way, the reductase domain structure cycles between closed and open conformations to deliver electrons, according to a conformational equilibrium that determines the movements and thus the electron flux capacity of the FMN domain (25, 28, 32, 34, 35, 37). A similar conformational switching mechanism is thought to enable electron transfer through the FMN domain in the related flavoproteins NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase and methionine synthase reductase (3842).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.(A) The nNOSr ribbon structure (from PDB: 1TLL) showing bound FAD (yellow) in FNR domain (green), FMN (orange) in FMN domain (yellow), connecting hinge (blue), and the Cy3–Cy5 label positions (pink) and distance (42 Å, dashed line). (B) Cartoon of an equilibrium between the FMN-closed and FMN-open states, with Cy dye label positions indicated. (C) Cytochrome c reductase activity of nNOSr proteins in their CaM-bound and CaM-free states. Color scheme of bar graphs: Black, WT nNOSr unlabeled; Red, Cys-lite (CL) nNOSr unlabeled; Blue, E827C/Q1268C CL nNOSr unlabeled; and Dark cyan, E827C/Q1268C CL nNOSr labeled.NOS enzymes also contain a calmodulin (CaM) binding domain that is located just before the N terminus of the FMN domain (Fig. 1B), and this provides an important layer of regulation (25, 27). CaM binding to NOS enzymes increases electron transfer from NADPH through the reductase domain and also triggers electron transfer from the FMN domain to the NOS heme as is required for NO synthesis (31, 32). The ability of CaM, or similar signaling proteins, to regulate electron transfer reactions in enzymes is unusual, and the mechanism is a topic of interest and intensive study. It has long been known that CaM binding alters NOSr structure such that, on average, it populates a more open conformation (43, 44). Recent equilibrium studies have detected a buildup of between two to four discreet conformational populations in NOS enzymes and in related flavoproteins, and in some cases, have also estimated the distances between the bound FAD and FMN cofactors in the different species (26, 36, 37, 39, 40), and furthermore, have confirmed that CaM shifts the NOS population distribution toward more open conformations (34, 36, 45). Although valuable, such ensemble-averaged results about conformational states cannot explain how electrons transfer through these enzymes, or how CaM increases the electron flux in NOS, because answering these questions requires a coordinate understanding of the dynamics of the conformational fluctuations. Indeed, computer modeling has indicated that a shift toward more open conformations as is induced by CaM binding to nNOS should, on its own, actually diminish electron flux through nNOS and through certain related flavoproteins (38). Despite its importance, measuring enzyme conformational fluctuation dynamics is highly challenging, and as far as we know, there have been no direct measures on the NOS enzymes or on related flavoproteins, nor studies on how CaM binding might influence the conformational fluctuation dynamics in NOS.To address this gap, we used single-molecule fluorescence energy resonance transfer (FRET) spectroscopy to characterize individual molecules of nNOSr that had been labeled at two specific positions with Cyanine 3 (Cy3) donor and Cyanine 5 (Cy5) acceptor dye molecules, regarding their conformational states distribution and the associated conformational fluctuation dynamics, which in turn enabled us to determine how CaM binding impacts both parameters. This work provides a unique perspective and a novel study of the NOS enzymes and within the broader flavoprotein family, which includes the mammalian enzymes methionine synthase reductase (MSR) and cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR), and reveals how CaM’s control of the conformational behaviors may regulate the electron transfer reactions of NOS catalysis.
Keywords:conformational motion, flavoprotein, domain–  domain interaction, FRET, electron transfer
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