Kayyali U S, Donaldson C, Huang H, Abdelnour R, Hassoun P M
Department of Medicine, Pulmonary and Critical Care Division, Tupper Research Institute, New England Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2001 Apr 27;276(17):14359-65. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M010100200. Epub 2001 Jan 22.
The enzyme xanthine oxidase (XO) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several disease processes, such as ischemia-reperfusion injury, because of its ability to generate reactive oxygen species. The expression of XO and its precursor xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) is regulated at pre- and posttranslational levels by agents such as lipopolysaccharide and hypoxia. Posttranslational modification of the protein, for example through thiol oxidation or proteolysis, has been shown to be important in converting XDH to XO. The possibility of posttranslational modification of XDH/XO through phosphorylation has not been adequately investigated in mammalian cells, and studies have reported conflicting results. The present report demonstrates that XDH/XO is phosphorylated in rat pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (RPMEC) and that phosphorylation is greatly increased ( approximately 50-fold) in response to acute hypoxia (4 h). XDH/XO phosphorylation appears to be mediated, at least in part, by casein kinase II and p38 kinase as inhibitors of these kinases partially prevent XDH/XO phosphorylation. In addition, the results indicate that p38 kinase, a stress-activated kinase, becomes activated in response to hypoxia (an approximately 4-fold increase after 1 h of exposure of RPMEC to hypoxia) further supporting a role for this kinase in hypoxia-stimulated XDH/XO phosphorylation. Finally, hypoxia-induced XDH/XO phosphorylation is accompanied by a 2-fold increase in XDH/XO activity, which is prevented by inhibitors of phosphorylation. In summary, this study shows that XDH/XO is phosphorylated in hypoxic RPMEC through a mechanism involving p38 kinase and casein kinase II and that phosphorylation is necessary for hypoxia-induced enzymatic activation.
黄嘌呤氧化酶(XO)因其产生活性氧的能力,已被认为与多种疾病过程的发病机制有关,如缺血再灌注损伤。XO及其前体黄嘌呤脱氢酶(XDH)的表达在翻译前和翻译后水平受到脂多糖和缺氧等因素的调节。蛋白质的翻译后修饰,例如通过硫醇氧化或蛋白水解,已被证明在将XDH转化为XO的过程中很重要。在哺乳动物细胞中,通过磷酸化对XDH/XO进行翻译后修饰的可能性尚未得到充分研究,并且研究报告的结果相互矛盾。本报告表明,XDH/XO在大鼠肺微血管内皮细胞(RPMEC)中被磷酸化,并且在急性缺氧(4小时)时磷酸化显著增加(约50倍)。XDH/XO磷酸化似乎至少部分由酪蛋白激酶II和p38激酶介导,因为这些激酶的抑制剂部分阻止了XDH/XO磷酸化。此外,结果表明,p38激酶是一种应激激活激酶,在缺氧时被激活(RPMEC暴露于缺氧1小时后增加约4倍),这进一步支持了该激酶在缺氧刺激的XDH/XO磷酸化中的作用。最后,缺氧诱导的XDH/XO磷酸化伴随着XDH/XO活性增加2倍,而磷酸化抑制剂可阻止这种增加。总之,本研究表明,在缺氧的RPMEC中,XDH/XO通过涉及p38激酶和酪蛋白激酶II的机制被磷酸化,并且磷酸化是缺氧诱导的酶激活所必需的。