Montagnani M, Chen H, Barr V A, Quon M J
Cardiology Branch, NHLBI, and Diabetes Branch, NIDDK, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2001 Aug 10;276(32):30392-8. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M103702200. Epub 2001 Jun 11.
Vasodilator actions of insulin are mediated by activation of endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) and subsequent production of NO. Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and Akt play important roles in insulin-signaling pathways leading to production of NO in vascular endothelium. Here we dissected mechanisms whereby insulin activates eNOS by using the fluorescent dye DAF-2 to directly measure NO production in single cells. Insulin caused a rapid increase in intracellular NO in NIH-3T3(IR) cells transiently transfected with eNOS. The stimulation of NO production by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) was abrogated by pretreatment of cells with the calcium chelator 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. Remarkably, in the same cells, insulin-stimulated production of NO was unaffected. However, cells expressing the eNOS-S1179A mutant (disrupted Akt phosphorylation site) did not produce detectable NO in response to insulin, whereas the response to LPA was similar to that observed in cells expressing wild-type eNOS. Moreover, production of NO in response to insulin was blocked by coexpression of an inhibitory mutant of Akt, whereas the response to LPA was unaffected. Phosphorylation of eNOS at Ser(1179) was observed only in response to treatment with insulin, but not with LPA. Interestingly, platelet-derived growth factor treatment of cells activated Akt but not eNOS. Results from human vascular endothelial cells were qualitatively similar to those obtained in transfected NIH-3T3(IR) cells, although the magnitude of the responses was smaller. We conclude that insulin regulates eNOS activity using a Ca(2+)-independent mechanism requiring phosphorylation of eNOS by Akt. Importantly, phosphorylation-dependent mechanisms that enhance eNOS activity can operate independently from Ca(2+)-dependent mechanisms.
胰岛素的血管舒张作用是通过激活内皮型一氧化氮合酶(eNOS)以及随后产生一氧化氮(NO)来介导的。磷脂酰肌醇3激酶和Akt在导致血管内皮细胞产生NO的胰岛素信号通路中发挥重要作用。在此,我们利用荧光染料DAF-2直接测量单细胞中的NO产生,剖析了胰岛素激活eNOS的机制。胰岛素使瞬时转染了eNOS的NIH-3T3(IR)细胞内的NO迅速增加。用钙螯合剂1,2-双(2-氨基苯氧基)乙烷-N,N,N',N'-四乙酸预处理细胞可消除溶血磷脂酸(LPA)对NO产生的刺激。值得注意的是,在相同细胞中,胰岛素刺激的NO产生不受影响。然而,表达eNOS-S1179A突变体(Akt磷酸化位点被破坏)的细胞对胰岛素无反应,检测不到NO产生,而对LPA的反应与表达野生型eNOS的细胞相似。此外,共表达Akt抑制性突变体可阻断胰岛素刺激的NO产生,而对LPA的反应不受影响。仅在胰岛素处理后观察到eNOS的Ser(1179)位点发生磷酸化,而LPA处理后未观察到。有趣地是,用血小板衍生生长因子处理细胞可激活Akt,但不能激活eNOS。人血管内皮细胞的结果与转染的NIH-3T3(IR)细胞的结果在性质上相似,尽管反应的程度较小。我们得出结论,胰岛素通过一种不依赖Ca(2+)的机制调节eNOS活性,该机制需要Akt使eNOS磷酸化。重要的是,增强eNOS活性的磷酸化依赖性机制可独立于Ca(2+)依赖性机制发挥作用。