Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.

Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase (nNOS) is the biosynthetic enzyme responsible for nitric oxide (·NO) production in muscles and in the nervous system. This constitutive enzyme, unlike its endothelial and inducible counterparts, presents an N-terminal PDZ domain known to display a preference for PDZ-bi...

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Main Authors: Lucía Sánchez-Ruiloba, Clara Aicart-Ramos, Lucía García-Guerra, Julia Pose-Utrilla, Ignacio Rodríguez-Crespo, Teresa Iglesias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989272?pdf=render
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author Lucía Sánchez-Ruiloba
Clara Aicart-Ramos
Lucía García-Guerra
Julia Pose-Utrilla
Ignacio Rodríguez-Crespo
Teresa Iglesias
author_facet Lucía Sánchez-Ruiloba
Clara Aicart-Ramos
Lucía García-Guerra
Julia Pose-Utrilla
Ignacio Rodríguez-Crespo
Teresa Iglesias
author_sort Lucía Sánchez-Ruiloba
collection DOAJ
description Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase (nNOS) is the biosynthetic enzyme responsible for nitric oxide (·NO) production in muscles and in the nervous system. This constitutive enzyme, unlike its endothelial and inducible counterparts, presents an N-terminal PDZ domain known to display a preference for PDZ-binding motifs bearing acidic residues at -2 position. In a previous work, we discovered that the C-terminal end of two members of protein kinase D family (PKD1 and PKD2) constitutes a PDZ-ligand. PKD1 has been shown to regulate multiple cellular processes and, when activated, becomes autophosphorylated at Ser 916, a residue located at -2 position of its PDZ-binding motif. Since nNOS and PKD are spatially enriched in postsynaptic densities and dendrites, the main objective of our study was to determine whether PKD1 activation could result in a direct interaction with nNOS through their respective PDZ-ligand and PDZ domain, and to analyze the functional consequences of this interaction. Herein we demonstrate that PKD1 associates with nNOS in neurons and in transfected cells, and that kinase activation enhances PKD1-nNOS co-immunoprecipitation and subcellular colocalization. However, transfection of mammalian cells with PKD1 mutants and yeast two hybrid assays showed that the association of these two enzymes does not depend on PKD1 PDZ-ligand but its pleckstrin homology domain. Furthermore, this domain was able to pull-down nNOS from brain extracts and bind to purified nNOS, indicating that it mediates a direct PKD1-nNOS interaction. In addition, using mass spectrometry we demonstrate that PKD1 specifically phosphorylates nNOS in the activatory residue Ser 1412, and that this phosphorylation increases nNOS activity and ·NO production in living cells. In conclusion, these novel findings reveal a crucial role of PKD1 in the regulation of nNOS activation and synthesis of ·NO, a mediator involved in physiological neuronal signaling or neurotoxicity under pathological conditions such as ischemic stroke or neurodegeneration.
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spelling doaj.art-8d5276156e7e43be83c844c3cb6470502022-12-21T23:59:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0194e9519110.1371/journal.pone.0095191Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.Lucía Sánchez-RuilobaClara Aicart-RamosLucía García-GuerraJulia Pose-UtrillaIgnacio Rodríguez-CrespoTeresa IglesiasNeuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase (nNOS) is the biosynthetic enzyme responsible for nitric oxide (·NO) production in muscles and in the nervous system. This constitutive enzyme, unlike its endothelial and inducible counterparts, presents an N-terminal PDZ domain known to display a preference for PDZ-binding motifs bearing acidic residues at -2 position. In a previous work, we discovered that the C-terminal end of two members of protein kinase D family (PKD1 and PKD2) constitutes a PDZ-ligand. PKD1 has been shown to regulate multiple cellular processes and, when activated, becomes autophosphorylated at Ser 916, a residue located at -2 position of its PDZ-binding motif. Since nNOS and PKD are spatially enriched in postsynaptic densities and dendrites, the main objective of our study was to determine whether PKD1 activation could result in a direct interaction with nNOS through their respective PDZ-ligand and PDZ domain, and to analyze the functional consequences of this interaction. Herein we demonstrate that PKD1 associates with nNOS in neurons and in transfected cells, and that kinase activation enhances PKD1-nNOS co-immunoprecipitation and subcellular colocalization. However, transfection of mammalian cells with PKD1 mutants and yeast two hybrid assays showed that the association of these two enzymes does not depend on PKD1 PDZ-ligand but its pleckstrin homology domain. Furthermore, this domain was able to pull-down nNOS from brain extracts and bind to purified nNOS, indicating that it mediates a direct PKD1-nNOS interaction. In addition, using mass spectrometry we demonstrate that PKD1 specifically phosphorylates nNOS in the activatory residue Ser 1412, and that this phosphorylation increases nNOS activity and ·NO production in living cells. In conclusion, these novel findings reveal a crucial role of PKD1 in the regulation of nNOS activation and synthesis of ·NO, a mediator involved in physiological neuronal signaling or neurotoxicity under pathological conditions such as ischemic stroke or neurodegeneration.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989272?pdf=render
spellingShingle Lucía Sánchez-Ruiloba
Clara Aicart-Ramos
Lucía García-Guerra
Julia Pose-Utrilla
Ignacio Rodríguez-Crespo
Teresa Iglesias
Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
PLoS ONE
title Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
title_full Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
title_fullStr Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
title_full_unstemmed Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
title_short Protein kinase D interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412.
title_sort protein kinase d interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphorylates the activatory residue serine 1412
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3989272?pdf=render
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