Aims/hypothesis: Impaired nitric oxide (NO) bioactivity and increased superoxide (SO) production are characteristics of vascular endothelial dysfunction in diabetes. The underlying mechanisms remain unknown. In this regard, we investigated the role of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) bioavailability in regulating endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity, dimerisation and SO production in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice. Methods: Mouse aortas were used for assays of the following: (1) aortic function by isometric tension; (2) NO by electronic paramagnetic resonance; (3) SO by lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence and dihydroethidine fluorescence; (4) total biopterin and BH4 by high-performance liquid chromatography; and (5) eNOS protein expression and dimerisation by immunoblotting. Results: In diabetic mouse aortas, relaxations to acetylcholine and NO levels were significantly decreased, but SO production was increased, in association with reductions in total biopterins and BH4. Although total eNOS levels were increased in diabetes, the protein mainly existed in monomeric form. Conversely, specifically augmented BH4 in diabetic endothelium preserved eNOS dimerisation, but the expression remained unchanged. Conclusions/interpretation: Our results demonstrate that BH4 plays an important role in regulating eNOS activity and its functional protein structure, suggesting that increasing endothelial BH4 and/or protecting it from oxidation may be a rational therapeutic strategy to restore eNOS function in diabetes.
A 64-year-old woman with a mechanical mitral valve prosthesis developed late-onset Candida endocarditis. Blood cultures grew Candida glabrata and Candida krusei. Transesophageal echocardiography demonstrated vegetations on the valve. The patient was not medically fit for valve replacement, but her condition was successfully treated with 6 weeks of intravenous caspofungin therapy.
Endothelium-dependent relaxation in conduit vessels is mediated largely by nitric oxide (NO), produced by the enzyme endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in the presence of the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) and mediated through a cGMP-dependent downstream signalling cascade. Endothelial NOS regulates blood pressure in vivo, and impaired endothelial NO bioactivity in vascular disease states may contribute to systemic hypertension. In the absence of sufficient levels of the cofactor BH4, NO becomes uncoupled from arginine oxidation and eNOS produces superoxide rather than NO. The enzymatic uncoupling of eNOS is an important feature of vascular disease states associated with increased oxidative stress. However, whether eNOS coupling, rather than overall eNOS activity, has specific effects on endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation in vitro, or on blood pressure regulation in vivo, remains unclear. In this study, we evaluate the relationships between blood pressure and endothelial function in models of eNOS uncoupling, using mice with endothelium-targeted transgenic eNOS overexpression (eNOS-Tg), in comparison with littermates in which eNOS coupling was rescued by additional endotheliumtargeted overexpression of GTP cyclohydrolase 1 (eNOS/GCH-Tg) to increase endothelial BH4 levels. Despite the previously characterized differences in eNOS-dependent superoxide production between these animals, we find that blood pressure is equally reduced in both genotypes, compared with wild-type animals. Furthermore, both eNOS-Tg and eNOS/GCH-Tg mice exhibit similarly impaired endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation. We show that reduced vasorelaxation responses result from desensitization of cGMP-mediated signalling and are associated with increased NO production rather than changes in superoxide production.
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