Background: NOSs possess a highly conserved tryptophan residue, proximal to the heme-thiolate bond. Results: Replacement of this Trp by His or Phe in Bacillus subtilis NOS altered both thermodynamic and kinetic parameters and NO synthesis. Conclusion: B. subtilis NOS control catalysis by tuning the electron density of its heme-thiolate bond. Significance: This is the first study to investigate these relationships in a bacterial NOS.Nitric-oxide synthases (NOS) are heme-thiolate enzymes that generate nitric oxide (NO) from L-arginine. Mammalian and bacterial NOSs contain a conserved tryptophan (Trp) that hydrogen bonds with the heme-thiolate ligand. We mutated Trp 66 to His and Phe (W66H, W66F) in B. subtilis NOS to investigate how heme-thiolate electronic properties control enzyme catalysis. The mutations had opposite effects on heme midpoint potential (؊302, ؊361, and ؊427 mV for W66H, wild-type (WT), and W66F, respectively). These changes were associated with rank order (W66H < WT < W66F) changes in the rates of oxygen activation and product formation in Arg hydroxylation and N-hydroxyarginine (NOHA) oxidation single turnover reactions, and in the O 2 reactivity of the ferrous heme-NO product complex. However, enzyme ferrous heme-O 2 autoxidation showed an opposite rank order. Tetrahydrofolate supported NO synthesis by WT and the mutant NOS. All three proteins showed similar extents of product formation (L-Arg 3 NOHA or NOHA 3 citrulline) in single turnover studies, but the W66F mutant showed a 2.5 times lower activity when the reactions were supported by flavoproteins and NADPH. We conclude that Trp 66 controls several catalytic parameters by tuning the electron density of the heme-thiolate bond. A greater electron density (as in W66F) improves oxygen activation and reactivity toward substrate, but decreases heme-dioxy stability and lowers the driving force for heme reduction. In the WT enzyme the Trp 66 residue balances these opposing effects for optimal catalysis.Nitric oxide (NO) is a small molecule essential to life in higher organisms. In mammals, NO synthesis is performed by three isoforms (inducible, endothelial, and neuronal) of homodimeric nitric-oxide synthases (NOS, EC 1.14.13.39). Each monomer is comprised of a nitric-oxide synthase oxygenase domain (NOSoxy), 3 with structurally defined binding sites for its substrate L-arginine, tetrahydrobiopterin (H 4 B), and a Cyscoordinated Fe-protoporphyrin IX moiety (heme), and a C-terminal reductase domain (NOSred) with binding sites for NADPH, FAD, and FMN. NOSoxy and NOSred are connected by a calmodulin binding sequence (1, 2).The existence of NOS is not unique to animals. A number of bacterial NOS or NOS-like proteins have been isolated and characterized during the past 10 years . With the exception of the complete NOS present in Sorangium cellulosum (25), all of the bacterial NOSs characterized to date consist of a truncated NOSoxy domain that lacks a portion of the N-terminal region and has no attached reductase domain (30). Thus, NO synthesis by bact...