Associate Provost for Research
Boston University Medical Campus
NHLBI - National Heart, Lung & Blood Research Resources

Abstract

Grant Number: 5R01HL067266-04
PI Name: KEANEY, JOHN F.
PI Email: jkeaney@bu.edu
PI Title: PROFESSOR
Project Title: Hypochlorite-Mediated Impairment of Endothelial Function

Abstract: DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Oxidative stress contributes to the of atherosclerosis, however that stress development demonstrating radical-scavenging antioxidants ameliorate this disease has proven difficult, perhaps due to the current focus on lipid peroxidation as the major vehicle for oxidative stress in atherosclerosis. There is evidence that two-electron oxidants from myeloperoxidase (MPO), such as HOCl, are important in atherosclerosis and these oxidants would not be sensitive to "classical" lipid-soluble antioxidants such as vitamin E. MPO binds to the endothelium and we have found that HOCl produces eNOS modification and truncation into a 100 kDa form leading to impaired NO bioactivity. This effect of HOCl is inhibited by SOD -- consistent with preliminary data that HOCl induces superoxide production in endothelial cells. Thus, as a central hypothesis, we submit that in atherosclerosis HOCI induces eNOS modification and truncation leading to endothelial superoxide production and reduced NO bioactivity. The goal of this project, therefore, is to identify the role of HOCl in modulating endothelial function and identify the mechanism(s) involved. To achieve this goal, we will first establish the relative contribution of HOCl to MPO-mediated oxidative events in HAECs and define conditions for examining the effect of HOCl on EDNO bioactivity in cultured human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs). We will then examine HOCl-mediated superoxide production and the potential roles of tetrahydrobiopterin oxidation and eNOS modification in this process. With respect to the latter, we will characterize this modified protein using chromatography and mass spectroscopy coupled with peptide fingerprinting. With this information, we will develop mutant eNOS corresponding to HOCl-induced truncation for expression in both COS-7 and endothelial cells to examine its implications for EDNO bioactivity. This HOCl-modified eNOS will be examined for potential effects on eNOS cellular distribution, protein-protein interactions, and phosphorylation status. We will then test the role of HOC in vivo by first defining the relation between eNOS modification and impaired EDNO bioactivity in the WHHL model of atherosclerosis. We will then transfect control rabbit vessels with mutant eNOS and attempt to link eNOS modification with impaired EDNO bioactivity. To test the role of MPO-mediated oxidation in atherosclerosis, we will treat WHHL rabbits with structurally unrelated inhibitors of MPO and examine the implications for HOCl-mediated eNOS modification and NO bioactivity. Using this strategy, we should be able to define the contribution of MPO-induced oxidation to the vascular diathesis of atherosclerosis.

Thesaurus Terms:
oxidative stress, oxidizing agent, vascular endothelium
antioxidant, atherosclerosis, myeloperoxidase, nitric oxide synthase, phosphorylation, protein localization, protein protein interaction, superoxide, superoxide dismutase, tetrahydrobiopterin
chemical fingerprinting, clinical research, human subject, laboratory rabbit, protein engineering, tissue /cell culture, transfection

Institution: BOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
715 ALBANY ST, 560
BOSTON, MA 021182394
Fiscal Year: 2006
Department: MEDICINE
Project Start: 15-MAR-2003
Project End: 29-FEB-2008
ICD: NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
IRG: ECS


Boston, Tue, 23 Jan 2007 16:00:49 EST