Adenylyl Cyclase Isoform 6 in the Pulmonary Artery Is Inhibited by Hypoxia via Cysteine Nitrosylation

Saeid Maghsoudi, Vikram Bhatia, Martha Hinton, Nisha Singh, Modh Wasif Khan, Prashen Chelikani, Shyamala, Dakshinamurti
University of Manitoba Faculty of Health Sciences. University of Manitoba Children’s Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba. University of Manitoba College of Dentistry.
Canada

American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 2024;
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2023-0447OC

Abstract
Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) is a hypoxic disorder of pulmonary vascular relaxation, mediated in part by adenylyl cyclase (AC). Neonatal pulmonary arteries (PA) express mainly AC6 isoform, followed by AC3, 7 and 9. AC6 expression is upregulated in hypoxia. We reported AC enzyme inhibition due to S-nitrosylation in PPHN PA, and in PA myocytes exposed to hypoxia. We hypothesize that hypoxia promotes cysteine thiol nitrosylation of AC6, impairing cAMP production. HEK293T cells stably expressing AC isoforms (AC3, 5, 6, 7, 9), or cysteine-to-alanine mutants AC6_C1004A, AC6_C1145A or AC6_C447A were cultured in normoxia (21% O2) or hypoxia (10% O2) for 72 hours, or challenged with nitroso donor S-nitrosocysteine (CysNO). AC activity was determined by real-time live-cell cAMP measurement (cADDis assay) or terbium-norfloxacin AC catalytic assay, with or without challenge by allosteric agonist forskolin; protein S-nitrosylation detected by biotin switch method and quantified by affinity precipitation. Only AC6 catalytic activity is inhibited in hypoxia or by S-nitrosylating agent, in presence or absence of forskolin; impaired cAMP production in hypoxia correlates with increased cysteine nitrosylation of AC6. Selective AC6 inhibition in pulmonary artery myocytes extinguishes AC sensitivity to inhibition by hypoxia. Alanine substitution of C1004, but not of other cysteines, decreases S-nitrosylation of AC6. AC activity is diminished in AC6_C1004A compared to AC6 wild type. Substitution of C1004 also extinguishes the inhibition of AC6 by hypoxia. We conclude AC6 is uniquely S-nitrosylated in hypoxia, inhibiting its activity and cAMP generation. We speculate that S-nitrosylation at C1004 may inhibit AC6 interaction with Gαs, playing a role in PPHN pathophysiology.

Category
Class III. Pulmonary Hypertension Associated with Alveolar Hypoxia
Vascular Cell Biology and Mechanisms of Pulmonary Vascular Disease

Age Focus: Pediatric Pulmonary Vascular Disease

Fresh or Filed Publication: Fresh (PHresh). Less than 1-2 years since publication

Article Access
Free PDF File or Full Text Article Available Through PubMed or DOI: No

Scroll to Top