Soluble guanylyl cyclase, the NO-receptor, regulates endothelium-dependent vascular relaxation via its transnitrosation activity
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We previously demonstrated that the NO-receptor soluble guanylyl cyclase (GC1) has the ability to transnitrosate other proteins in a reaction that involves, in some cases, oxidized Thioredoxin 1 (oTrx1). This transnitrosation cascade was established in vitro and we identified by mass spectrometry and mutational analysis Cys 610 (C610) of GC1 α-subunit as a major donor of S-nitrosothiols (SNO). To assay the relevance of GC1 transnitrosation under physiological conditions and in oxidative pathologies, we studied a knock-in mouse in which C610 was replaced with a serine (KI αC 610S ) under basal or angiotensin II (Ang II)–treated conditions. Despite similar GC1 expression and NO-stimulated cGMP-forming activity, the Ang II-treated KI mice displayed exacerbated oxidative pathologies including higher mean arterial pressure and more severe cardiac dysfunctions compared to the Ang II-treated WT. These phenotypes were associated with a drastic decrease in global S-nitrosation and in levels of SNO-Trx1 and SNO-RhoA in the KI mice. To investigate the mechanism underlying the dysregulation of blood pressure despite an intact NO-cGMP axis, pressure myography and in vivo intravital microscopy were conducted to analyze the vascular resistance tone. Both approaches indicated that, even in the absence of oxidative stress, the single mutation C610S led to a significant deficiency in acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation while smooth muscle relaxation in response to NO remained unchanged. These findings indicate that the C610S mutation uncoupled the two NO signaling pathways involved in the endothelium and smooth muscle vasorelaxation and suggest that GC1-dependent S-nitrosation is a key player in endothelium-derived hyperpolarization.