четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

UK's O2 apologizes for smartphone problems

The head of mobile phone operator O2 has apologized to customers in the British capital who were unable to make calls after the group's network was swamped by people using smartphones.

In an interview published in the Financial Times newspaper on Tuesday, O2 Chief Executive Robert Dunne said some customers in London had periodically not been able to make or receive calls or transmit data because of pressure on the network from smartphones such as the iPhone.

The network problems in the second half of the year were blamed on increased use of applications by customers with smartphones that repeatedly pull data off the Internet at short intervals.

Baby talk gets the word out, scientists find

WASHINGTON All that baby talk adults use with infants isn't justsilly cooing - scientists say it appears to be vital in helpingbabies' brains absorb key building blocks of language.

And this high-pitched, drawn-out speech is universal, whetherparents are speaking in English, Swedish or Russian.

University of Washington neuroscientist Patricia Kuhl saysparents unconsciously exaggerate the vowel sounds that every infant -no matter what language he or she ultimately will speak - needs tomaster the phonetic elements of speech.

Kuhl's tape-recordings show mothers speaking in a singsong thatstresses and stretches the vowels. Take the word "bead." People cansay …

Swiss skier Cuche posts fastest time in training

BEAVER CREEK, Colorado (AP) — Didier Cuche of Switzerland has turned in the fastest time in a World Cup downhill training session on the demanding Birds of Prey course.

Cuche finished Tuesday's run in 1 minute, 47.80 seconds, more than a half-second quicker than Adrien Theaux of France. The challenging Beaver Creek course seems to …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Phillies 4, Rockies 3

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Win tickets for grand prix

Competition The FIM British Speedway Grand Prix at theMillennium Stadium in Cardiff has become one of the biggest eventsin the British motorsport calendar.

And this year's event promises to be more exciting and spectacular than ever before.

The 16 best riders in the world, including Britain's ScottNicholls, Chris Harris and Edward Kennett, will line up in front ofmore than 40,000 fans as they go full throttle to contest the WorldChampionship. It will be a night of top-class sporting action andhigh drama, a night not to miss with 500cc bikes, no brakes andacceleration quicker than an F1 car, racing wheel to wheel - and youcan be there to relish the …

Long-time Parkview Home administrator will be missed

Markham, Ont.

Several hundred people gathered at Rouge Valley Mennonite Church in Markham on Jan. 11 to grieve the sudden death of Joe Nighswander and to celebrate a life well lived. He lived his span of 82 years fully engaged with his family, church and broader community until he passed away in his sleep in the early hours of Jan. 7 at home with his wife Elsie.

Nighswander's active involvement with others was reflected in the comments made by those attending his funeral. Some had sung with him in the choir at Parkview Village the afternoon before his death, others recalled phone conversations and e-mail exchanges. Church members remembered his playful participation in the …

US consumer prices fall again in December

A record plunge in gasoline prices pushed overall U.S. consumer prices down for the third straight month in December, closing out a year in which the change in inflation was the smallest in more than a half-century.

Concerns remain low about possible deflation, but represent a marked change from just six months ago when soaring energy prices threatened to trigger a widening inflation problem that many analysts believed the Federal Reserve would have to fight by raising interest rates.

The Labor Department said Friday that consumer prices dropped by 0.7 percent in December, slightly smaller than the 0.9 percent drop economists expected.

For the …

Little League scores in Israel debut

JERUSALEM (AP) The Jerusalem Schleppers took the field, and itwas one, two, three strikes, you're "bahutz" at the old ball game.

Little League baseball made its debut in Israel yesterday.

No hot dog or peanut vendors were about. No one made like HarryCaray on "Take Me Out to the Ball Game." The game lasted only fiveinnings. And the jargon may have sounded strange.

But Opening Day in Israel did have its American touches:cheering fans, bats hurled in disgust by strikeout victims, screamingcoaches, a head coach from Texas and the mayor - Jerusalem's TeddyKollek - tossing the first ball.

Baseball debuted with an all-star game drawn from the …

70 Punished in Accidental B-52 Flight

WASHINGTON - The Air Force said Friday it has punished 70 airmen involved in the accidental, cross-country flight of a nuclear-armed B-52 bomber following an investigation that found widespread disregard for the rules on handling such munitions.

"There has been an erosion of adherence to weapons-handling standards at Minot Air Force Base and Barksdale Air Force Base," said Maj. Gen. Richard Newton, the Air Force deputy chief of staff for operations.

Newton was announcing the results of a six-week probe into the Aug. 29-30 incident in which the B-52 was inadvertently armed with six nuclear-tipped cruise missiles and flown from Minot in North Dakota to Barksdale in …

Utah ushers in a new era of choice for bar patrons

For the last 40 years, dropping into a bar in Utah has been a complicated affair: Patrons have to fill out an application, pay a fee and become a member before they can go in for a drink.

It is one of several restrictive rules governing alcohol consumption in Utah that made the heavily Mormon state one of the toughest places in the nation to get a drink.

But some of that will change on Wednesday when a new state law kicks in eliminating the need for people to become members of bars to go inside.

"I've owned clubs for eight years now, and I never thought this was going to happen," said Jason Rasmussen, owner of A Bar Named Sue. "This is …

Man Receives Probation, Fine For Phony Kidnapping Report

A 21-year-old man who told Naperville police a phony story abouta child abduction was sentenced Thursday to two years' probation and500 hours of public service and fined $500 and ordered to undergopsychological evaluation.

Richard Nieves, of Aurora, also has a possible 90-day jailsentence hanging over his head as part of DuPage County Circuit JudgeJames W. Jerz's sentence. If Nieves has no violations at the end ofhis probationary period, he can ask Jerz not to impose the jail term,said Assistant State's Attorney Carmen Polo, deputy chief of theDuPage criminal division.

But even if Nieves has no violations, Jerz could impose the jailtime, Polo said. Nieves …

US to require biggest traders report activity

WASHINGTON (AP) — Large traders will be required to register with the government and make available more information about their trades under a rule adopted by federal regulators.

The Securities and Exchange Commission agreed unanimously on the rule, which would take effect in 60 days. The rule is a response to the May 2010 "flash …

NFL union seeks fees

WASHINGTON The union that represents 300-pound defensive linemenis threatening to get tough with fantasy geeks.

Many of the geeks are just laughing.

The National Football League Players Association contends it cancharge a licensing fee to fantasy game operators for using statisticsto run their contests. The union says compiling touchdowns andyardage is the same as using a player's picture without permission.

Just by threatening companies, the union said this year it's goingto collect $1 million in fantasy football licensing fees, enough topay each NFL player about $500.

But until the union shuts a company down or wins a court case,many game operators will take the association about as seriously as aNew Orleans Saints fan guaranteeing a Super Bowl victory, fantasysports executives said.

"You either get scared and pay them, or else you throw the letterin the trash," said Charlie Wiegert, vice president of CDM Inc.,which said it will collect $15 million in fantasy sports revenue thisyear. "Most are just tossing it in the garbage."

The union's fees, plus a share of profits, run from as little as$10,000 for the smallest entrepreneur to more than $125,000 for St.Louis-based CDM and large media companies such as Walt Disney Co. andCBS Corp.-backed Sportsline.com.

When the NFL union started taking on the fantasy football industrysix years ago, the association had one person combing throughmagazines for a few hours a week looking to find game operators theirlawyers could threaten to sue.

Since then, the Internet has helped fantasy sports grow from anarcane hobby to an industry that generates an estimated $100 millionin revenue a year and involves about 30 million Americans, accordingto a Harris Interactive poll.

It's gotten so big that 100 companies, including Yahoo Inc. andNews Corp., gathered last month in Chicago for a fantasy footballconvention and talked more about revenue than running backs.

"Anybody who wants to view fantasy football the way it was, just anice fun game people played among friends, has their head in thesand," said Pat Allen, the union's chief operating officer, who isspearheading its licensing effort.

In fantasy leagues, fans draft imaginary teams of real players andscore points based on statistics the players compile. Many leaguesare informal, made up of friends and co-workers.

The union said it can't do anything about these so-called backyardleagues but can do something about Internet games. Union lawyers whoseek payment from game operators base their argument on case law theysay supports players' rights to be paid when their names are used forprofit.

The union this year will have as many people working on generatinglicensing fees for fantasy football as it does on video games, whichproduces $10 million in revenue. Two full-timers and an intern spentthis summer scouring publications and Web sites for unlicensedfantasy games.

They helped get the biggest game operators to pay. But when theNational Football League season kicks off Sept. 3, only about 25 ofthe estimated 300 fantasy football games will be licensed, and theunion won't be getting at least $1 million more from those companies,game operators said.

"Until they go out and close a company's doors or win a trial, alot of companies out there will just laugh at the union," said CarlFoster, president of the Fantasy Sports Players Association, anonprofit group that represents the industry.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Canadian inquiry hears testimony about Taser death

A public inquiry began hearing testimony Monday about the death of a Polish immigrant who was zapped with a Taser stun gun at Vancouver International Airport.

Robert Dziekanski died Oct. 14, 2007, after police zapped him with a Taser. Police said they used the Taser after he began acting erratically.

Dziekanski, who spoke only Polish, had apparently become upset after waiting for 10 hours at the airport for his mother, who was supposed to pick him up. His death brought international attention and intense criticism after video of the incident was released.

The first half of the inquiry, a study commission held last year, broadly examined Tasers and their use. A report from that inquiry is due out early this year.

The second phase will focus specifically on what happened to Dziekanski and look for recommendations that could prevent a similar incident in the future.

If the evidence merits, Judge Thomas Braidwood can report misconduct on the part of those involved.

None of Monday's witnesses saw Robert Dziekanski being Tasered by four officers.

Dziekanski, a construction worker who did not speak English, arrived in Vancouver that afternoon to live with his mother, Zofia Cisowski in Kamloops, British Columbia.

Ten hours later, visibly nervous after being unable to find his mother, Dziekanski began throwing furniture in the airport's international arrivals area. He apparently became upset when he did not see his mother in the secure baggage area _ which she was not allowed to enter.

Four Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers arrived and within seconds hit him five times with a Taser. The confrontation was caught on video and broadcast around the world on television and the Internet.

The RCMP maintain Dziekanski was in a state of excited delirium and suffering from alcohol withdrawal. A coroner's report indicated signs of alcoholism.

Witnesses Monday said Dziekanski was slightly agitated, attributing that to his emigrating. Vancouver airport greeter Patricia Hunter met Dziekanski went he arrived in Vancouver. She said he appeared disoriented but not intoxicated.

"He was an unusual passenger," she said. "He had an almost robot-like walk and approach."

She said a customs agent recognized the man could not understand English and supplied Polish translations of landing documents.

The most anticipated testimony is that of the four police officers. The inquiry was delayed while police awaited word on charges against the officers.

The province's attorney general announced last month the officers would not face charges and would testify.

Cisowski said Monday she has been lied to repeatedly about her son's condition and the circumstances of his death

"I want to know the truth," she told reporters. "I think everyone tries to lie to save themselves. I have nothing to lose because I lost it."

Cisowski sat quietly in the hearing Monday, occasionally wiping her eyes.

Her lawyer, Walter Kosteckyj, said Cisowski wants a full account of what happened and wants to see all agencies involved _ including the RCMP, the border agency and Vancouver International Airport _ take responsibility.

Employers Boost Payrolls by 132,000

WASHINGTON - Employers boosted payrolls by a better-than-expected 132,000 jobs in June, enough to keep the unemployment rate at a relatively low 4.5 percent. It was another sign that the economy is snapping out of a nearly yearlong sluggish spell.

The latest picture of the nation's employment climate, released by the Labor Department on Friday, also showed that workers saw solid gains in their wages last month.

The tally of 132,000 new jobs was stronger than the 125,000 that economists were forecasting. They did, however, predict that job growth would be sufficient to hold the unemployment rate at 4.5 percent, where it has stood for three straight months.

New hiring in the areas of education, health services, leisure and hospitality and government drove overall job growth last month. Construction companies also expanded employment. Those gains swamped job cuts at factories, retailers and certain professional and business services.

Meanwhile, the economy added more jobs in April and May than the government previously thought. Revised figures released Friday showed that payrolls grew by a strong 190,000 in May, much stronger than the 157,000 reported last month. In April, 122,000 positions were added, which was better than the 80,000 previously reported, which had been the fewest in two and a half years.

Workers saw modest wage gains in June.

Average hourly earning rose to $17.38, a 0.3 percent increase from May. That matched the rise anticipated by economists. Over the last 12 months, wages grew by 3.9 percent.

Wage growth is important to workers and supports consumer spending, a major ingredient in healthy overall economic activity. The modest increase in wages should ease inflation fears.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues keep a close eye on wages for any signs that they might generate inflation.

Out of control inflation is bad for the economy and for the pocketbook. It shrinks paychecks, erodes purchasing power and eats into the value of investments.

The Federal Reserve last week noted that there have been some improvements on some inflation readings but made clear that it is not letting down its guard on this front. The biggest danger to the economy is if inflation doesn't recede as the Fed anticipates, Fed policymakers said.

Still, Fed policymakers have enough faith in their inflation forecast that they left a key interest rate last week at 5.25 percent, where it has been for a year.

Companies have continued to hire at a decent pace even as the economy has endured a nearly period of sluggishness.

Economic growth nearly stalled in the first three months of this year, with business expansion slumping to a pace of just 0.7 percent, the worst in more than four years. The ailing housing market was a main factor behind the weakness.

Analysts believe the economy rebounded in the April-to-June quarter, expanding at a pace anywhere from 2.3 percent - to more than 3 percent. The government's estimate of second-quarter economic activity will be released later this month.

Despite the healthy jobs market and the budding rebound, the public is giving President Bush low marks for his economic stewardship.

Only 37 percent approve of his handling of the economy, tying a record-low set in November 2005, according to an AP-Ipsos poll.

Trying to capitalize on that, Democrats have been pushing policies they say are aimed at closing the gap between low-wage and high-wage workers. A new law will boost the federal minimum wage from $5.15 a hour to $7.25 an hour over two years. The first increase of 70 cents will go into effect later this month.

Across the country, the length of peoples' job hunt was little changed.

The average time the 6.9 million unemployed people spent in their job searches was 16.8 weeks in June, up slightly from 16.7 weeks in May.

Tuesday, February 5

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of 2008. There are 330 days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1679 - Peace of Nijmegen is declared between Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I and France's King Louis XIV.

1782 - Spanish forces capture Minorca Island, off Spain, from British.

1792 - Tippoo of Mysore, India, who is defeated in war with British and Hyderabad, cedes half of Mysore to British.

1811 - British Regency Act is passed, whereby the Prince of Wales becomes Prince Regent during King George III's temporary insanity.

1885 - Congo state is established as a personal possession of Belgium's King Leopold II.

1887 - Verdi's opera "Otello" premieres at La Scala, in Milan, Italy.

1917 - Mexico becomes a federated republic of 28 states; U.S. Congress passes, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto, a law severely curtailing the immigration of Asians.

1958 - Gamel Abdel Nasser is formally nominated to become the first president of the new United Arab Republic.

1962 - France's President Charles de Gaulle calls for independence for Algeria on basis of friendly cooperation with France.

1971 - U.S. Apollo 14 astronauts land on Moon.

1976 - Earthquake in Guatemala takes almost 23,000 lives.

1989 - Algeria's president proposes new national constitution, dropping references to socialism and opening door to multiparty system.

1990 - Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, addressing the party plenum, says the Communist Party must abandon its monopoly on power.

1991 - Iraq, under attack by the U.S. and its allies, suspends fuel sales to its citizens.

1992 - U.N. declines deployment of 10,000-man U.N. peacekeeping force in Yugoslavia.

1993 - Up to 200 Somali youths hurl rocks at U.S. forces and set tire barricades ablaze in the belief that American troops shot to death a Somali man.

1994 - A single mortar shell kills 68 people in a Sarajevo marketplace; White separatist Byron de la Beckwith is convicted in Jackson, Mississippi, for murdering civil rights leader Medgar Evers, three decades earlier.

1995 - Peru and Ecuador break off cease-fire talks and fighting flares again along their disputed jungle border.

1997 - Three Swiss banking giants announce they will contribute US$71 million to open a humanitarian fund for Holocaust victims.

1998 - More than 600,000 plantation workers in Sri Lanka go on strike for higher wages, crippling key sectors of the country's economy. They return to work ten days later.

1999 - The 80-year-old President Nelson Mandela of South Africa delivers his last major address to Parliament.

2001 - Four men go on trial in New York in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa, which killed 224 people; Blast in Moscow subway injures at least nine.

2002 - Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel apologizes for his country's role in the 1961 assassination of then-Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba. He offers a US$3.25 million fund in Lumumba's name to promote democracy in Congo.

2003 - North Korea announces its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon has resumed operations. North Korea in December 2002 declared its intention to reopen the facility, as part of a series of announced moves to resume its nuclear programs, which it had agreed to suspend in 1994.

2004 - Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army rebels attack a refugee camp in the north, killing 54 civilians and two soldiers. The shadowy rebel group, which has little contact with the outside world, has fought for 17 years to overthrow President Yoweri Museveni, but mostly attacks civilians to steal food and abduct children for use as fighters or concubines.

2005 - NATO helicopter gunships find the shattered wreckage of an Afghan airliner on a frigid mountain east of Kabul. Officials doubt any of the 104 people aboard could have survived.

2006 - A bomb explosion rips through a passenger bus, killing at least 13 people and wounding 20 others in a province of southwestern Pakistan wracked by growing tribal unrest.

2007 - Somalia's government begins a weeklong meeting with elders, traditional chiefs and representatives of aid groups to try to reconcile Somalis after 16 years of conflict.

Today's Birthdays:

Sir Robert Peel, English statesman after whom British police are called "Bobbies" (1788-1850); Johan Ludvig Runeberg, Finnish national poet (1804-1877); John Lindley, English botanist (1799-1865); William S. Burroughs, U.S. writer (1914-1997); Andreas Papandreou, Greek prime minister (1919-1996); Jennifer Jason Leigh, U.S. actress (1962--); Bobby Brown, U.S. singer (1969--); Laura Linney, U.S. actress (1964--).

Thought For Today:

Many excellent words are ruined by too definite a knowledge of their meaning. _ Aline Kilmer, American poet (1888-1941).

America betrayed by its friends

One after another, America's Western friends and allies haverejected the Reagan administration's request for help in minesweepingin the Persian Gulf, where late last month a mine caused considerabledamage to an oil tanker navigating under U.S. protection.

The most severe blow, the hardest to take, is the one fromBritain. Also on the naysaying list are France, West Germany and theNetherlands. And, of course, Kuwait, whose U.S.-reflagged tankersare the beneficiaries of the whole risky exercise, is openlyreluctant to do anything that could incur the direct wrath of Iran.

A British Foreign Office spokesman said that granting the U.S.request would have meant a "commitment of a potentially open-endedkind that is difficult to contemplate at this present time." To addinsult to injury, he also managed to suggest that Britain was actingin a very statesman like way, unlike the United States. " . . . Inthe short term," he declared, "it is better for us not to contributeto any escalation in tension. . . . " So it is the United States, andnot the belligerents in the seven-year Iran-Iraq war, that mustshoulder the blame for "escalation of tension" in the Persian Gulf.

France did not even have the courage to admit that it did notwant to further complicate its problems with Iran. The Frenchdefense minister said his country was considering "possibilities ofcontributing help in areas where the U.S. Navy is having difficultiesin minesweeping. (But) we are not going to enter the gulf." Sure,France is going to rush out and help in such mine-sown waters asNorfolk, Va., or even Lake Michigan. These are the allies for whosesake this country has sacrificed so many American lives and spenthuge amounts of U.S. taxpayers' money?

They so covet the word statesmanship that they ignore twoother, far more important words: friend and ally.

There is no statesmanship in closing one's eyes towell-established peril and pretending it can be wished away byappropriate soothing words.

It is selfishness - selfishness that seeks to profit,politically and perhaps financially, at the expense of America.

It is shortsightedness - shorthsightedness that refuses to seethe long-term consequences of appeasement of a volatile theocratictyranny.

And it is betrayal - betrayal of a country that has always comethrough for them but which, they seem to think, does not have a rightto reciprocity.

Development group advised to hire Sandra Day O'Connor

A nonprofit group promoting economic development may soon ask aretired U.S. Supreme Court justice to help overhaul the state'sjudicial system.

West Virginia: A Vision Shared has been advised by a consultantto enlist Sandra Day O'Connor for that task.

Consultant Market Street Services says the state lacks anintermediate appeals court and automatic appeals. It also questionsWest Virginia's partisan election of judges and justices.

Market Street says the National Center for State Courts couldconduct a large-scale review of the state's judiciary. Its otherrecommendations address health care, work force training, university-based research and the state's image.

A Vision Shared presented the findings to Gov. Joe Manchin onThursday.

Stability of the Heme Environment of the Nitric Oxide Synthase from Staphylococcus aureus in the Absence of Pterin Cofactor

ABSTRACT

We have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to probe the heme environment of a recently discovered NOS from the pathogenic bacterium Staphylococcus aureus, named SANOS. We detect two forms of the CO complex in the absence of L-arginine, with v^sub Fe-CO^ at 482 and 497 cm^sup -1^ and v^sub C-O^ at 1949 and 1930 cm^sup -1^, respectively. Similarly to mammalian NOS, the binding of L-arginine to SANOS caused the formation of a single CO complex with v^sub Fe-CO^ and v^sub C-O^ frequencies at 504 and 1917 cm^sup -1^, respectively, indicating that L-arginine induced an electrostatic/steric effect on the CO molecule. The addition of pterins to CO-bound SANOS modified the resonance Raman spectra only when they were added in combination with L-arginine. We found that (6R) 5,6,7,8 tetra-hydro-L-biopterin and tetrahydrofolate were not required for the stability of the reduced protein, which is 5-coordinate, and of the CO complex, which does not change with time to a form with a Soret band at 420 nm that is indicative of a change of the heme proximal coordination. Since SANOS is stable in the absence of added pterin, it suggests that the role of the pterin cofactor in the bacterial NOS may be limited to electron/proton transfer required for catalysis and may not involve maintaining the structural integrity of the protein as is the case for mammalian NOS.

Abbreviations used: NOS, nitric oxide synthase; NO, nitric oxide; SANOS, NOS of Staphylococcus aureus; BANGS, NOS of Bacillus subtilis; DANOS, NOS of Deinococcus radiodurans; nNOS, neuronal form of mammalian NOS; iNOS, inducible forni of mammalian NOS; eNOS, endothelial form of mammalian NOS; H^sub 4^B, (6R) 5,6,7,8 Tetra-hydro-L-biopterin; THF, tetrahydrofolate; Fe^sup 3+^, ferric form; Fe^sup 2+^, ferrous form; CO complex, ferrous carbon monoxide form.

INTRODUCTION

Nitric oxide synthases are heme-iron enzymes commonly found in animals and insects (Sengupta et al., 2003). The best characterized NOS are those from mammals that catalyze through two consecutive catalytic cycles the hydroxylation of L-arginine into nitric oxide and L-citrulline (Marletta, 1994). Animal NOS are homodimeric proteins and consist of an amino-terminal domain containing a heme group, a C-terminal reductase domain with FMN and FAD cofactors, and a regulatory region that control the rate of electron transfer between these two domains (Alderton et al, 2001; Marietta, 1994; Raman et al, 2000). The electrons required for the catalytic reactions are provided by NADPH and travel to the heme via the FMN and FAD cofactors of the reductase domain of the enzyme. Essential to the enzyme activity is a pterin cofactor, H^sub 4^B, without which the enzyme does not produce NO (Adak et al, 2000; Cosentino and Luscher, 1999; Wei et al., 2003). This pterin binds at the dimer interface, close to the heme group. H^sub 4^B forms extensive Van der Waals interactions and H-bonds with surrounding amino acids and the heme propionates, which helps stabilize the dimeric form of the enzyme (Abu-Soud et al., 1995). In all NOS characterized to date, the heme is attached to the protein moiety through an iron-thiolate coordination bond. The active site of the enzyme is composed of the heme group, the H^sub 4^B binding site, and the L-arginine binding site near the iron on the opposite side of the iron-thiolate bond.

The first description of a bacterial, L-arginine-dependent NO synthase activity has been from the bacterium Nocardia (Chen and Rosazza, 1994, 1995). Recently, genes encoding proteins similar to animal NOS have been found in other bacteria including Bacillus subtilis (Kunst et al., 1997), Staphylococcus aureus (Kuroda et al., 2001), and Deinococcus radiodurans (White et al., 1999) (Fig. 1). Bacterial NOS are particular in that they lack the reductase domain (Fig. 1) (Bird et al., 2002). Several residues near the amino-terminus are also missing (Fig. 1). In the folded animal NOS, these amino-terminal residues protect the pterin site from exposure to the solvent. Three bacterial NOS, BANOS (Adak et al., 2002a), SANOS (Bird et al., 2002), and DANOS (Adak et al., 2002b), have been expressed as recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli. BANOS was found to synthesize NO in single-turnover experiments when supplied with N^sup G^-hydroxy-L-arginine and H^sub 4^B (Adak et al, 2002a), and both BANGS and DANOS were shown to synthesize nitrite under equilibrium conditions using L-arginine orN^sup G^-hydroxy-L-arginine as substrates (Adaket al., 2002a,b). However, the turnover number was found to be very small possibly due to the use of the reductase domain of a mammalian NOS instead of the cognate reductase. It must be stressed that although the bacterial NOS are able to carry out NO synthesis in vitro, no evidence exists for such a reaction in vivo.

The crystalline structure of BANOS in complex with L-arginine (Pant et al., 2002) and that of SANOS in complex with the NOS inhibitor SEITU (S-ethylisotiourea) were recently published (Bird et al., 2002). The structure showed that in SANOS, the pterin binding site is more exposed to the solvent than that of mammalian NOS because several of the N-terminal residues that protect the pterin from solvent exposure in mammalian NOS are missing. Nonetheless, the protein exists as a dinner in solution and the crystal structure revealed that the dimer is stabilized by alternative interactions (Bird et al., 2002). The pterin binding site is larger in SANOS than in mammalian NOS and is occupied by a NAD^sup +^ molecule in the crystals. It appears that some bacteria, such as S. aureus, in which NOS genes have been found, may not be able to synthesize H^sub 4^B because they lack the sepiapterin reductase, the last enzyme of the biosynthetic pathway for the synthesis of H^sub 4^B (Adak et al,. 2002b; Raman et al, 2000). However, it is possible that B. subtilis may be able to synthesize H^sub 4^B (Adak et al., 2002a). The nature of the natural cofactor of the bacterial NOS remains to be determined.

To characterize the environment of the active site of bacterial NOS, we purified the recombinant SANOS and probed it with resonance Raman spectroscopy, which is a very powerful technique that provides a wealth of information about the structure and electronic properties of the heme group and of the heme axial ligands. We show that the binding of L-arginine to SANOS induces changes to the heme group similar to those observed in mammalian NOS. However, the binding of H4B and THF have little structural/ electronic effects on the protein and we show that these are not required for stability of the ferrous and the CO complex. Our results suggest that, in contrast to mammalian NOS, the pterin cofactor of the bacterial NOS may not have a role in the maintenance of the structural integrity of the protein although it would be required for the catalytic activity.

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Chemicals

H^sub 4^B was from Alexis Biochemicals (San Diego, CA). Sodium dithionite was obtained from Fluka (Sigma-Aldrich, Oakville, Canada). Argon and ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O were from Praxair (Mississauga, Canada) .^sup 13^C^sup 16^O gas was purchased from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories (Andover, MA) and ^sup 12^C^sup 18^O and ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O were from Icon Isotopes (Summit, NJ).

Protein expression and purification

The SANOS gene was amplified by the PCR method from S. aureus genomic DNA (American Type and Culture Collection (ATCC) 35556) and cloned in the pet30B expression vector (Novagen, Madison, WI) in frame with an N-terminal tag composed of six histidine residues. The cloned gene was sequenced at a local facility and found to be identical to the sequence deposited at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) (NC_002745). The recombinant protein was expressed in E. coli BL21(DE3) and was purified by affinity chromatography over a Ni^sup 2+^-Sepharose column (Amersham Biosciences, Baie d'Urf�, Canada). Briefly, E. coli cells grown in Terrific Broth medium (Sambrook el al., 1989) supplemented with 10 [mu]g/ml of kanamycin were recovered after an overnight induction by 1 mM isopropyl-[beta]-D-thiogalactopyranoside that was added when the optical density of the culture had reached 0.8. The cells were disrupted using a French pressure cell and the cell lysate was centrifuged at 10000 X g for 30 min at 4�C. Ammonium sulfate precipitation was then earned out on the soluble proteins fraction. Proteins that precipitated between 35% and 50% ammonium sulfate saturation were harvested by centrifugation, resuspended in purification buffer (40 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM PMSF) and loaded on a 40-ml Ni^sup 2+^-sepharose column. The column was washed successively with 10 column volumes of purification buffer containing 20 mM, 50 mM, and 100 mM imidazole, respectively. SANOS was eluted in purification buffer containing 400 mM imidazole. The purified protein was dialyzed at 4�C against 40 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, buffer containing 1 mM DTT, 150 mM NaCl and 10% glycerol and was kept at -80�C. The purified protein migrated with an apparent molecular weight of 42 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight in solution, determined by gel filtration over a Superdex HR200 column (Amersham Biosciences, Baie d'Urfe, Canada), was 72 kDa indicating that SANOS is a dimer in solution (the calculated molecular mass of the SANOS monomer including heme and the His-tag is 45.9 kDa). The buffer used for gel filtration chromatography was 40 mM Hepes, pH 8, 150 mM NaCl, and 1 mM DTT. The heme b content was quantified by the pyridine hemochrome method (Appleby, 1978).

Affinity for L-arginine

The affinity of SANOS for L-arginine was determined by the spectral changes caused by L-arginine binding to the ferric enzyme (McMillan and Masters, 1993).

Sample preparation for spectroscopy

The buffer used was 40 mM Hepes, pH 7.6, containing 1 mM DTT and 40 mM NaCl. To obtain spectrum of the ferric protein in the absence of substrate, DTT was not included in the buffer as this compound forms a low-spin complex with the heme. Where indicated, 1 mM L-arginine, 600 [mu]M THF, and 1.2 mM H^sub 4^B were added to the protein samples.

Optical spectroscopy

Optical spectra were recorded with a Gary 3 spectrophotometer with samples placed in a 1-cm path-length anaerobic cuvette (Hellma, M�llheim, Germany). The Fe^sup 2+^ sample was prepared by equilibration of the sample solution with argon followed by the addition of a small volume of a freshly prepared anaerobic solution of sodium dithionite. The CO complexes were prepared by incubating the protein samples with argon, adding a known volume of CO gas, and reducing the heme with a small amount of freshly prepared sodium dithionite. The protein concentration was 5 [mu]M.

Resonance Raman spectroscopy

To obtain resonance Raman spectra, the 441.6 nm line of an He/Cd laser (Liconix laser, Melles-Griot, Canada) was used to probe CO complexes, and the 406 and 413 lines of a Kr-ion laser (Innova 302 Kr laser, Coherent, Santa Clara, CA) were used to probe ferric and ferrous forms of SANOS. The laser beam was focused to an ~55 [mu]M spot on a custom-made sample cuvette, which was kept rotating at 1000 rpm to avoid local heating of the sample. The scattered light was collected at a 90� angle with an F#1 lens and refocused with an F#9.8 lens on the entrance slit of a 0.75-m spectrograph (Acton Research, Acton, MA) equipped with an 1800 lines/mm diffraction grating. A Notch filter, designed to block light at 441.6 nm (MK Photonics, Albuquerque, NM) or at 406 and 413 nm (Kaiser Optical, Ann Arbor, MI) was placed in front of the entrance slit of the spectrometer to prevent Rayleigh scattered light from entering the spectrometer. The width of the spectrometer slit was set at 100 microns. The diffracted light was detected at the spectrometer exit with a liquid nitrogen-cooled CCD camera (Spec10:100B, Roper Scientific, Trenton, NJ). Cosmic rays were automatically removed from spectra by a software routine of WinSpec (Roper Scientific). Typically, several 1-min spectra were recorded with a low excitation power, 1.4-4.8 mW, at room temperature and averaged with the Grams software (ThermoGalactic, Salem, NH). The spectra were calibrated with the lines of indene in the 200-1700 cm^sup -1^ region and with the lines of acetone and potassium ferrocyanide in the 1600-2100 cm^sup -1^ region. To verify the stability of the samples, optical spectra of the samples in the Raman cuvette were recorded before and after resonance Raman spectra were obtained. Typically, samples containing 30-40 [mu],M protein, based on the heme content, were used to acquire the resonance Raman spectra. To obtain the resonance Raman spectra of ferrous SANOS in the perpendicular and parallel orientations, a polarizer (Newport, Irvine, CA) in combination with a polarization scrambler was placed in front of the entrance slit of the spectrometer. The efficiency of this setup was verified by measuring the polarization ratio of the 460 cm^sup -1^ line of CCl^sub 4^.

RESULTS

Optical spectra of SANOS

The SANOS protein was expressed in E. coli and was purified in the absence of added pterin and substrate L-arginine. The purified protein displayed an optical spectrum with a large Soret band with maxima at 395 nm and 418 nm, respectively, suggesting a mixture of high-spin and low-spin hemes (spectrum not shown). The addition of L-arginine to the SANOS sample caused the disappearance of the 418-nm band and the resulting spectrum was typical of those of 5-coordinate, high-spin heme proteins with a Soret band centered at 398 nm (Fig. 2). The identity of the natural cofactor of SANOS is unknown. We used here H^sub 4^B and THF, a pterin analog that was showed to support NO synthesis in DANOS (Adak et al, 2002b). The addition of H^sub 4^B or THF to SANOS changed the optical spectrum of the ferrie enzyme and we observed an increase of the intensity of the band at 398 nm and a diminution of the intensity at 418 nm (not shown). This behavior is similar to that of mammalian NOS, which display a shift from a mixture of 5-coordinate and 6-coordinate forms to a 5-coordinate, high-spin form with a Soret band near 397 nm when saturated with H^sub 4^B (Ghosh et al., 1997). These spectral changes caused by the addition of H^sub 4^B or THF alone to SANOS indicate that these molecules bind to the protein and that they induce a shift in the heme coordination state similar to that of the mammalian NOS.

Upon reduction of the ferric form (Fig. 2), the ferrous SANOS displayed a Soret band centered at 411 nm, suggesting that the heme is 5-coordinate and high-spin (Wang et al., 1993). Addition of CO to the ferrous protein shifted the Soret band to 445 nm with a minor contribution near 423 nm (Fig. 2). For the CO complex of NOS and P450, a Soret band near 450 nm indicates that the heme forms an iron-thiolate bond on the proximal side whereas a Soret band near 420 nm is indicative of a protein in an inactive state called P420 (Wang et al., 1995; Wells et al, 1992). For P450cam, the proximal ligand of the P420 form was shown to be a histidine residue (Wells et al., 1992). No change in the optical spectrum of the CO complex of SANOS was observed upon addition of L-arginine, confirming that the majority of the protein is already in a native-like conformation with a cysteine residue as the proximal ligand to the heme. In contrast to the situation observed for the mammalian NOS (Wang et al, 1995), the CO complex of SANOS is very stable in the absence of pterin and substrate and no significant increase in the content of the P420 form was observed over the course of a 24-h incubation at room temperature (not shown). Under the same conditions, nNOS and iNOS convert to the P420 form with time (Wang et al, 1995).

Resonance Raman spectra of ferric SANOS

The high-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectra of heme proteins (1300-1700 cm-1) contains in-plane vibrational modes of the porphyrin ring that are sensitive to the oxidation, coordination, and spin state of the heme iron (Hu et al, 1996; Spiro and Li, 1988; Wang et al, 1996). In particular, the V^sub 4^ mode is sensitive to the electron density of the porphyrin ring and the V^sub 2^ and v^sub 3^ modes are sensitive to the coordination and spin state of the heme iron (Spiro and Li, 1988; Wang et al., 1996). The assignment of the coordination and spin state of ferric SANOS was obtained from the resonance Raman spectra of the substrate-free and L-arginine-bound enzyme recorded in the high-frequency region (Fig. 3). The frequencies of the v^sub 4^ line at 1373 cm^sup -1^ for the substrate-free (Fig. 3 B) and at 1369 cim^sup -1^ for the L-arginine-bound protein (Fig. 3 C), respectively, are typical of oxidized heme proteins. Two v^sub 3^ lines, at 1489 and 1503 cm^sup -1^, respectively, were identified in the spectrum of the substrate-free SANOS (Fig. 3 B), indicating a mixture of 5-coordinate and high-spin (1489 cm^sup -1^) and 6-coordinate and low-spin (1503 cm^sup -1^) ferric hemes. Upon the addition of L-arginine, a single V^sub 3^ line is observed at 1488 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 3 C), indicating that the heme is totally 5-coordinate and high-spin. In the latter spectrum, the identification of the v^sub 2^ line at 1563 cm^sup -1^ confirms this assignment. The assignment of the v^sub 2^ line of the substrate-free protein was not possible because this region of the spectrum is complicated by the presence of additional heme modes (Fig. 3 B).

Other heme modes are of interest, for instance, the v^sub 10^ mode that is usually observed near 1638 cm^sup -1^ in the spectra of 6-coordinate and low-spin ferric heme proteins. For SANOS, the v^sub 10^ mode is observed at 1639 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 3 B). As reported for eNOS (Schelvis et al., 2002) and nNOS (Wang et al., 1995), the v^sub 10^ mode of the 5-coordinate and high-spin form of SANOS convolutes with the v^sub C-C^ vinyl stretching mode at 1624 cm^sup -1^. A single v^sub 10^/v^sub vinyl^ stretching mode was identified in the presence (1624 cm^sup -1^) or absence (1626 cm^sup -1^) of L-arginine (Fig. 3, B and C). The nearly identical frequencies indicate that the binding of L-arginine does not induce a significant change in the orientation and/or environment of the vinyl groups. A similar behavior has been reported for the mammalian eNOS (Schelvis et al., 2002).

Resonance Raman spectra of ferrous SANOS

The high-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectrum of the ferrous form of substrate-free and pterin-free SANOS is showed in Fig. 3 D. The v^sub 4^ and v^sub 3^ lines are found at 1349 cm^sup -1^ and 1467 cm^sup -1^, respectively, showing that the heme is 5-coordinate and high-spin. The low-frequency of the v^sub 4^ mode is similar to the frequencies of the v^sub 4^ modes of P450 (Champion et al., 1978) and nNOS (Wang et al., 1995) and is indicative of an iron-thiolate coordination. Other heme proteins with histidine-iron coordination have a v^sub 4^ line at higher frequency, near 1355 cm^sup -1^. The heme coordination and spin state of the ferrous SANOS did not change upon L-arginine binding (results not shown), and the heme thus remained 5-coordinate and high-spin. In contrast, ferrous nNOS is mostly 6-coordinate and low-spin in the absence of pterin and 5-coordinate and high-spin in the presence of H^sub 4^B (Wang et al., 1995). The v^sub 10^/v^sub vinyl^ region of ferrous SANOS, with lines at 1602 and 1619 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 3 D), is similar to that of nNOS/H^sub 4^B with lines at 1600 and 1617 cm^sup -1^ (Table 1). The ferrous, H^sub 4^B-depleted nNOS, representing the P420 form, displays a single v^sub 10^/v^sub vinyl^ mode at 1615 cm^sup -1^ (Table 1) (Wang et al, 1995). The similarity of the ferrous spectrum of SANOS with that of nNOS/H^sub 4^B is a further indication that very little inactive P420 form is present in our protein preparation.

A line at 1369 cm^sup -1^, not seen in the resonance Raman spectrum of reduced nNOS (Wang et al., 1993), is present in the reduced spectrum of SANOS (Fig. 3 D). As discussed above, it is unlikely that this line corresponds to the v^sub 4^ line of a P420 form; moreover, the v^sub 4^ line of such a P420 form would be expected near 1361 cm^sup -1^ based on the frequency observed for the ferrous P420 form of P450 (Wells et al., 1992) and nNOS (Wang et al., 1995). The 1369 cm^sup -1^ line also does not arise from the v^sub 4^ line of oxidized heme. First, the optical spectrum of the ferrous sample used to obtain the Raman spectrum was verified to rule out the possibility that the sample oxidized during data acquisition. Second, the v^sub 4^ line of the substrate-free ferric enzyme is actually at a higher frequency, 1373 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 3 B). Measurement of the polarization sensitivity of ferrous SANOS revealed that the 1369 cm^sup -1^ line is not polarized, with a polarization ratio of 0.99, in contrast to the v^sub 4^ line at 1349 cm^sup -1^ that displays a polarization ratio of 0.28 (Fig. 3, D and E). This result establishes that the 1369 cm^sup -1^ arises from a heme mode other than v^sub 4^, and therefore we conclude that ferrous SANOS is 5-coordinate and high-spin in the presence or absence of L-arginine and pterins with no other detectable form.

Resonance Raman spectra of the CO complexes

CO is widely used to probe the active site of heme proteins because it produces a very stable heme complex and because it is a sensitive probe of electronic and steric interactions within the heme pocket (Aono et al., 2002; Couture et al., 2001; Fan et al., 1997; Igarashi et al., 2003; Mukai et al, 2002; Phillips et al., 1999; Uchida et al, 1998; Wang et al., 1997). In the high-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectrum of the CO complex (Fig. 3 A), the v^sub 4^ line and the v^sub 3^, line are identified at 1370 and 1495 cm^sup -1^, respectively, revealing that the complex is 6-coordinate and low-spin. No significant photodissociation of the heme-bound CO molecule occurred during spectral acquisition as indicated by the absence of the v^sub 4^ line (1349 cm^sup -1^) and of the v^sub 3^ line (1467 cm^sup -1^) of the 5-coordinate, high-spin ferrous form. In contrast, these two lines are present in the resonance Raman spectrum of the CO complex acquired at high laser power (~50 mW; results not shown).

CO isotopes were used to identify the v^sub Fe-CO^ and [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ modes in the low-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectra. The spectra of the substrate-free enzyme were recorded first. Fig. 4 shows an isotope-sensitive line located approximately at 489 cm^sup -1^ that shifts monotonously in going from ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O (Fig. 4 D), to ^sup 13^C^sup 16^O (Fig. 4 C), to ^sup 12^C^sup 18^O (Fig. 4 B), and to ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O (Fig. 4 A). This behavior is expected for the v^sub Fe-CO^ stretching mode of a CO complex and has been observed for many heme proteins (Wang et al., 1997; Yu et al., 1984). The isotope sensitive line at ~489 cm^sup -1^, which is quite large (with a width at half-height of 35 cm^sup -1^), was further investigated by spectral deconvolution. For the ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O spectrum, two lines, at 482 and 497 cm^sup -1^, respectively, with approximately the same area under the curve, were deconvoluted (not shown). In contrast, the ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O spectrum revealed two major lines at 470 cm^sup -1^ and 481 cm^sup -1^ and a smaller intensity line at 498 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 4, inset). Since the line at 498 cm^sup -1^ is not shifting with the different CO isotopes, the latter was assigned to a heme mode. We conclude that the 497 cm^sup -1^ line deconvoluted from the ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O spectrum is composed of a small-intensity heme mode at 498 cm^sup -1^ and of a larger-intensity line at 497 cm^sup -1^ that we assign to a v^sub Fe-CO^ mode. SANOS thus displays two v^sub Fe-CO^ modes located at 482 cm^sup -1^ and 497 cm^sup -1^, respectively, with ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O. These lines shift to 470 cm^sup -1^ and 481 cm^sup -1^, respectively, with ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O. The magnitude of the ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O - ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O isotope shift of the 497 cm^sup -1^ mode, 16 cm^sup -1^, corresponds to the value expected for a system behaving as a diatomic oscillator and the magnitude of the isotope shift of the 482 cm^sup -1^ line, 12 cm^sup -1^, is smaller than the expected shift but is similar to that observed in nNOS (Wang et al., 1997) (Table 2).

A third line at 560 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 4 D) displayed isotope sensitivity with shifts to 544 cm^sup -1^, 557 cm^sup -1^, and 543 cm^sup -1^ with ^sup 13^C^sup 16^O, ^sup 12^C^sup 18^O, and ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O, respectively. This line was assigned to the [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ bending mode of SANOS as it displayed the typical zigzag pattern of the [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ bending mode of heme proteins (Yu et al., 1984).

To identify the v^sub C-O^ stretching mode of substrate-free SANOS, the resonance Raman spectra were recorded in the 1600-2100 cm^sup -1^ region (Fig. 5, A-C). Two lines, at 1949 cm^sup -1^ and 1930 cm^sup -1^, respectively, that shifted to 1857 cm^sup -1^ and 1843 cm^sup -1^, respectively, with ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O, were assigned to two v^sub C-O^ stretching modes as they fall in the region observed for the v^sub C-O^ stretching modes of other heme proteins (Table 2). The magnitude of the isotope shifts, 92 cm^sup -1^ and 87 cm^sup -1^, respectively, corresponds well to the theoretical value expected for a diatomic oscillator (91 cm^sup -1^). Based on the reversed relationship displayed by the frequencies of the v^sub Fe-CO^ and v^sub C-O^ modes (Li and Spiro, 1988; Ray et al., 1994; Vogel et al., 2000), we propose the existence of two CO complexes of SANOS: one is characterized by the 1930 cm^sup -1^ v^sub C-O^ mode and the v^sub Fe-CO^ mode at 497 cm^sup -1^ whereas the second is characterized by the 1949 cm^sup -1^ v^sub C-O^ mode and the v^sub Fe-CO^ mode at 482 cm^sup -1^. As shown in Fig. 7, a plot of the v^sub Fe-CO^ versus v^sub C-O^ frequencies shows that the modes for SANOS, open circles 1 and 2, fall in the region of heme proteins having thiolate coordination.

L-arginine and cofactors binding

The effect of L-arginine binding to SANOS was then investigated. For this, the low-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectrum of the CO complex was recorded in the presence of a saturating amount of L-arginine. As shown in Fig. 6, C-E, a single line at 504 cm^sup -1^ displayed a shift to 496 cm^sup -1^ with ^sup 13^C ^sup 18^O. The frequency of this line is similar to that of the v^sub Fe-CO^ mode of substrate-bound nNOS (Table 2) and is therefore assigned to the v^sup Fe-CO^ mode of L-arginine-bound SANOS. The isotope shift of 8 cm^sup -1^ is smaller than expected but is similar to that of nNOS (Table 2). Thus the two v^sub Fe-CO^ modes detected in the absence of L-arginine are replaced in the L-arginine-bound SANOS by a single v^sub Fe-CO^ mode at higher frequency. The bending mode of the CO complex of L-arginine-bound SANOS is also found at a higher frequency, 567 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 6 D), than that of the CO complex of L-arginine-free SANOS, 560 cm^sup -1^ (Fig. 4 D, Table 2).

In the v^sub C-O^ region of the CO spectrum of L-arginine-bound SANOS, a single isotope-sensitive line was detected at 1917 cm^sup -1^ with ^sup 12^C^sup 16^O and at 1830 cm^sup -1^ with ^sup 13^C^sup 18^O (Fig. 5). This line falls in the region where the v^sub C-O^ modes of other heme proteins occur (Table 2) and it displayed an isotopic shift, 87 cm^sup -1^, close to the theoretical value expected for a diatomic oscillator, 90 cm^sup -1^. It is therefore assigned to the v^sub C-O^ stretching mode of the CO complex of L-arginine-bound SANOS. Thus, the two v^sub C-O^ stretching modes observed at 1930 and 1949 cm^sup -1^, respectively, with the L-arginine-free enzyme are replaced by a single v^sub C-O^ mode at 1917 cm^sup -1^ upon L-arginine binding (Table 2).

Inspection of the resonance Raman spectra of the L-arginine-bound enzyme (Fig. 6 D) and the L-arginine-free enzyme (Fig. 4 D) indicated that binding of L-arginine caused several changes to the resonance Raman spectrum of the CO complex. These differences are best seen in the difference spectrum calculated from the spectrum of the L-arginine-bound enzyme minus that of the substrate-free enzyme (Fig. 6 F). Among these, the most significant changes are new maxima at 691 cm and 734 cm^sup -1^ , an increase of the intensity of lines near 747 and 801 cm^sup -1^, as well as a narrowing of the V^sub Fe-CO^ region that is revealed by the decrease in intensity near 484 cm^sup -1^. Based on the assignment of heme modes of myoglobin (Hu et al., 1996), the line at 747 cm^sup -1^ may correspond to the v^sub 15^ pyrrole breathing mode whereas the line at 801 cm^sup -1^ may correspond to V^sub 6^, a heme ruffling mode. These changes at 747 and 801 cm^sup -1^ reveal that the heme itself undergoes structural and electronic modifications after the binding of L-arginine. In contrast, the binding of H^sub 4^B alone does not perturb the spectrum of the CO complex as shown by the difference spectrum calculated between the H^sub 4^B-saturated enzyme and the H^sub 4^B-free protein (Fig. 6 H) that displayed only a small imbalance of the intense line at 676 cm^sup -1^. THF alone did not change the spectrum either (results not shown). However, the addition of H^sub 4^B (Fig. 6 A) or THF (Fig. 6 B) in combination with L-arginine revealed changes in the intensity and position of several heme modes. This is best observed in the difference spectrum calculated from the spectrum of the L-arginine/H^sub 4^B sample minus the spectrum of the L-arginine saturated sample (Fig. 6 G). For instance, there is an increase of the intensity in the v^sub Fe-CO^ mode at 499 cm^sup -1^, of the bending mode at 563 cm^sup -1^, and other small changes to heme modes in the 700-800 cm^sup -1^ region.

DISCUSSION

Bacterial genes encoding NOS have been discovered recently in the genomes of several Bacillus species (Kunst et al., 1997), in S. aitreus (Kuroda et al., 2001), and in D. radiodurans (White et al., 1999). We presented here the first detailed characterization of the heme environment of a bacterial NOS in solution.

Heme coordination and spin state of ferric and ferrous SANOS

For the purpose of comparison with the mammalian NOS, the effects of pterin and L-arginine binding on the heme coordination state of ferric and ferrous SANOS were determined. Ferric SANOS, as purified, represents a mixture of 6-coordinate, low-spin and 5-coordinate, high-spin species (Fig. 3, Table 1). Six-coordinate and low-spin ferric forms are observed for P450^sub cam^, nNOS, and eNOS (Table 1). For the P450^sub cam^ enzyme, the low-spin species is attributed to a form with a water molecule that is bound to the iron on the distal side of the heme (Poulos et al., 1986). Upon binding of substrate (L-arginine for NOS and camphor for P450^sub cam^) or cofactor (H^sub 4^B in NOS), this water molecule is displaced to give rise to a 5-coordinate and high-spin species (Table 1). Similarly, ferric SANOS is converted into a 5-coordinate and high-spin species upon binding L-arginine or H^sub 4^B as shown in the resonance Raman spectra where a single v^sub 3^, line is detected at 1488 cm^sup -1^ (Table 1). This change of coordination and spin state suggests the existence of a binding site for L-arginine and for a pterin cofactor and that their occupancy by a substrate or a pterin molecule, respectively, prevents the coordination of a water molecule to the iron.

It is noteworthy that ferrous SANOS is 5-coordinate and high-spin, even in the absence of L-arginine and pterin. This is shown by the low frequency of the v^sub 4^ line (1349 cm^sup -1^) that is typical of other thiolate-coordinated, 5-coordinate reduced heme proteins, and by the frequency of the [nu]^sub 3^ line at 1467 cm^sup -1^ that is typical of 5-coordinate and high-spin ferrous hemes. Also of interest is the finding that in contrast to mammalian nNOS and iNOS characterized in the absence of the pterin cofactor (Wang et al., 1995), there is no evidence of a 6-coordinate, low-spin form of ferrous SANOS (Fig. 3, D and E).

The comparison of the CO complexes of SANOS with respect to those of the mammalian NOS

CO is widely used to probe the heme environment of heme proteins. It is particularly sensitive to polar interactions due to the possible electronic delocalization on the Fe-C-O unit (Phillips et al., 1999). It is also sensitive to steric interactions that cause the bending or the tilting of the Fe-C-O unit. We have determined the frequencies of the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ [nu]^sub C-O^ and [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ modes of SANOS. We use these to deduce the properties of the heme pocket and compare them to those of mammalian NOS and P450. First, in the absence of exogenous substrate, we detect two [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ modes at 482 and 497 cm^sup -1^, respectively, and two [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ modes at 1949 and 1930 cm^sup -1^, respectively. This indicates that in SANOS, the CO molecule can adopt two conformations. In nNOS, two conformations of the Fe-C-O unit were observed and assigned to an open conformation, [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ at 487 cm^sup -1^ and [nu]^sub C-O^ at 1949 cm^sup -1^, in which the CO molecule is not interacting with neighboring groups, and a closed conformation, with [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ at 501 cm^sup -1^ and [nu]^sub C-O^ at 1930 cm^sup -1^, in which a positively charged group interacts with the hemebound CO molecule (Fan et al., 1997). Similarly, for SANOS, the two conformations can be described as an open conformation where the CO molecule does not interact strongly with neighbor groups, with [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ at 482 cm^sup -1^ and [nu]^sub C-O^ at 1949 cm^sup -1^, and a conformation in which a nearby group, positively charged, is interacting with the CO molecule, that give rise to a [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ mode at 497 cm^sup -1^ and a [nu]^sub C-O^ mode at 1930 cm^sup -1^. However, upon inspection of the SANOS crystal structure, it does not appear that a positively charged group is present in the vicinity of the heme on the distal side (Bird et al., 2002). It may be that the structure of the ferrous protein in complex with CO differs from that of the ferric enzyme, which is the form crystallized, and that a conformational change occurs upon heme reduction or ligand binding. When plotted on the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ versus [nu]^sub C-O^ correlation graph, the values of the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ and [nu]^sub C-O^ modes of SANOS and SANOS/Arg fall in the region observed for heme proteins having thiolate coordination (Fig. 7, 1-3). This confirms that the fifth axial ligand of the enzyme in the CO complex is a cysteine residue.

In ferric SANOS, the change in coordination and spin state induced upon binding of L-arginine occurs in the absence of exogenously added pterin, which suggests that SANOS forms a strong complex with L-arginine. This is supported by the finding that the affinity for L-arginine is high, 4.4 � 0.2 �M (Chartier and Couture, unpublished results), close to the values observed for nNOS (Ghosh et al., 1997). The structure of the heme pocket of SANOS is affected by the binding of L-arginine as observed in the low-frequency region of the resonance Raman spectrum of the CO complex, which displays modifications to several heme modes. Similar to nNOS (Wang et al., 1997) and iNOS (Fan et al., 1997; Li et al., 2004), we observe an increase in the intensity of the modes at 692, 751, and 801 cm^sup -1^, respectively, upon L-arginine binding. Recently, Li et al. showed that several modes in the low-frequency region of iNOS in complex with CO and NO are modulated by L-arginine and H^sub 4^B binding (Li et al., 2004). These changes were attributed to distortion of the heme imposed by the binding of L-arginine and H^sub 4^B (Li et al., 2004). The similarity of the resonance Raman spectra of L-arginine-bound SANOS and that of the mammalian NOS indicate that L-arginine binds in a similar manner in these proteins. The correlation between the modifications to the heme structure, imposed by L-arginine binding, and the catalytic properties of NOS are not known but they may be relevant to the various rates of heme reduction displayed by NOS (Santolini et al., 2001).

In addition to changes to heme modes in the low-frequency region, L-arginine binding caused the replacement of the two [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ and [nu]^sub C-O^ modes detected with the L-arginine free enzyme (Table 2) by a single [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ mode at 504 cm^sup -1^. The frequency of the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ mode of the L-arginine-bound SANOS complex is similar to that of nNOS/Arg, [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ at 503 cm^sup -1^, but the [nu]^sub C-O^ frequency differs significantly, 1917 cm^sup -1^ versus 1929 cm^sup -1^, respectively (Table 2). This is more easily observed on the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ versus [nu]^sub C-O^ correlation graph (Fig. 7), where the values for the L-arginine-bound SANOS complex (open circle 3) are on the correlation line whereas those of nNOS/Arg are above the correlation line (solid circle 6). This observation may be due to a stronger Fe-thiolate bond in SANOS in comparison to the mammalian NOS. Determination of the frequency of the [nu]^sub Fe-Cys^ mode should reveal whether the strength of the Fe-thiolate bond differs in SANOS as compared to that of eNOS (Schelvis et al., 2002), the only mammalian NOS for which this value has been determined.

The bending mode of the Fe-CO complex is a sensitive indicator of the heme proximal ligand. It is found in the 556-567 cm^sup -1^ range in P450 and NOS (Table 2), whereas it is in the 577-579 cm^sup -1^ range in Mb, human Hb, and cytochrome oxidase (Ray et al., 1994). The [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ bending mode of SANOS is detected, with and without substrate, in the range expected from a heme protein with a Fe-thiolate bond (Table 2). Distortion from linearity of the Fe-C-O unit seems to activate the bending mode in some heme proteins. However, distal polar interactions may be even more important, as Ray et al. observed that the intensity of the [delta]^sub Fe-C-O^ bending mode is increased by polar interactions in the distal heme pocket and is correlated with significant back-bonding (Ray et al., 1994). That the bending mode is already intense in the absence of substrate in SANOS suggests either that the Fe-C-O unit is distorted from linearity in the substrate-free protein or that a heme pocket group is involved in polar interactions with the CO. Upon L-arginine binding, the bending mode of SANOS becomes more intense and shifts to higher frequency. This shift to higher frequencies is similar to that observed with nNOS and iNOS upon L-arginine binding (Table 2) and it indicates that steric/polar interactions of the CO molecule with L-arginine are similar in these NOS. That strong polar/steric interactions between CO and L-arginine occur in SANOS is also supported by the smaller than expected isotopic shift of the [nu]^sub Fe-CO^ mode in the presence of L-arginine (8 cm^sup -1^, Table 2), as compared to the isotopic shifts in the absence of L-arginine (16 and 12 cm^sup -1^, Table 2). This indicates that the CO complex of L-arginine-bound SANOS is not well described by the simple model composed of a two-body oscillator.

Stability of pterin-free SANOS and relation to function

We have shown that ferrous SANOS is totally 5-coordinate and high-spin in the absence of substrate and pterin. We also showed that the CO complex of SANOS is unusually stable in comparison to the CO complex of H^sub 4^B-depleted nNOS (Wang et al., 1995) since it shows little change of the absorption spectrum over a 24-h period of incubation at room temperature; the Soret band remained at 445 nm. The band at 445 nm is indicative of the presence of a native structure with thiolate coordination. From the analysis of the primary amino acid sequence and the crystal structure of SANOS (Bird et al., 2002), one might have expected that the protein may have been unstable in the absence of pterin since several residues defining the pterin binding site in mammalian NOS are missing in SANOS, leaving the pterin site more solvent-exposed. This is clearly not the case. Hence, SANOS must have evolved to maintain the structural integrity of the reduced protein in the absence of added cofactor as both the ferrous and ferrous-CO complex are stable with time under these conditions.

That SANOS is stable in the ferrous state without added pterin does not mean that the protein does not require a pterin for its function. With BANOS, it was shown that NO synthesis in single turnover experiments with N^sup G^-hydroxy-L-arginine as the substrate was dependent on the presence of H^sub 4^B (Adak et al., 2002a). With DANOS, nitrite formation was stimulated by H4B in an in vitro assay performed with the reductase domain of nNOS (Adak et al., 2002a). SANOS (F. Chartier and M. Couture, unpublished results), BANOS (Adak et al., 2002a), and DANOS (Adak et al., 2002b) display a slow catalytic rate as determined from the rate of nitrite synthesis under turnover conditions in the presence of the reductase domain of a mammalian NOS. This slow catalytic activity may be related to the use of a pterin that is not the native pterin of bacterial NOS. However, the slow catalytic rates may also result from the use of the reductase domain of a mammalian NOS instead of the native reductase present in the bacteria harboring a NOS gene. Although several N-terminal residues defining the pterin binding site are missing in SANOS and the other bacterial NOS, the crystal structures of SANOS (Bird et al., 2002) and BANOS (Pant et al., 2002) reveal the presence of a cavity corresponding to the H^sub 4^B binding site of mammalian NOS. The presence of this cavity and the enhancement of catalytic activity by H^sub 4^B suggest that a pterin-like molecule likely binds at this site in the bacterial NOS in vivo. A gene encoding a putative sepiapterin reductase was identified in B. subtilis genome by sequence comparison (Kunst et al., 1997). Sequence data bank search with sepiapterin reductase sequences are not conclusive about the presence of a similar gene in S. aureus (F. Chartier and M. Couture, unpublished results). Little is known about the pathways for pterin biosynthesis in bacteria harboring a NOS gene, and clearly, more studies are required to determine the nature of the native cofactor of bacterial NOS.

CONCLUSIONS

SANOS responds to the binding of L-arginine in a manner similar to that observed for mammalian NOS both in the ferric and CO states. However, the behavior of the enzyme with respect to pterin is remarkable. First, although binding of H^sub 4^B or THF changed the spin state and coordination state of the heme iron in the ferric form, these molecules are not required for the maintenance of the ferrous protein in the 5-coordinate and high-spin state. second, the CO complex does not degrade over time to a P420-like form in the absence of added pterin. Third, a spectral signature for the binding of H^sub 4^B or THF in the CO complex was observed only in combination with L-arginine, suggesting that the effects of H^sub 4^B and THF binding to the CO complex are modest. Altogether, these results suggest that although a pterin is probably required for catalysis by SANOS, through electron/proton transfer, it may not have a structural role as in mammalian NOS, where the pterin cofactor is required to maintain the ferrous heme in the 5-coordinate and high-spin state and to prevent the conversion of the enzyme to the P420-like form.

This work was supported by the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada grant 250073, Canadian Foundation for Innovation equipment grant 7128, and the Fonds Qu�b�cois de la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologies grant 78927 to M.C.

[Reference]

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[Author Affiliation]

Fran�ois J. M. Chartier and Manon Couture

Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada

[Author Affiliation]

Submitted March 8, 2004, and accepted for publication May 26, 2004. Address reprint requests to Manon Couture, Assistant Professor, Dept. of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Pavillon Marchand, Room 4165, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec G1K 7P4, Canada. Tel.: 418-656-2131 ext. 13515; Fax: 418-656-7176; E-mail: manon.couture@bcm.ulaval.ca.

Gulbis' Sunday: Golf, then 'Apprentice' finale

Natalie Gulbis has a busy Sunday.

The LPGA Tour star went into the final round of the Michelob Ultra Open five shots off the lead at the Kingsmill resort in Williamsburg, Virginia.

Then, golf's glamour girl was planning to board a private jet sent by NBC bound for New York, where she was to take part in the finale of "Celebrity Apprentice."

Gulbis says she's looking forward to being reunited with all the friends she made on the television show, and wouldn't mind making the trip after being doused in beer. She says "that would be fantastic."

The winner of the tournament, sponsored by Anheuser-Busch, traditionally has a few bottles of the company's beer dumped on her by supporters during a celebration on the 18th green.

CTA: No fare increases; Fare reduction through discount cards

CTA: No fare increases; Fare reduction through discount cards

Chicago Transit Authority officials cite more riders, sound management and high technology as their reasons for no fare increases next year, even while they upgrade service and vehicles.

"Our operating house is in order, as well as our capital side," CTA Board Chairman Valerie Jarrett said Thursday in presenting the transit company's $869 million operating budget for 2001.

Chicago's transit agency is the only one in the U.S. that uses fare-card technology on both its bus and rail systems, and the payoff for riders is actually lower travel costs, CTA said, being only 42 percent of them use cash.

CTA charges $75 for its 30 Day Pass, down from $88 two years ago, and the agency offers service for any 30-day period now, instead of requiring use of the pass from the first to the last day of the month. Its 7 Day Pass at $20 offers unlimited use, making it, CTA said, a great deal for riders.

Referring to CTA's good financial condition, Chicago Defender Publisher Colonel Eugene Scott told Jarrett during a meeting Thursday, "One of the things we've noted with amazement is what resources will do for improved service."

CTA President Frank Kruesi said, "There's a connection between how we do things financially and how we renovate. When riders feel what we're doing day in and day out results in their being treated well, customers respond in a positive way."

For example, he said, research shows that when CTA operators pick up trash on their vehicles, customers notice it and less littering results.

"It's an exciting thing," he said.

CTA's customer-friendly policy results, Jarrett said, from management's awareness that for many of its 1.5 million weekday riders, CTA is the only way they can travel. Holding fares at current rates for a tenth consecutive year is meaningful to customers, she said.

Next year's operating budget increase of $28 million represents a rise of 3.3 percent as officials expect ridership to increase by 3.4 percent and revenues to rise by 2.6 percent. The budget includes $427 million in improvements through CTA's five-year capital plan. It will result in renovation on the Cermak (Douglas) Branch of the Blue Line and capacity expansion on the Brown Line.

Kruesi said one of management's greatest challenges is how to tailor transit services to businesses whose workers change shifts and create sudden, temporary ridership increases.

"We need to make sure we shift service to getting people to and from work," he said. "CTA used to say, "`We're providing bus service, but now we look to the community to serve its needs."

He said, "CTA is no longer aloof and separate. Many of our office, housing and beach turnarounds show we designed a more coherent set of services."

Jarrett talked history, too.

"When I joined the CTA board five years ago, the agency's financial outlook was grim," she said. "Because we've been careful and creative with our spending, we've been able to make improvements in our service and still keep fares low. We want to continue with that strategy."

Kruesi said, "We're certainly not perfect, but we're getting a lot better."

One way it will get better is by putting 200 new, air-conditioned buses on the streets and renovating more than 200 old buses over the course of the next year.

"We'll go to a fleet of fully air-conditioned buses within a couple of years," he said. "Now on an average weekday, a million riders use buses, and half of them on a hot summer day won't be on an air-conditioned bus. Some of the buses are 18 years old, although a bus becomes obsolete in 12 years."

In 1983, he said, 80 percent of customers were bus riders, and last year that portion fell to two-thirds of CTA users.

"The erosion of our bus riders is easiest to fix, and next month for the first time since 1985 there will be new buses. A hundred-fifty by early 2001 will be added, and after that, 160 new buses per year."

CTA will continue to test ways to cut down on bunching, through a program that will enable some bus drivers to make route adjustments when they see problems.

"A preeminent problem is trying to space our buses," Kruesi said. "In congested traffic, there will be operator empowerment, enabling drivers to self-direct on 21 or 22 routes."

"The CTA is faced with a wonderful problem," Jarrett said. "It is that people are rediscovering transit. Ridership is higher, both for choice riders and for people who have no choice."

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (Valerie Jarrett)