Title of article
Characterisation of bovine inducible nitric oxide synthase
Author/Authors
Stephanie Widdison، نويسنده , , Stephanie and Ashley، نويسنده , , George R. and Howard، نويسنده , , Chris J. and Coffey، نويسنده , , Tracey J.، نويسنده ,
Pages
8
From page
302
To page
309
Abstract
Inducible nitric oxide (iNOS) is an enzyme that catalyzes the production of the reactive nitrogen intermediate nitric oxide (NO). NO is an important signalling molecule, released by numerous cells, that acts in many tissues to regulate a diverse range of physiological and biological processes, including neurotransmission, immune defence and the regulation of cell death (apoptosis). NO plays a major role in the killing of intracellular pathogens as part of the innate immune response. iNOS is known to be induced by a number of stimuli including cytokines as well as pathogens and their components. As yet, a full-length bovine iNOS sequence has only been predicted from the genome, although partial sequences from cDNA are available. Here, we have identified a 3471 bp transcript for bovine iNOS, isolated from RNA from bovine alveolar macrophages stimulated with the intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium bovis. When translated this gives a protein of 1156 amino acids. Bovine iNOS shows a high degree of similarity to iNOS from other species, and also shares a common protein domain structure.
Keywords
Bovine , Nitric oxide , inducible nitric oxide synthase , iNOS , macrophages
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
2056583
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