1. Academic Validation
  2. A Ca(2+)-activated NADPH oxidase in testis, spleen, and lymph nodes

A Ca(2+)-activated NADPH oxidase in testis, spleen, and lymph nodes

  • J Biol Chem. 2001 Oct 5;276(40):37594-601. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M103034200.
B Bánfi 1 G Molnár A Maturana K Steger B Hegedûs N Demaurex K H Krause
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Biology of Aging Laboratory, Department of Geriatrics, Geneva University Hospitals, Ch. du Petit-Bel-Air 2, CH-1225 Geneva, Switzerland.
Abstract

Superoxide and its derivatives are increasingly implicated in the regulation of physiological functions from oxygen sensing and blood pressure regulation to lymphocyte activation and sperm-oocyte fusion. Here we describe a novel superoxide-generating NADPH Oxidase referred to as NADPH Oxidase 5 (NOX5). NOX5 is distantly related to the gp91(phox) subunit of the phagocyte NADPH Oxidase with conserved regions crucial for the electron transport (NADPH, FAD and heme binding sites). However, NOX5 has a unique N-terminal extension that contains three EF hand motifs. The mRNA of NOX5 is expressed in pachytene spermatocytes of testis and in B- and T-lymphocyte-rich areas of spleen and lymph nodes. When heterologously expressed, NOX5 was quiescent in unstimulated cells. However, in response to elevations of the cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration it generated large amounts of superoxide. Upon Ca(2+) activation, NOX5 also displayed a second function: it became a proton channel, presumably to compensate charge and pH alterations due to electron export. In summary, we have identified a novel NADPH Oxidase that generates superoxide and functions as a H(+) channel in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. NOX5 is likely to be involved in Ca(2+)-activated, redox-dependent processes of spermatozoa and lymphocytes such as sperm-oocyte fusion, cell proliferation, and cytokine secretion.

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