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1.
Dinitrosyliron complexes (DNIC) have been found in a variety of pathological settings associated with NO. However, the iron source of cellular DNIC is unknown. Previous studies on this question using prolonged NO exposure could be misleading due to the movement of intracellular iron among different sources. We here report that brief NO exposure results in only barely detectable DNIC, but levels increase dramatically after 1–2 h of anoxia. This increase is similar quantitatively and temporally with increases in the chelatable iron, and brief NO treatment prevents detection of this anoxia-induced increased chelatable iron by deferoxamine. DNIC formation is so rapid that it is limited by the availability of NO and chelatable iron. We utilize this ability to selectively manipulate cellular chelatable iron levels and provide evidence for two cellular functions of endogenous DNIC formation, protection against anoxia-induced reactive oxygen chemistry from the Fenton reaction and formation by transnitrosation of protein nitrosothiols (RSNO). The levels of RSNO under these high chelatable iron levels are comparable with DNIC levels and suggest that under these conditions, both DNIC and RSNO are the most abundant cellular adducts of NO.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Nitrite protects various organs from ischemia–reperfusion injury by ameliorating mitochondrial dysfunction. Here we provide evidence that this protection is due to the inhibition of iron-mediated oxidative reactions caused by the release of iron ions upon hypoxia. We show in a model of isolated rat liver mitochondria that upon hypoxia, mitochondria reduce nitrite to nitric oxide (NO) in amounts sufficient to inactivate redox-active iron ions by formation of inactive dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC). The scavenging of iron ions in turn prevents the oxidative modification of the outer mitochondrial membrane and the release of cytochrome c during reoxygenation. This action of nitrite protects mitochondrial function. The formation of DNIC with nitrite-derived NO could also be confirmed in an ischemia–reperfusion model in liver tissue. Our data suggest that the formation of DNIC is a key mechanism of nitrite-mediated cytoprotection.  相似文献   

4.
In this report, we tested the hypothesis that cellular content of non-heme iron determined whether cytotoxic levels of nitric oxide (NO) resulted in apoptosis versus necrosis. The consequences of NO exposure on cell viability were tested in RAW264.7 cells (a cell type with low non-heme iron levels) and hepatocytes (cells with high non-heme iron content). Whereas micromolar concentrations of the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine induced apoptosis in RAW264.7 cells, millimolar concentrations were required to induce necrosis in hepatocytes. Caspase-3 activation and cytochrome c release were evident in RAW264.7 cells, but only cytochrome c release was detectable in hepatocytes following high dose S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine exposure. Pretreating RAW264.7 cells with FeSO(4) increased intracellular non-heme iron to levels similar to those measured in hepatocytes and delayed NO-induced cell death, which then occurred in the absence of caspase-3 activation. Iron loading was also associated with the formation of intracellular dinitrosyl-iron complexes (DNIC) upon NO exposure. Cytosolic preparations containing DNIC as well as pure preparations of DNIC suppressed caspase activity. These data suggest that non-heme iron content is a key factor in determining the consequence of NO on cell viability by regulating the chemical fate of NO.  相似文献   

5.
It is well established that nitric oxide (NO) reacts with cellular iron and thiols to form dinitrosyliron complexes (DNIC). Little is known, however, regarding their formation and biological fate. Our quantitative measurements reveal that cellular concentrations of DNIC are proportionally the largest of all NO-derived adducts (900 pmol/mg protein, or 45-90 μM). Using murine macrophages (RAW 264.7), we measured the amounts, and kinetics, of DNIC assembly and disappearance from endogenous and exogenous sources of NO in relation to iron and O2 concentration. Amounts of DNIC were equal to or greater than measured amounts of chelatable iron and depended on the dose and duration of NO exposure. DNIC formation paralleled the upregulation of iNOS and occurred at low physiologic NO concentrations (50-500 nM). Decreasing the O2 concentration reduced the rate of enzymatic NO synthesis without affecting the amount of DNIC formed. Temporal measurements revealed that DNIC disappeared in an oxygen-independent manner (t1/2 = 80 min) and remained detectable long after the NO source was removed (> 24 h). These results demonstrate that DNIC will be formed under all cellular settings of NO production and that the contribution of DNIC to the multitude of observed effects of NO must always be considered.  相似文献   

6.
In cultured macrophages (J 774 line) a decrease in iron-sulfur centers (ISC) was not observed after 5 min treatment with nitric oxide (NO) (10(-7) M NO/10(7) cells). The content of these centers was measured by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy at 16-60 K. However, the appearance of a characteristic ESR signal at g(av) = 2.03 indicated the formation of dinitrosyl iron complex (DNIC) in these cells. These findings suggest that loosely bound non-heme iron (free iron) but not iron from ISC is mainly involved in DNIC formation. ISC might release iron for DNIC formation after their destruction induced by the products of NO oxidation (NO2, N2O3, etc).  相似文献   

7.
The gaseous mediators hydrogen sulphide (H2S) and nitric oxide (*NO) are synthesised in the body from L-cysteine and L-arginine, respectively. In the cardiovascular system, *NO is an important regulator of vascular tone and its over- or under-production has been linked to a variety of diseases. The physiological significance of H2S is not yet clear but, like *NO, it exhibits vasodilator activity and may play a part in septic and haemorrhagic shock, hypertension, regulation of cardiac contractility, and in inflammation. To date, there have been no reports of a chemical interaction between H2S and *NO. Here we show that incubation of the H2S donor, sodium hydrosulphide, with a range of *NO donors and *NO gas in vitro leads to the formation of a nitrosothiol molecule as determined by a combination of techniques; electron paramagnetic resonance, amperometry, and measurement of nitrite. We further show that this nitrosothiol did not induce cGMP accumulation in cultured RAW264.7 cells unless *NO was released with Cu2+. Finally, using liver homogenates from LPS treated rats we present evidence for the endogenous formation of this nitrosothiol. These findings provide the first evidence for the formation of a novel nitrosothiol generated by reaction between H2S and *NO. We propose that generation of this nitrosothiol in the body may regulate the physiological effects of both *NO and H2S.  相似文献   

8.
Using EPR spectroscopy it was established that Fe ions released from ferritin under the action of glutathione and superoxide took part in the formation of dinitrosyl complexes of iron with glutathione (DNIC). The reaction between O2-. and NO resulted in the formation of peroxynitrite, which oxidized glutathione to the thiyl radical. In these conditions, DNIC did not inhibit the formation of thiyl radicals but effectively slowed down the oxidative destruction of beta-carotene by peroxynitrite and free radicals of lipids. In the presence of glutathione, the inversion of the antioxidant properties of DNIC into prooxidant ones took place. S-nitrosoglutathione prevented this inversion and suppressed the free-radical oxidation of beta-carotene induced by ferritin. It was proposed that the equilibrium between S-nitrosoglutathione, DNIC, "free Fe" ions and ferritin may determine the balance between prooxidant and antioxidant processes in living organisms.  相似文献   

9.
The formation of protein-bound dinitrosyl-iron complexes (DNIC) in blood plasma and packed red cell fraction has been demonstrated by the EPR method in the experiments on rabbits which were i/v injected with the low-molecular DNIC with thiosulphate. This formation was ensured by transfer of Fe(+)(NO(+))(2) moieties from low-molecular DNIC onto serum albumin or hemoglobin molecules. Protein-bound DNICs appeared immediately after low-molecular DNIC injection followed with gradually decreasing their amounts. The complexes could be detected by EPR technique during more than two days. The addition of water-soluble NO scavenger, the iron complex with N-methyl-d-glucamine dithiocarbamate (MGD) resulted in decomposition of a part of protein-bound DNICs and in effective excretion of secondary products (mainly mononitrosyl-iron complexes with MGD) from the blood flow.  相似文献   

10.
Administration of dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with cysteine suppressed the development of experimental (surgically induced) endometriosis in rats: the mean size of endometrioma was 1.85 times smaller if 0.5 mL of a 5 mM aqueous solution of DNIC had been injected daily for 10 days. It is supposed that NO molecules and nitrosonium ions (NO+), released from DNIC rapidly decomposed in the organism, prove cytotoxic for endometrioid tissue.  相似文献   

11.
N-Myc downstream-regulated gene 1 (NDRG1) is a ubiquitous cellular protein that is up-regulated under a multitude of stress and growth-regulatory conditions. Although the exact cellular functions of this protein have not been elucidated, mutations in this gene or aberrant expression of this protein have been linked to both tumor suppressive and oncogenic phenotypes. Previous reports have demonstrated that NDRG1 is strongly up-regulated by chemical iron chelators and hypoxia, yet its regulation by the free radical nitric oxide (NO) has never been demonstrated. Herein, we examine the chemical biology that confers NDRG1 responsiveness at the mRNA and protein levels to NO. We demonstrate that the interaction of NO with the chelatable iron pool (CIP) and the appearance of dinitrosyliron complexes (DNIC) are key determinants. Using HCC 1806 triple negative breast cancer cells, we find that NDRG1 is up-regulated by physiological NO concentrations in a dose- and time-dependant manner. Tumor cell migration was suppressed by NDRG1 expression and we excluded the involvement of HIF-1α, sGC, N-Myc, and c-Myc as upstream regulatory targets of NO. Augmenting the chelatable iron pool abolished NO-mediated NDRG1 expression and the associated phenotypic effects. These data, in summary, reveal a link between NO, chelatable iron, and regulation of NDRG1 expression and signaling in tumor cells.  相似文献   

12.
It is hypothesized that in cells producing nitric oxide (NO), NO and its endogenous derivatives (low-molecular S-nitrosothiols and dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with thiol-containing ligands) can move in the intracellular space not only by diffusion but also in an autowave mode. This hypothesis is based on the previously obtained data on autowave distribution of DNIC with glutathione following application of a drop of a solution of Fe2+ + glutathione onto the surface of a thin layer of a S-nitrosoglutathione solution. The appearance of autowaves is conditioned by a self-regulating self-sustained system arising in the process. This system consists of self-convertible DNIC and S-nitrosothiols as well as free ferrous iron ions, thiols and NO and can function in the autowave regime for several seconds with subsequent passage to a steady state maintained by chemical equilibrium between DNIC and their constituent components (free Fe2+ ions, thiols, S-nitrosothiols and NO). Possible advantages of autowave distribution of NO and its endogenous derivatives in the intracellular space over free diffusion, which might entail higher efficiency of their biological action, are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Dimeric dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with cysteine or glutathione as NO donors accelerated the healing of experimental skin wound in rats, as demonstrated by histological and histochemical examination. After two injections of an aqueous DNIC solution into the wound (total 5 μmol) on days 1 and 2 after surgery, the granulocyte volume in wound tissue on day 4 was 3–4 times greater than in the control. Higher DNIC doses provoked inflammation in the wound. Similar experiments with another NO donor S-nitrosoglutathione in equivalent amounts (10 μmol) adversely affected the wound. Addition of 2.5 μmol glutathione DNIC for 40 min produced EPR-detectable protein-bound DNIC (2.5 nmol) in wound tissue. Under the same conditions, 5 μmol S-nitrosoglutathione produced less than 10 pmol of protein-bound DNIC; an EPR-active nitrosyl hemoglobin complex was mainly formed (1.5–2.0 nmol) in this case. The beneficial effect of DNIC on the wound was suggested to be due to the delivery of NO to its targets without pronounced formation of cytotoxic peroxynitrite in wound tissue. In contrast, peroxynitrite could form upon administration of rapidly decomposed S-nitrosoglutathione, thereby aggravating the wound condition.  相似文献   

14.
Dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with thiolate ligands and S-nitrosothiols, which are NO and NO+ donors, share the earlier demonstrated ability of nitrite for inhibition of catalase. The efficiency of inhibition sharply (by several orders in concentration of these agents) increases in the presence of chloride, bromide, and thiocyanate. The nitro compounds tested--nitroarginine, nitroglycerol, nitrophenol, and furazolidone--gained the same inhibition ability after incubation with ferrous ions and thiols. This is probably the result of their transformation into DNIC. None of these substances lost the inhibitory effect in the presence of the well known NO scavenger oxyhemoglobin. This fact suggests that NO+ ions rather than neutral NO molecules are responsible for the enzyme inactivation due to nitrosation of its structures. The enhancement of catalase inhibition in the presence of halide ions and thiocyanate might be caused by nitrosyl halide formation. The latter protected nitrosonium ions against hydrolysis, thereby ensuring their transfer to the targets in enzyme molecules. The addition of oxyhemoglobin plus iron chelator o-phenanthroline destroying DNIC sharply attenuated the inhibitory effect of DNIC on catalase. o-Phenanthroline added alone did not influence this effect. Oxyhemoglobin is suggested to scavenge nitrosonium ions released from decomposing DNIC, thereby preventing catalase nitrosation. The mixture of oxyhemoglobin and o-phenanthroline did not affect the inhibitory action of nitrite or S-nitrosothiols on catalase.  相似文献   

15.
No decrease in iron-sulphur centers was found in cultured macrophage cells (J774) after the treatment with nitric oxide (10(-7) M NO/10(7) cells) during 5 min. The center content was controlled by the electron spin resonance (ESR) method. The macrophages pretreated with dithionite + methyl viologen showed the formation of dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with a characteristic ESR signal at g approximately 2.03. The data suggest that loosely bound nonheme iron (free iron) mostly contributes to the formation of these complexes. Iron from iron-containing proteins does not release from these centers under the direct action of nitric oxide. The iron-sulphur centers can be destroyed by the products of nitric oxide oxidation (NO2, N2O3, etc.) as oxidizing and acid agents.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanisms of S-nitrosothiol transformation into paramagnetic dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNICs) with thiol- or non-thiol ligands or mononitrosyl iron complex (MNICs) with N-methyl-D-glucamine dithiocarbamate catalyzed by iron(II) ions under anaerobic conditions were studied by monitoring EPR or optical features of the complexes and S-nitrosothiols. The kinetic investigations demonstrated the appearance of short-living paramagnetic mononitrosyl-iron complex with L-cysteine prior to the formation of stable dinitrosyl-iron complex with cysteine in the solution of iron(II)-citrate complex (50-100 microM), S-nitrosocysteine (400 microM), and L-cysteine (20 mM) in 100 mM Hepes buffer (pH 7.4). The addition of deoxyhemoglobin (100 microM) did not influence the process, which points to a direct interaction between S-nitrosocysteine and iron(II) ions to yield DNIC. The reaction of DNIC-cysteine formation is first- and second-order in iron and S-nitrosocysteine, respectively. The third-order rate constant is (1.0 +/- 0.2) x 10(5) M(-2) s(-1) (estimated from EPR results) or (2.0 +/- 0.1) x 10(4) M(-2) s(-1) (estimated by optical method). A similar process of DNIC-cysteine formation was observed in a solution of iron(II)-citrate complex, L-cysteine, and NO-proline (200 microM) as a NO* donor. The appearance of a less stable dinitrosyl-iron complex with phosphate was detected when solutions of iron(II)-citrate containing 100 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) were mixed with S-nitrosocysteine or NO-proline. The rapid formation of DNIC with phosphate was followed by its decay. When the concentration of L-cysteine in solutions was reduced from 20 to 1 mM, the life-time of the DNIC-cysteine diminished notably; this was caused by consumption of L-cysteine in the process of DNIC-cysteine formation from S-nitrosocysteine and iron. Thus, L-cysteine is consumed. Formation of DNIC with glutathione was also observed in a solution of glutathione (20 mM), S-nitrosoglutathione (400 microM), and iron(II) complex (800 microM) in 100 mM Hepes buffer (pH 7.4), but the rate of formation was about 10 times slower than the formation of the DNIC-cysteine. The rate of MNIC-MGD formation from iron(II)-MGD complexes and S-nitrosocysteine was first-order in both reactants. The second-order rate constant for this reaction, estimated from EPR measurements, was 30 +/- 5 M(-1) s(-1). Rate constants of MNIC-MGD formation from iron(II)-MGD and the more stable S-nitrosoglutathione and S-nitroso-D,L-penicillamine were equal to 3.0 +/- 0.3 and 0.3 +/- 0.05 M(-1) s(-1), respectively. Thus, the concerted mechanism of DNIC and MNIC formation from S-nitrosothiols and iron(II) ions can be suggested to be predominant.  相似文献   

17.
Dinitrosyl non-heme–iron complexes (DNIC) are found in many nitric oxide producing tissues. A prerequisite of DNIC formation is the presence of nitric oxide, iron and thiol/imidazole groups. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of the cellular labile iron pool in the formation of DNIC in erythroid K562 cells. The cells were treated with a nitric oxide donor in the presence of a permeable (salicylaldehyde isonicotinoyl hydrazone) or a nonpermeable (desferrioxamine mesylate) iron chelator and DNIC formation was recorded using electron paramagnetic resonance. Both chelators inhibited DNIC formation up to 50% after 6 h of treatment. To further investigate the role of lysosomal iron in DNIC formation, we prevented lysosomal proteolysis by pretreatment of whole cells with NH4Cl. Pretreatment with NH4Cl inhibited the formation of DNIC in a time-dependent manner that points to the importance of the degradation of iron metalloproteins in DNIC formation in vivo. Fractionation of the cell content after treatment with the nitric oxide donor revealed that DNIC is formed predominantly in the endosomal/lysosomal fraction. Taken together, these data indicate that lysosomal iron plays a crucial role in DNIC formation in vivo. Degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins seems to be important for this process.  相似文献   

18.
Dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNICs) have been traced in rat blood and organs after intravenous infusion of Oxacom. It is shown that the active principle (DNIC with glutathione) is rapidly distributed through the organism and deposited in blood and organs as protein-bound DNICs. The specific levels of DNIC in the main body organs are comparable, whereas its apparent lifetimes relate as blood < heart = lung < liver < kidney. Spin trapping assays indicate that protein-bound DNICs are a major but not the only form of NO deposition; the next largest depot is most probably formed by S-nitrosothiols. The gradual release of NO from such pools ensures the smooth and prolonged hypotensive effect of Oxacom.  相似文献   

19.
Recent results demonstrated that S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) and nitric oxide (*NO) protect brain dopamine neurons from hydroxyl radical (*OH)-induced oxidative stress in vivo because they are potent antioxidants. GSNO and *NO terminate oxidant stress in the brain by (i) inhibiting iron-stimulated hydroxyl radicals formation or the Fenton reaction, (ii) terminating lipid peroxidation, (iii) augmenting the antioxidative potency of glutathione (GSH), (iv) mediating neuroprotective action of brain-derived neurotrophin (BDNF), and (v) inhibiting cysteinyl proteases. In fact, GSNO--S-nitrosylated GSH--is approximately 100 times more potent than the classical antioxidant GSH. In addition, S-nitrosylation of cysteine residues by GSNO inactivates caspase-3 and HIV-1 protease, and prevents apoptosis and neurotoxicity. GSNO-induced antiplatelet aggregation is also mediated by S-nitrosylation of clotting factor XIII. Thus the elucidation of chemical reactions involved in this GSNO pathway (GSH GS* + *NO-->[GSNO]-->GSSG + *NO-->GSH) is necessary for understanding the biology of *NO, especially its beneficial antioxidative and neuroprotective effects in the CNS. GSNO is most likely generated in the endothelial and astroglial cells during oxidative stress because these cells contain mM GSH and nitric oxide synthase. Furthermore, the transfer of GSH and *NO to neurons via this GSNO pathway may facilitate cell to neuron communications, including not only the activation of guanylyl cyclase, but also the nitrosylation of iron complexes, iron containing enzymes, and cysteinyl proteases. GSNO annihilates free radicals and promotes neuroprotection via its c-GMP-independent nitrosylation actions. This putative pathway of GSNO/GSH/*NO may provide new molecular insights for the redox cycling of GSH and GSSG in the CNS.  相似文献   

20.
The conversion of NO into its congeners, nitrosonium (NO+) and nitroxyl (HNO/NO-) species, has important consequences in NO metabolism. Dinitrosyl iron complex (DNIC) combined with thiol ligands was shown to catalyze the conversion of NO into NO+, resulting in the synthesis of S-nitrosothiols (RSNO) both in vitro and in vivo. The formation mechanism of DNIC was proposed to involve the intermediate release of nitroxyl. Since the detection of hydroxylamine (as the product of a rapid reaction of HNO/NO- with thiols) is taken as the evidence for nitroxyl generation, we examined the formation of hydroxylamine, RSNO, and nitrite (the product of a rapid reaction of NO+ with water) in neutral solutions containing iron ions and thiols exposed to NO under anaerobic conditions. Hydroxylamine was detected in NO treated solutions of iron ions in the presence of cysteine, but not glutathione (GSH). The addition of urate, a major "free" iron-binding agent in humans, to solutions of GSH and iron ions, and the subsequent treatment of these solutions with NO increased the synthesis of GSNO and resulted in the formation of hydroxylamine. This caused a loss of urate and yielded a novel nitrosative/nitration product. GSH attenuated the urate decomposition to such a degree that it could be reflected as the function of GSH:urate. Results described here contribute to the understanding of the role of iron ions in catalyzing the conversion of NO into HNO/NO- and point to the role of uric acid not previously described.  相似文献   

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