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1.
Nitric oxide (NO) is an important biological regulator. It can bind to heme iron and form NO+, involved in the synthesis of S-nitrosothiols (-SNOs). NO reacts with human hemoglobin (Hb) to produce the derivatives: S-nitrosylhemoglobin (-SNOHb) and nitrosylhemoglobin (HbNO). At neutral pH values, free NO does not react directly with the -SH groups of Hb. The reductive nitrosylation of Fe(III) heme upon reaction with NO has long been studied, but it is not yet completely known. To quantify the reaction of NO with Hb, we developed a new, sensitive (nanomolar concentration range) electrochemical assay to selectively measure HbNO and -SNOHb. The assay also allows the monitoring of free NO during the reaction with human Fe(III)Hb and Fe(II)HbO(2).  相似文献   

2.
Nitric oxide (NO) signaling regulates key processes in cardiovascular physiology, specifically vasodilation, platelet aggregation, and leukocyte rolling. Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), the mammalian NO sensor, transduces an NO signal into the classical second messenger cyclic GMP (cGMP). NO binds to the ferrous (Fe2+) oxidation state of the sGC heme cofactor and stimulates formation of cGMP several hundred-fold. Oxidation of the sGC heme to the ferric (Fe3+) state desensitizes the enzyme to NO. The heme-oxidized state of sGC has emerged as a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of cardiovascular disease. Here, we investigate the molecular mechanism of NO desensitization and find that sGC undergoes a reductive nitrosylation reaction that is coupled to the S-nitrosation of sGC cysteines. We further characterize the kinetics of NO desensitization and find that heme-assisted nitrosothiol formation of β1Cys-78 and β1Cys-122 causes the NO desensitization of ferric sGC. Finally, we provide evidence that the mechanism of reductive nitrosylation is gated by a conformational change of the protein. These results yield insights into the function and dysfunction of sGC in cardiovascular disease.  相似文献   

3.
The reduction of circulating nitrite to nitric oxide (NO) has emerged as an important physiological reaction aimed to increase vasodilation during tissue hypoxia. Although hemoglobin, xanthine oxidase, endothelial NO synthase, and the bc(1) complex of the mitochondria are known to reduce nitrite anaerobically in vitro, their relative contribution to the hypoxic vasodilatory response has remained unsolved. Using a wire myograph, we have investigated how the nitrite-dependent vasodilation in rat aortic rings is controlled by oxygen tension, norepinephrine concentration, soluble guanylate cyclase (the target for vasoactive NO), and known nitrite reductase activities under hypoxia. Vasodilation followed overall first-order dependency on nitrite concentration and, at low oxygenation and norepinephrine levels, was induced by low-nitrite concentrations, comparable to those found in vivo. The vasoactive effect of nitrite during hypoxia was abolished on inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase and was unaffected by removal of the endothelium or by inhibition of xanthine oxidase and of the mitochondrial bc(1) complex. In the presence of hemoglobin and inositol hexaphosphate (which increases the fraction of deoxygenated heme), the effect of nitrite was not different from that observed with inositol hexaphosphate alone, indicating that under the conditions investigated here deoxygenated hemoglobin did not enhance nitrite vasoactivity. Together, our results indicate that the mechanism for nitrite vasorelaxation is largely intrinsic to the vessel and that under hypoxia physiological nitrite concentrations are sufficient to induce NO-mediated vasodilation independently of the nitrite reductase activities investigated here. Possible reaction mechanisms for nitrite vasoactivity, including formation of S-nitrosothiols within the arterial smooth muscle, are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Rates for the reaction of nitric oxide with several ferric heme proteins and model compounds have been measured. The NO combination rates are markedly affected by the presence or absence of distal histidine. Elephant myoglobin in which the E7 distal histidine has been replaced by glutamine reacts with NO 500-1000 times faster than do the native hemoglobins or myoglobins. By contrast, there is no difference in the CO combination rate constants of sperm whale and elephant myoglobins. Studies on ferric model compounds for the R and T states of hemoglobin indicate that their NO combination rate constants are similar to those observed for the combination of CO with the corresponding ferro derivatives. The last observation suggests that the presence of an axial water molecule at the ligand binding site of ferric hemoglobin A prevents it from exhibiting significant cooperativity in its reactions with NO.  相似文献   

5.
S-Nitrosothiols are potentially important mediators of biological processes including vascular function, apoptosis, and thrombosis. Recent studies indicate that the concentrations of S-nitrosothiols in the plasma from healthy individuals are lower than previously reported and in the range of 30-120 nM. The mechanisms of formation and metabolism of these low nM concentrations, capable of exerting biological effects, remain unknown. An important issue that remains unresolved is the significance of the reactions of low fluxes of nitric oxide (NO) with oxygen to form S-nitrosothiols in a complex biological medium such as plasma, and the impact of red blood cells on the formation of S-nitrosothiols in blood. These issues were addressed by exposing plasma to varying fluxes of NO and measuring the net formation of S-nitrosothiols. In the presence of oxygen and physiological fluxes of NO, the predominant S-nitrosothiol formed is S-nitroso-albumin at concentrations in the high nM range (approximately 400-1000 nM). Although the formation of S-nitrosothiols by NO was attenuated in whole blood, presumably by erythrocytic hemoglobin, significant amounts of S-nitrosothiols within the physiological range of S-nitrosothiol concentrations (approximately 80 nM) were still formed at physiological fluxes of NO. Little is known about the stability of S-nitroso-albumin in plasma, and this is central to our understanding of the biological effectiveness of S-nitrosothiols. Low molecular weight thiols decreased the half-life of S-nitroso-albumin in plasma, and the stability of S-nitroso-albumin is enhanced by the alkylation of free thiols. Our data suggests that physiologically relevant concentrations of S-nitrosothiols can be formed in blood through the reaction of NO with oxygen and proteins, despite the low rates of reaction of oxygen with NO and the presence of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

6.
Recent evidence suggests that the reaction of nitrite with deoxygenated hemoglobin and myoglobin contributes to the generation of nitric oxide and S-nitrosothiols in vivo under conditions of low oxygen availability. We have investigated whether ferrous neuroglobin and cytoglobin, the two hexacoordinate globins from vertebrates expressed in brain and in a variety of tissues, respectively, also react with nitrite under anaerobic conditions. Using absorption spectroscopy, we find that ferrous neuroglobin and nitrite react with a second-order rate constant similar to that of myoglobin, whereas the ferrous heme of cytoglobin does not react with nitrite. Deconvolution of absorbance spectra shows that, in the course of the reaction of neuroglobin with nitrite, ferric Fe(III) heme is generated in excess of nitrosyl Fe(II)-NO heme as due to the low affinity of ferrous neuroglobin for nitric oxide. By using ferrous myoglobin as scavenger for nitric oxide, we find that nitric oxide dissociates from ferrous neuroglobin much faster than previously appreciated, consistently with the decay of the Fe(II)-NO product during the reaction. Both neuroglobin and cytoglobin are S-nitrosated when reacting with nitrite, with neuroglobin showing higher levels of S-nitrosation. The possible biological significance of the reaction between nitrite and neuroglobin in vivo under brain hypoxia is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Nitrite reacts with deoxyhemoglobin to generate nitric oxide (NO). This reaction has been proposed to contribute to nitrite-dependent vasodilation in vivo and potentially regulate physiological hypoxic vasodilation. Paradoxically, while deoxyhemoglobin can generate NO via nitrite reduction, both oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin potently scavenge NO. Furthermore, at the very low O(2) tensions required to deoxygenate cell-free hemoglobin solutions in aortic ring bioassays, surprisingly low doses of nitrite can be reduced to NO directly by the blood vessel, independent of the presence of hemoglobin; this makes assessments of the role of hemoglobin in the bioactivation of nitrite difficult to characterize in these systems. Therefore, to study the O(2) dependence and ability of deoxhemoglobin to generate vasodilatory NO from nitrite, we performed full factorial experiments of oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and nitrite and found a highly significant interaction between hemoglobin deoxygenation and nitrite-dependent vasodilation (P < or = 0.0002). Furthermore, we compared the effect of hemoglobin oxygenation on authentic NO-dependent vasodilation using a NONOate NO donor and found that there was no such interaction, i.e., both oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin inhibited NO-mediated vasodilation. Finally, we showed that another NO scavenger, 2-carboxyphenyl-4,4-5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, inhibits nitrite-dependent vasodilation under normoxia and hypoxia, illustrating the uniqueness of the interaction of nitrite with deoxyhemoglobin. While both oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin potently inhibit NO, deoxyhemoglobin exhibits unique functional duality as an NO scavenger and nitrite-dependent NO generator, suggesting a model in which intravascular NO homeostasis is regulated by a balance between NO scavenging and NO generation that is dynamically regulated by hemoglobin's O(2) fractional saturation and allosteric nitrite reductase activity.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric oxide (NO) is generated in biological systems and plays an important role as a bioregulatory molecule. Its ability to bind hemoglobin and myoglobin is well known. Moreover, it may lose an electron forming the nitrosyl group involved in the formation of S-nitrosothiols. The main problem in analyzing NO is its extreme reactivity. We have tackled this task by using an amperometric sensor to determine free NO, S-nitrosothiols (such as S-nitrosoglutathione), and nitrite in cell-free systems and murine microglial cell cultures. The determination of nitrosothiols is of biochemical relevance and a difficult task particularly at low concentration values. In this article we describe a new method based on the reductive cleavage of the S-NO bond by cuprous ions followed by a solid-state amperometric determination. The system described by us is sensitive, rapid, does not require previous purification steps, is easy to perform, and is inexpensive. For this reason, we think that it may represent an important analytical improvement. It has been suggested that nitrosothiols may exert biological activity by acting as a reservoir of NO. We tested the production of nitrite and of RSNO in stimulated, cultured murine microglial cells and we have shown that nitrite accumulates in these conditions. GSNO also accumulates, provided that GSH is present in the medium.  相似文献   

9.
Recent studies reveal a novel role for hemoglobin as an allosterically regulated nitrite reductase that may mediate nitric oxide (NO)-dependent signaling along the physiological oxygen gradient. Nitrite reacts with deoxyhemoglobin in an allosteric reaction that generates NO and oxidizes deoxyhemoglobin to methemoglobin. NO then reacts at a nearly diffusion-limited rate with deoxyhemoglobin to form iron-nitrosyl-hemoglobin, which to date has been considered a highly stable adduct and, thus, not a source of bioavailable NO. However, under physiological conditions of partial oxygen saturation, nitrite will also react with oxyhemoglobin, and although this complex autocatalytic reaction has been studied for a century, the interaction of the oxy- and deoxy-reactions and the effects on NO disposition have never been explored. We have now characterized the kinetics of hemoglobin oxidation and NO generation at a range of oxygen partial pressures and found that the deoxy-reaction runs in parallel with and partially inhibits the oxy-reaction. In fact, intermediates in the oxy-reaction oxidize the heme iron of iron-nitrosyl-hemoglobin, a product of the deoxy-reaction, which releases NO from the iron-nitrosyl. This oxidative denitrosylation is particularly striking during cycles of hemoglobin deoxygenation and oxygenation in the presence of nitrite. These chemistries may contribute to the oxygen-dependent disposition of nitrite in red cells by limiting oxidative inactivation of nitrite by oxyhemoglobin, promoting nitrite reduction to NO by deoxyhemoglobin, and releasing free NO from iron-nitrosyl-hemoglobin.  相似文献   

10.
The nitrosylation of two water-soluble iron-porphyrins, the anionic Fe(III)-meso-tetrakis(p-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (FeTPPS(4)) and the cationic Fe(III)-meso-tetrakis(4-N-methylpyridiniumyl)porphyrin (FeTMPyP), by the nitric oxide donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) was studied using optical absorption spectroscopy. The influence of ionic and non-ionic micelles on rates of nitric oxide transfer was investigated. Initially, the effect of the micelles on the pH-dependent equilibrium between monomeric and micro-oxo-dimeric species of the iron-porphyrins was examined. It is not affected in micelle-porphyrin systems with electric charges identical in sign. The non-ionic micelles of polidocanol induce a small negative pK shift. In contrast, the dimerization equilibrium of porphyrins in oppositely charged micellar phases is displaced to lower pH by approximately 2 units. Nitric oxide binding to monomers and micro-oxo-dimers was examined at pH 5.0 and 8.0, respectively. Contrary to nitrosylation by NO gas, SNAP induces reductive nitrosylation. There was no observed NO-Fe(III)porphyrin intermediate. Nitrosylation rates were obtained and compared in aqueous buffer and in micellar systems. Monomers nitrosylate much faster than micro-oxo-dimers. Oppositely charged micelles prevent nitrosylation of the iron-porphyrins or considerably enhance nitrosylation times. Nitrosylation rates are comparable to transnitrosylation rates between several S-nitrosothiols and thiol-containing proteins, suggesting biological relevance for the process.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of ferrous hemoglobins to reduce nitrite to form nitric oxide has been demonstrated for hemoglobins from animals, including myoglobin, blood cell hemoglobin, neuroglobin, and cytoglobin. In all cases, the rate constants for the bimolecular reactions with nitrite are relatively slow, with maximal values of ~5 M(-1) s(-1) at pH 7. Combined with the relatively low concentrations of nitrite found in animal blood plasma (normally no greater than 13 μM), these slow reaction rates are unlikely to contribute significantly to hemoglobin oxidation, nitrite reduction, or NO production. Plants and cyanobacteria, however, must contend with much higher (millimolar) nitrite concentrations necessitated by assimilatory nitrogen metabolism during hypoxic growth, such as the conditions commonly found during flooding or in waterlogged soil. Here we report rate constants for nitrite reduction by a ferrous plant hemoglobin (rice nonsymbiotic hemoglobin 1) and a ferrous cyanobacterial hemoglobin from Synechocystis that are more than 10 times faster than those observed for animal hemoglobins. These rate constants, along with the relatively high concentrations of nitrite present during hypoxia, suggest that plant and cyanobacterial hemoglobins could serve as anaerobic nitrite reductases in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Considerable disparities in the reported levels of basal human nitrite and S-nitrosothiols (RSNO) in blood have brought methods of quantifying these nitric oxide (NO) metabolites to the forefront of NO biology. Ozone-based chemiluminescence is commonly used and is a robust method for measuring these species when combined with proper reductive chemistry. The goal of this article is to review existing methodologies for the measurement of nitrite and RSNO by reductive chemiluminescence. Specifically, we discuss in detail the measurement of nitrite and RSNO in biological matrices using tri-iodide and copper(I)/cysteine-based reduction methods coupled to chemiluminescence. The underlying reaction mechanisms, as well as the potential pitfalls of each method are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The giant extracellular hemoglobin (erythrocruorin) from the earth worm (Lumbricus terrestris) has shown promise as a potential hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier (HBOC) in in vivo animal studies. An important beneficial characteristic of this hemoglobin (LtHb) is the large number of heme-based oxygen transport sites that helps overcome issues of osmotic stress when attempting to provide enough material for efficient oxygen delivery. A potentially important additional property is the capacity of the HBOC either to generate nitric oxide (NO) or to preserve NO bioactivity to compensate for decreased levels of NO in the circulation. The present study compares the NO-generating and NO bioactivity-preserving capability of LtHb with that of human adult hemoglobin (HbA) through several reactions including the nitrite reductase, reductive nitrosylation, and still controversial nitrite anhydrase reactions. An assignment of a heme-bound dinitrogen trioxide as the stable intermediate associated with the nitrite anhydrase reaction in both LtHb and HbA is supported based on functional and EPR spectroscopic studies. The role of the redox potential as a factor contributing to the NO-generating activity of these two proteins is evaluated. The results show that LtHb undergoes the same reactions as HbA and that the reduced efficacy for these reactions for LtHb relative to HbA is consistent with the much higher redox potential of LtHb. Evidence of functional heterogeneity in LtHb is explained in terms of the large difference in the redox potential of the isolated subunits.  相似文献   

14.
Neonatal cattle and in part neonates of other species have manyfold higher plasma concentrations of nitrite plus nitrate than mature cows and subjects of other species, suggesting an enhanced and needed activation of the nitric oxide (NO) axis at birth. While the biological half-life of NO is short (<1 sec), its functionality can be prolonged, and in many regards more discretely modulated, when it reacts with low-molecular-weight and protein-bound thiols to form S-nitrosothiols (RSNO), from which NO subsequently can be rereleased. We used the calf as a model to test the hypothesis that plasma concentrations of RSNO are elevated at birth in mammals, correlate with ascorbate and urate levels, are selectively generated in critical tissue beds, and are generated in a manner temporally coincident with changes in tissue levels of active NO synthases (NOS). Plasma concentrations of RSNO, ascorbate, and urate were highest immediately after birth (Day 0), dropped >50% on Day 1, and gradually decreased over time, reaching a nadir in mature cattle. Albumin and immunoglobulin G were identified as major plasma RSNO. The presence of S-nitrosocysteine (SNC, a validated marker for S-nitrosylated proteins), inducible NOS (iNOS), and activated endothelial NOS (eNOS phosphorylated at Ser1177) in different tissues was analyzed by immunohistochemistry in another group of similar-aged calves. SNC, iNOS, and phosphorylated eNOS were detected in liver and ileum at the earliest timepoint of sampling (4 hrs after birth), increased between 4 and 24 hrs, and then declined to near-nondetectable levels by 2 weeks of life. Our data show that the neonatal period in the bovine species is characterized by highly elevated and coordinated NO-generating and nitrosylation events, with the ontogenetic changes occurring in iNOS and eNOS contents in key tissues as well as RSNO products and associated antioxidant markers.  相似文献   

15.
Jensen FB 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(13):3375-3387
The nitrite reductase activity of deoxyhemoglobin has received much recent interest because the nitric oxide produced in this reaction may participate in blood flow regulation during hypoxia. The present study used spectral deconvolution to characterize the reaction of nitrite with carp and rabbit hemoglobin at different constant oxygen tensions that generate the full range of physiological relevant oxygen saturations. Carp is a hypoxia-tolerant species with very high hemoglobin oxygen affinity, and the high R-state character and low redox potential of the hemoglobin is hypothesized to promote NO generation from nitrite. The reaction of nitrite with deoxyhemoglobin leads to a 1 : 1 formation of nitrosylhemoglobin and methemoglobin in both species. At intermediate oxygen saturations, the reaction with deoxyhemoglobin is clearly favored over that with oxyhemoglobin, and the oxyhemoglobin reaction and its autocatalysis are inhibited by nitrosylhemoglobin from the deoxyhemoglobin reaction. The production of NO and nitrosylhemoglobin is faster and higher in carp hemoglobin with high O(2) affinity than in rabbit hemoglobin with lower O(2) affinity, and it correlates inversely with oxygen saturation. In carp, NO formation remains substantial even at high oxygen saturations. When oxygen affinity is decreased by T-state stabilization of carp hemoglobin with ATP, the reaction rates decrease and NO production is lowered, but the deoxyhemoglobin reaction continues to dominate. The data show that the reaction of nitrite with hemoglobin is dynamically influenced by oxygen affinity and the allosteric equilibrium between the T and R states, and that a high O(2) affinity increases the nitrite reductase capability of hemoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanisms of formation of S-nitrosothiols under physiological conditions and, in particular, of generation of SNO-Hb (the hemoglobin form in which the cysteine residues beta93 are S-nitrosated) are still not completely understood. In this paper, we investigated whether, in the presence of O2, NO* is more efficient to nitrosate protein-bound thiols such as Cysbeta93 or low molecular weight thiols such as glutathione. Our results show that when substoichiometric amounts of NO* are mixed slowly with the protein solution, NO*, O2, and possibly NO2* and/or N2O3 accumulate in hydrophobic pockets of hemoglobin. Since the environment of the cysteine residue beta93 is rather hydrophobic, these conditions facilitate SNO-Hb production. Moreover, we show that S-nitrosation mediated by reaction of NO* with the iron(III) forms of Hb or Mb is significantly more effective when it can take place intramolecularly, as in metHb. Intermolecular reactions lead to lower S-nitrosothiol yields because of the concurring hydrolysis to nitrite.  相似文献   

17.
The rate that hemoglobin reacts with nitric oxide (NO) is limited by how fast NO can diffuse into the heme pocket. The reaction is as fast as any ligand/protein reaction can be and the result, when hemoglobin is in its oxygenated form, is formation of nitrate in what is known as the dioxygenation reaction. As nitrate, at the concentrations made through the dioxygenation reaction, is biologically inert, the only role hemoglobin was once thought to play in NO signaling was to inhibit it. However, there are now several mechanisms that have been discovered by which hemoglobin may preserve, control, and even create NO activity. These mechanisms involve compartmentalization of reacting species and conversion of NO from or into other species such as nitrosothiols or nitrite which could transport NO activity. Despite the tremendous amount of work devoted to this field, major questions concerning precise mechanisms of NO activity preservation as well as if and how Hb creates NO activity remain unanswered.  相似文献   

18.
Hemopexin (HPX), which serves as a scavenger and transporter of toxic plasma heme, has been postulated to play a key role in the homeostasis of NO. In fact, HPX-heme(II) reversibly binds NO and facilitates NO scavenging by O(2). HPX-heme is formed by two four-bladed beta-propeller domains. The heme is bound between the two beta-propeller domains, residues His213 and His266 coordinate the heme iron atom. HPX-heme displays structural features of heme-proteins endowed with (pseudo-)enzymatic activities. In this study, the kinetics of rabbit HPX-heme(III) reductive nitrosylation and peroxynitrite-mediated oxidation of HPX-heme(II)-NO are reported. In the presence of excess NO, HPX-heme(III) is converted to HPX-heme(II)-NO by reductive nitrosylation. The second-order rate constant for HPX-heme(III) reductive nitrosylation is (1.3 +/- 0.1) x 10(1) m(-1).s(-1), at pH 7.0 and 10.0 degrees C. NO binding to HPX-heme(III) is rate limiting. In the absence and presence of CO2 (1.2 x 10(-3) m), excess peroxynitrite reacts with HPX-heme(II)-NO (2.6 x 10(-6) m) leading to HPX-heme(III) and NO, via the transient HPX-heme(III)-NO species. Values of the second-order rate constant for HPX-heme(III)-NO formation are (8.6 +/- 0.8) x 10(4) and (1.2 +/- 0.2) x 10(6) m(-1).s(-1) in the absence and presence of CO2, respectively, at pH 7.0 and 10.0 degrees C. The CO2-independent value of the first-order rate constant for HPX-heme(III)-NO denitrosylation is (4.3 +/- 0.4) x 10(-1) s(-1), at pH 7.0 and 10.0 degrees C. HPX-heme(III)-NO denitrosylation is rate limiting. HPX-heme(II)-NO appears to act as an efficient scavenger of peroxynitrite and of strong oxidants and nitrating species following the reaction of peroxynitrite with CO2 (e.g. ONOOC(O)O-, CO3-, and NO2).  相似文献   

19.
Nagababu E  Ramasamy S  Rifkind JM 《Biochemistry》2007,46(41):11650-11659
The reaction of nitrite with deoxyhemoglobin (deoxyHb) results in the reduction of nitrite to NO, which binds unreacted deoxyHb forming Fe(II)-nitrosylhemoglobin (Hb(II)NO). The tight binding of NO to deoxyHb is, however, inconsistent with reports implicating this reaction with hypoxic vasodilation. This dilemma is resolved by the demonstration that metastable intermediates are formed in the course of the reaction of nitrite with deoxyHb. The level of intermediates is quantitated by the excess deoxyHb consumed over the concentrations of the final products formed. The dominant intermediate has a spectrum that does not correspond to that of Hb(III)NO formed when NO reacts with methemoglobin (MetHb), but is similar to metHb resulting in the spectroscopic determinations of elevated levels of metHb. It is a delocalized species involving the heme iron, the NO, and perhaps the beta-93 thiol. The putative role for red cell reacted nitrite on vasodilation is associated with reactions involving the intermediate. (1) The intermediate is less stable with a 10-fold excess of nitrite and is not detected with a 100-fold excess of nitrite. This observation is attributed to the reaction of nitrite with the intermediate producing N2O3. (2) The release of NO quantitated by the formation of Hb(II)NO is regulated by changes in the distal heme pocket as shown by the 4.5-fold decrease in the rate constant in the presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. The regulated release of NO or N2O3 as well as the formation of the S-nitroso derivative of hemoglobin, which has also been reported to be formed from the intermediates generated during nitrite reduction, should be associated with any hypoxic vasodilation attributed to the RBC.  相似文献   

20.
Elucidating the reaction of nitric oxide (NO) with oxyhemoglobin [HbFe(II)O2] is critical to understanding the metabolic fate of NO in the vasculature. At low concentrations of NO, methemoglobin [HbFe(III)] is the only detectable product from this reaction; however, locally high concentrations of NO have been demonstrated to result in some iron-nitrosylhemoglobin [HbFe(II)NO] and S-nitrosohemoglobin (SNO-Hb) formation. Reductive nitrosylation through a HbFe(III) intermediate was proposed as a viable pathway under such conditions. Here, we explore another potential mechanism based on mixed valenced Hb tetramers. The oxidation of one or two heme Fe(II) in the R-state HbFe(II)O2 has been observed to lower the oxygen affinity of the remaining heme groups, thus creating the possibility of oxygen release and NO binding at the heme Fe(II) sites. This mixed valenced hypothesis requires an allosteric transition of the Hb tetramer. Hence, this hypothesis can account for HbFe(II)NO formation, but not SNO-Hb formation. Here, we demonstrate that cyanide attenuated the formation of SNO-Hb by 30-40% when a saturated NO bolus was added to 0.1-1.0 mM HbFe(II)O2 solutions. In addition, HbFe(II)NO formation under such inhomogeneous conditions does not require allostericity. Therefore, we concluded that the mixed valenced theory does not play a major role under these conditions, and reductive nitrosylation accounts for a significant fraction of the HbFe(II)NO formed and approximately 30-40% of SNO-Hb. The remaining SNO-Hb is likely formed from NO oxidation products.  相似文献   

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