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1.
Numerous methods are available for measurement of nitrate (NO(-)(3)). However, these assays can either be time consuming or require specialized equipment (e.g., nitrate reductase, chemiluminescent detector). We have developed a method for simultaneous evaluation of nitrate and nitrite concentrations in a microtiter plate format. The principle of this assay is reduction of nitrate by vanadium(III) combined with detection by the acidic Griess reaction. This assay is sensitive to 0.5 microM NO(-)(3) and is useful in a variety of fluids including cell culture media, serum, and plasma. S-Nitrosothiols and L-arginine derivatives were found to be potential interfering agents. However, these compounds are generally minor constituents of biological fluids relative to the concentration of nitrate/nitrite. This report introduces a new, convenient assay for the stable oxidation products of nitrogen oxide chemistry in biological samples.  相似文献   

2.
In the Griess reaction, first reported by Johann Peter Griess in 1879 as a method of analysis of nitrite (NO(2)(-)), nitrite reacts under acidic conditions with sulfanilic acid (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)NH(2)) to form a diazonium cation (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)-N[triple bond]N(+)) which subsequently couples to the aromatic amine 1-naphthylamine (C(10)H(7)NH(2)) to produce a red-violet coloured (lambda(max) approximately 540 nm), water-soluble azo dye (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)-NN-C(10)H(6)NH(2)). The identification of nitrite in saliva has been the first analytical application of this diazotization reaction in 1879. For a century, the Griess reaction has been exclusively used to identify analytically bacterial infection in the urogenital tract, i.e. to identify nitrite produced by bacterial reduction of nitrate (NO(3)(-)), the major nitrogen oxide anion in human urine. Since the discovery of the l-arginine/nitric oxide (l-Arg/NO) pathway in 1987, however, the Griess reaction is the most frequently used analytical approach to quantitate the major metabolites of NO, i.e. nitrite and nitrate, in a variety of biological fluids, notably blood and urine. The Griess reaction is specific for nitrite. Analysis of nitrate by this reaction requires chemical or enzymatic reduction of nitrate to nitrite prior to the diazotization reaction. The simplicity of the Griess reaction and its easy and inexpensive analytical feasibility has attracted the attention of scientists from wide a spectrum of disciplines dedicated to the complex and challenging L-Arg/NO pathway. Today, we know dozens of assays based on the Griess reaction. In principle, every laboratory in this area uses its own Griess assay. The simplest Griess assay is performed in batch commonly as originally reported by Griess. Because of the recognition of numerous interferences in the analysis of nitrite and nitrate in biological fluids and of the desire to analyze these anions simultaneously, the Griess reaction has been repeatedly modified and automated. In recent years, the Griess reaction has been coupled to HPLC, i.e. is used for post-column derivatization of chromatographically separated nitrite and nitrate. Such a HPLC-Griess system is even commercially available. The present article gives an overview of the currently available assays of nitrite and nitrate in biological fluids based on the Griess reaction. Special emphasis is given to human plasma and urine, to quantitative aspects, as well as to particular analytical and pre-analytical factors and problems that may be associated with and affect the quantitative analysis of nitrite and nitrate in these matrices by assays based on the Griess reaction. The significance of the Griess reaction in the L-Arg/NO pathway is appraised.  相似文献   

3.
Miranda et al. have developed a method for simultaneous evaluation of nitrate and nitrite concentrations using reduction of nitrate by vanadium(III) combined with detection by the acidic Griess reaction [K.M. Miranda, M.G. Espey, D.A. Wink, A rapid, simple spectrophotometric method for simultaneous detection of nitrate and nitrite, Nitric Oxide 5 (2001) 62-71]. The sensitivity of the nitrate assay decline if the mixture analyzed contains a large excess of nitrite relative to nitrate, for instance, in the case of oxidation products of nitric oxide (NO) in aerated solutions, or in sweat. By this reason nitrite should be removed before the nitrate assay, if [NO2-]>[NO3-]. Here we lay out an improved method allowing the above limitation to be erased, using sulfamic acid for nitrite removal. We also describe some modifications that enhance the reproducibility of the assay.  相似文献   

4.
A macro and micro assay for the spectrophotometric determination of serum nitrite and nitrate was developed. Nitrite/nitrate in biological samples can be estimated in a single step by this method. The principle of the assay is the reduction of nitrate by copper-cadmium alloy, followed by color development with Griess reagent (sulfanilamide and N-naphthylethylenediamine) in acidic medium. This assay is sensitive to 1 microM nitrate and is suitable for different biological fluids, including sera with a high lipid concentration. The copper-cadmium alloy used in the present method is easy to prepare and can completely reduce nitrate to nitrite in an hour. The present method provides a simple, cost-effective assay for the estimation of stable oxidation products of nitric oxide in biological samples.  相似文献   

5.
K Schulz  S Kerber  M Kelm 《Nitric oxide》1999,3(3):225-234
Nitric oxide (NO) is an important intracellular and extracellular signal substance. Nitrite is one product of the oxidative metabolism of NO. The purpose of this study was to establish a simple method of determining nitrite (NO2-) to provide a means of estimating the endogenous formation of NO or NO2-. A flow injection analysis (FIA) based on the Griess reaction was developed for this purpose. Using a standard additive method, it is possible to eliminate matrix effects such as those that can occur in samples containing protein. This measuring method is suitable for measurements in effluates or protein-rich cellular supernatants. The sensitivity of the method is 2 nmol/L for samples in aqueous phases and 8 nmol/L for protein-containing phases. The two-point discrimination is 2 nmol/L. A linear correlation between nitrite and signal level can be demonstrated over a range of 0.002-5 micromol/L. Reproducibility, including sample preparation and analysis, can be specified with a coefficient of variation (C.V.) of 6.7%. Day-to-day variability for identical samples 0.8% (C.V.). This study presents examples of the application of this method (measurements in blood samples and in isolated perfused hearts) and compares them to established methods of measuring NO and NO2. We found the FIA method to be equally sensitive as NO measurement by means of oxyhemoglobin assay. The FIA method is seven times more sensitive than HPLC methods, and its design is significantly simpler. Compared to the traditional Griess method, its sensitivity is higher by a factor of 500. With its high sensitivity, high reproducibility, and its unsurpassed low susceptibility to interference, this method of analysis provides a means of reliably determining nitrite concentration as a marker of NO formation in various matrices. Therefore, it can be a valuable instrument in experimental and clinical studies to determine the physiologic and pathophysiologic relevance of NO.  相似文献   

6.
This work describes an electrochemical method for the determination of the nitrate and nitrite reductase activities of Rhizobium japonicum. The advantage of the method lies in the use of whole cells for the analysis and we earlier developed this protocol for the assay of NO. The results obtained are comparable to the spectrophotometric Griess assay. As the method is based on electrochemical reduction, the commonly interfering biological components like ascorbic acid, uric acid, dopamine, etc., will not interfere with the analysis. This method can be extended to the fabrication of biosensors for nitrate and nitrite using the same principle.  相似文献   

7.
The E. coli cell method for nitrate measurement consists of two-steps: nitrate reduction by the E. coli cell usually under anaerobic conditions and subsequently nitrite measurement with the Griess reaction. It was found that the E. coli DSM 498k wildtype cell can reduce nitrate to nitrite under aerobic conditions. Therefore, the E. coli method for nitrate measurement was adapted to be performed under aerobic conditions in a microtiter plate. The adapted method is simpler than the original E. coli method and other nitrate methods such as those with inorganic reductants and with purified enzymes. Furthermore, it was found that for the Griess reaction the pH values of samples after addition of the Griess reagent A should be lower than 1.8 for a stable absorbance at 540 nm to be reached. It is important to add the two Griess reagents separately and to read the absorbance twice consecutively in a microtiter plate. The adapted E. coli method was successfully applied to measure the traces of nitrate in MRS and other medium components by measuring the standard curve of a dilution of each individual medium component. It was found that many organic medium components contain traces of nitrate, while none of them contain detectable nitrite. Among these, the extract of meat and yeast extract contain relatively high amounts of nitrate: 217 mg N/kg and 99 mg N/kg respectively. MRS broth contains nitrate from 0.3 to 0.6 mg N/l depending on the batch numbers of the product. The adapted E. coli can also be used for nitrate measurement in other matrices.  相似文献   

8.
Mass spectrometry-based approaches are the reference techniques for the determination of nitrite and nitrate in plasma and serum. However, due to their simplicity and rapidity, assays based on the Griess reaction or HPLC are generally used in clinical studies, but they generate diverging values for nitrite/nitrate concentration. In this study, particular attention is paid to the optimization of the deproteinization procedure for plasma and serum samples prior to nitrite/nitrate analysis by an enzymatic batch Griess assay, HPLC and GC-MS. A method is reported to verify completeness of deproteinization and to correct for nonspecific contribution to the absorbance of the diazo dye at 540 nm. With the application of such optimized procedures, we were able to significantly improve the correlation between Griess and HPLC method or the GC-MS technique for nitrite+nitrate concentrations in human serum and plasma. Despite remaining potentially interfering pre-analytical and analytical factors, the procedures reported in the present study may be helpful in a critical evaluation of limits and possibilities of the enzymatic batch Griess assay as a large-scale method for nitrite/nitrate determination in human serum in clinical studies.  相似文献   

9.
Nitrate and nitrite have been considered stable inactive end products of nitric oxide (NO). While several recent studies now imply that nitrite can be reduced to bioactive NO again, the more stable anion nitrate is still considered to be biologically inert. Nitrate is concentrated in saliva, where a part of it is reduced to nitrite by bacterial nitrate reductases. We tested if ingestion of inorganic nitrate would affect the salivary and systemic levels of nitrite and S-nitrosothiols, both considered to be circulating storage pools for NO. Levels of nitrate, nitrite, and S-nitrosothiols were measured in plasma, saliva, and urine before and after ingestion of sodium nitrate (10 mg/kg). Nitrate levels increased greatly in saliva, plasma, and urine after the nitrate load. Salivary S-nitrosothiols also increased, but plasma levels remained unchanged. A 4-fold increase in plasma nitrite was observed after nitrate ingestion. If, however, the test persons avoided swallowing after the nitrate load, the increase in plasma nitrite was prevented, thereby illustrating its salivary origin. We show that nitrate is a substrate for systemic generation of nitrite. There are several pathways to further reduce this nitrite to NO. These results challenge the dogma that nitrate is biologically inert and instead suggest that a complete reverse pathway for generation of NO from nitrate exists.  相似文献   

10.
Vascular intimal hyperplasia (IH) limits the long term efficacy of current surgical and percutaneous therapies for atherosclerotic disease. There are extensive changes in gene expression and cell signaling in response to vascular therapies, including changes in nitric oxide (NO) signaling. NO is well recognized for its vasoregulatory properties and has been investigated as a therapeutic treatment for its vasoprotective abilities. The circulating molecules nitrite (NO(2)(-)) and nitrate (NO(3)(-)), once thought to be stable products of NO metabolism, are now recognized as important circulating reservoirs of NO and represent a complementary source of NO in contrast to the classic L-arginine-NO-synthase pathway. Here we review the background of IH, its relationship with the NO and nitrite/nitrate pathways, and current and future therapeutic opportunities for these molecules.  相似文献   

11.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a signal molecule with functions such as neurotransmission, local vascular relaxation, and anti-inflammation in many physiological and pathological processes. Various factors regulate its intracellular lifetime. Due to its high reactivity in biological systems, it is transformed in the bloodstream into nitrates (NO(-)(3)) by oxyhemoglobin. The Griess reaction is a technically simple method (spectrophotometric, 540 nm) for the analysis of nitrites (NO(-)(2)) in aqueous solutions. We studied the interference of common anticoagulants in the quantification of nitrate and nitrite in plasma samples by the Griess method. We obtained rat plasma using heparin or sodium EDTA as anticoagulants, then added, or otherwise, known NO(-)(3) amounts in order to calculate their recovery. We also studied the effect of ultra-filtration performed before Griess reaction on plasma and aqueous solutions of various anticoagulants (heparin, EDTA, and also sodium citrate) to compare the recoveries of added NO(-)(3) or NO(-)(2). We used standards of NO(-)(3) or NO(-)(2) for quantification. We conclude that: (i) The bacterial nitrate reductase used to reduce NO(-)(3) to NO(-)(2) is unstable in certain storage conditions and interferes with different volumes of plasma used. (ii) The ultrafiltration (which is sometimes performed before the Griess reaction) of plasma obtained with EDTA or citrate is not recommended because it leads to overestimation of NO(minus sign)(3). In contrast, ultrafiltration is necessary when heparin is used. (iii) The absorbance at 540 nm attributed to plasma itself (basal value or background) interferes in final quantification, especially when ultrafiltration is not performed. For the quantification of plasma NO(-)(3) we recommend: sodium EDTA as anticoagulant, no ultrafiltration of plasma, and measurement of the absorbance background of each sample.  相似文献   

12.
All photometric or HPLC methods described to date have been unable to detect nitrite, a reliable marker of NO synthase activity, in human blood because of its rapid metabolism within the erythrocytes. We now elaborate on method to prevent nitrite degradation during sample preparation which in combination with high-performance anion-exchange chromatography and electrochemical detection allows a sensitive measurement of nitrite. A linear current response in the concentration range of 10–1000 nmol/l nitrite was observed yielding a correlation coefficient of 0.99. In addition, the combination of the electrochemical with a UV detector allowed us to simultaneously quantify nitrate one analytical run, which is the end product of NO/nitrite metabolism. Basal levels for nitrate and nitrite in human blood were determined with 25±4 μmol/l and 578±116 nmol/l (n=8), respectively and thus were in the same concentration range as expected from NO measurement in saline perfused isolated organs or cultured endothelial cells. Therefore, the presented method may be used to assess activity of endothelial constitutive NO synthase in humans under physiological and pathophysiological conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Previous studies have reported increased serum concentrations of nitrite/nitrate – the degradation products of nitric oxide – in Plasmodium vivax malaria and uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria. In all these studies, however, nitrite/nitrate has been measured spectrometrically using Griess reagent which carries major disadvantages in the determination of serum nitrite/nitrate. The method does not allow an exact differentiation of nitrite and biogenic amines that are physiologically present in plasma. In the present study we introduce high-performance liquid chromatography as a new, accurate and cost effective method for determination of serum nitrite/nitrate levels. Significantly increased nitrate concentrations were found in malaria patients and serum values remained above normal levels for at least 21 days. It could be shown that our HPLC method is a sensitive and cost-effective method for direct determination of nitrite/nitrate in serum samples, which is not influenced by the presence of biogenic amines.  相似文献   

14.
A new method to measure nitrate/nitrite with a NO-sensitive electrode   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
There are different methods to measure the unstable moleculenitric oxide (NO). We will describe a new sensitive method to measure NO by reconversion of nitrate/nitrite to NO, which will bedetermined with an amperometric Clark-type electrode. Nitrate andnitrite are the degradation products of NO. First, nitrate isenzymatically converted to nitrite with the use of the nitrate reductase. Second, nitrite is reduced to equimolar NO concentrations byan acidic iodide solution. The detection limit of the electrode in anaqueous solution was 2 nmol/l NO (meaning the threshold was dependingon the volume added: 500 µl of a 0.2 µmol/l nitrite solution addedto a 10-ml bath). This method provides the ability to assess basal andagonist-stimulated NO releases of different biological models. Wemeasured basal and carbachol-stimulated NO release of nativeendothelial cells from porcine coronary arteries and porcine aorticendothelial cell cultures. Moreover, it was possible to measure thenitrate/nitrite concentration in the coronary effluent of a guinea pigheart. In conclusion, we present a valid, highly sensitive new methodof measuring nitrite/NO in biological systems with a commerciallyavailable electrode.

  相似文献   

15.
Nowadays, very diverse human activities generate urgent demands for fast, sensitive reliable innovative tools capable of detecting major industrial, military, and other dangerous products. An important part of these compounds are free radicals. Capillary electrophoresis (CE), especially in its miniaturized format (lab-on-a-chip), and other electromigration methods offer special possibilities to resolve this problem. These measurements have a great opportuness because of very wide chemical and biological role of free radicals. Several compounds, e.g. monomers and some biologically important groups (as are nitrones) oppose oxidative challenges by virtue of their trap very rapidly oxygen- or carbon-centered radicals and generating other radical species which are stable and biochemically less harmful than the original ones. In many cases, conventionally, the relative trap capacity is measured against tert.-butylhydroperoxide (TBH). In this lecture are presented numerous important free radical species (active oxygen–, nitrogen- and carbon-centered ones, as HO, NO etc) and their adequate in vitro and in vivo applied bioanalytical methods, including liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection and mass spectrometry, gas chromatography with mass spectrometry, capillary electrophoresis, electron spin resonance and chemiluminescence analysis. A simple and highly sensitive method is the capillary zone electrophoresis with amperometric detection (CZE-AD); It was introduced to determine indirectly OH by analysing its reaction products with salicylic and dihydroxybenzoic acids. Hydroxylated radical products of these acids are often used as a relative measurement in free radical research. Accurate determination of pK(a) values is important for proper characterization of newly synthesized molecules. CZE method was used for determination of their values. Are initiated new research fields as Fenton-, electro-Fenton and photoelectro-Fenton chemistry and foreseen their perspectives.

Nitric oxide is an important cell signaling molecule in physiology and pathophysiology. An indirect method for monitoring nitric oxide (NO) by determining nitrate and nitrite by microchip capillary electrophoresis (CE) with electrochemical (EC) detection has been developed. The amount of nitrite formed in this reaction (analyzed by capillary electrophoresis) was compared with the amount of oxygen consumed (measured by polarography). Were observed a linear relationship between the amount of consumed oxygen and the amount of nitrite formed in the measured range. These results demonstrate that polarographic measurements of the amount of oxygen consumed in the reaction with NO could be used to estimate the concentration of dissolved NO in authentic media. Polarography is an adequate method also to quantitative kinetic study of the free radical activity and of the trapping capacity of different compounds. This method is based on measure of the catalytic polarografic current of Fe(III) in the presence of free radical sources (TBH, hydrogen-peroxydes), and their traps. Personal contribution of the authors in this field is discussed.  相似文献   


16.
The reductive nitrosylation of ferric (met)hemoglobin is of considerable interest and remains incompletely explained. We have previously observed that at low NO concentrations the reaction with tetrameric hemoglobin occurs with an observed rate constant that is at least 5 times faster than that observed at higher concentrations. This was ascribed to a faster reaction of NO with a methemoglobin-nitrite complex. We now report detailed studies of this reaction of low NO with methemoglobin. Nitric oxide paradoxically reacts with ferric hemoglobin with faster observed rate constants at the lower NO concentration in a manner that is not affected by changes in nitrite concentration, suggesting that it is not a competition between NO and nitrite, as we previously hypothesized. By evaluation of the fast reaction in the presence of allosteric effectors and isolated β- and α-chains of hemoglobin, it appears that NO reacts with a subpopulation of β-subunit ferric hemes whose population is influenced by quaternary state, redox potential, and hemoglobin dimerization. To further characterize the role of nitrite, we developed a system that oxidizes nitrite to nitrate to eliminate nitrite contamination. Removal of nitrite does not alter reaction kinetics, but modulates reaction products, with a decrease in the formation of S-nitrosothiols. These results are consistent with the formation of NO(2)/N(2)O(3) in the presence of nitrite. The observed fast reductive nitrosylation observed at low NO concentrations may function to preserve NO bioactivity via primary oxidation of NO to form nitrite or in the presence of nitrite to form N(2)O(3) and S-nitrosothiols.  相似文献   

17.
A method for the estimation of nitrate and nitrite is described in which nitrate is converted to nitrite by Klebsiella pneumoniae (UNF 9232) and nitrite is estimated by the Griess reaction before and after incubation. The method is suitable for the estimation of 1–25 nmol of each ion in body fluids, many samples can be handled simultaneously, and special apparatus is not required.  相似文献   

18.
In the recent years, there has been an increase in the development of new biosensors that could be helpful in the study of various physiological processes. In this study, we report the development of a new in vitro experimental design for real-time nitric oxide (NO) amperometric measurements in erythrocyte suspensions. To achieve this, we employed human erythrocyte suspensions in sodium chloride 0.9%, pH 7 (haematocrit 0.05%). The production of NO by erythrocytes was measured with a commercial NO sensor during stimulation by L-arginine, acetylcholine, choline, atropine and velnacrine maleate (10 microM of final concentrations). We also measured the nitrite and nitrate concentrations produced by erythrocyte suspensions stimulated with the above effectors by means of the Griess reaction method. We observed that there was a direct relation between the electric current produced by the NO sensor, and the NO standard concentrations, thereby leading to a good calibration curve. The in vitro erythrocytes produced significant amperometric NO values in response to a wide range of effectors and these results have the same variation profile of the nitrites and nitrates results achieved with the Griess method. In conclusion, the amperometric NO sensor constitutes a reliable method for direct, and real-time measurement in vitro of the NO production of erythrocyte suspensions, As such, it offers a potential diagnostic technique for the evaluation of diseases, and the therapeutic progression of diseases, related to intracellular NO metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
Adaptation of the Griess reaction for detection of nitrite in human plasma   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The determination of nitrite in human plasma or serum has been most frequently used as a marker of nitric oxide (NO) production. In addition, it has recently been suggested that nitrite could act as a vasodilating agent at physiological concentrations by NO delivery. Therefore, nitrite determination in biological fluids is becoming increasingly important. The most frequently used method to measure nitrite is based on the spectrophotometric analysis of the azo dye obtained after reaction with the Griess reagent. This method has some limitations regarding detection limit and sensitivity, thus resulting unsuitable for nitrite detection in plasma. We have identified some drawbacks and modified the original procedure to overcome these problems. By the use of the newly developed method, we measured 221±72 nM nitrite in human plasma from healthy donors.  相似文献   

20.
Our microtiter plate assay is based on the enzymatic reduction of nitrate by dissimilatory nitrate reductase from Pseudomonas stutzeri [EC 1.7.99.4]. Exogenous redox mediators like methyl viologen, methylene blue, and cibachron blue were applied to reduce nitrate reductase. Concentrations of 0.02-0.9 mM nitrate can be detected with +/-6% standard deviation, by using a photometric Griess reaction for the formed nitrite. Nitrate reductase is stable in the pH range 6.5-9.0 and works in the temperature range 4-76 degrees C. The assay shows no interferences with salt content up to 1 M chloride or 11 mM chlorate, and serum albumin content up to 50 mg/ml. The time demand of our two-step procedure is 20 min/100 samples. Nitrate reductase could be conserved on site of the wells of microtiter plates for at least 6 months at room temperature. The nitrate assay was applied in environmental and consumer goods analysis, and for medical diagnostics in human plasma samples.  相似文献   

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