4.6 Article

Assessments of the chemistry and vasodilatory activity of nitrite with hemoglobin under physiologically relevant conditions

Journal

JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 99, Issue 4, Pages 912-921

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2004.12.010

Keywords

nitric oxide; nitrite; S-nitrosohemoglobin; red blood cells; hypoxic vasodilation

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL 59130, HL 66179-02, HL 52529] Funding Source: Medline

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Hypoxic vasodilation involves detection of the oxygen content of blood by a sensor, which rapidly transduces this signal into vasodilatory bioactivity. Current perspectives on the molecular mechanism of this function hold that hemoglobin (Hb) operates as both oxygen sensor and a condition-responsive NO reactor that regulates the dispensing of bioactivity through release of the NO group from the beta-cys93 S-nitroso derivative of Hb, SNO-Hb. A common path to the formation of SNO-Hb involves oxidative transfer of the NO-group from heme to thiol. We have previously reported that the reaction of nitrite with deoxy-Hb, which furnishes heme-Fe(II)NO, represents one attractive route for the formation of SNO-Hb. Recent literature, however, posits that the nitrite-reductase reaction of Hb might produce physiological vasodilatory effects through NO that evades trapping on heme-Fe(II) and may be stored before release as Fe(III)NO. In this article, we briefly review current perspectives in NO biology on the nitrite-reductase reaction of Hb. We report in vitro spectroscopic (UV/Vis, EPR) studies that are difficult to reconcile with suggestions that this reaction either generates a heme-Fe(III)NO reservoir or significantly liberates NO. We further show in bioassay experiments that combinations of nitrite and deoxy-Hb - under conditions that suppress SNO-Hb formation - exhibit no direct vasodilatory activity. These results help underscore the differences between physiological, RBC-regulated, hypoxic vasodilation versus pharmacological effects of exogenous nitrite. (c) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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