Literature DB >> 15706099

Mechanisms of vasodilatation induced by nitrite instillation in intestinal lumen: possible role of hemoglobin.

Andrey V Kozlov1, Giuseppina Costantino, Babak Sobhian, Laszlo Szalay, Fraz Umar, Hans Nohl, Soheyl Bahrami, Heinz Redl.   

Abstract

It has been shown that nitrite can be reduced to nitric oxide (NO) in intestine and a number of other tissues and released into the blood to form nitrosylhemoglobin (NO-Hb), existing in an equilibrium with S-nitrosohemoglobin. The latter has been suggested to be an NO transporter to distant organs. The aim of this study was to define the pathway of nitrite reduction to form NO in intestinal wall and to estimate whether this pathway has an effect on peripheral circulation. We have shown that in rat intestine at pH 7.0 70% of nitrite is converted to NO in mitochondria. At pH 6.0, nonenzymatic nitrite reduction becomes as efficient as the mitochondrial pathway. To prove whether the NO formed from nitrite in intestine can induce vasodilatation, sodium nitrite was instilled into intestinal lumen and the concentration of NO formed and diffused into the blood was followed by measuring of NO-Hb complex formation. We found that the concentration of NO-Hb gradually increases with the increase of nitrite concentration in intestinal lumen. However, it was not always accompanied by a decrease in systemic blood pressure. Blood pressure dropped down only after NO-Hb reached a threshold concentration of approximately 10 microM. These data show that NO-Hb cannot provide enough NO for vasodilatation if the concentration of NO bound to Hb is < 10 microM. The exact mechanism underlying vasodilatation observed when the concentration of NO-bound Hb was > 10 microM is, however, not clear yet and requires further studies.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15706099     DOI: 10.1089/ars.2005.7.515

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal        ISSN: 1523-0864            Impact factor:   8.401


  17 in total

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Review 5.  Nitrite as regulator of hypoxic signaling in mammalian physiology.

Authors:  Ernst E van Faassen; Soheyl Bahrami; Martin Feelisch; Neil Hogg; Malte Kelm; Daniel B Kim-Shapiro; Andrey V Kozlov; Haitao Li; Jon O Lundberg; Ron Mason; Hans Nohl; Tienush Rassaf; Alexandre Samouilov; Anny Slama-Schwok; Sruti Shiva; Anatoly F Vanin; Eddie Weitzberg; Jay Zweier; Mark T Gladwin
Journal:  Med Res Rev       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 12.944

6.  Regulation of nitrite transport in red blood cells by hemoglobin oxygen fractional saturation.

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Review 7.  Mitochondria as metabolizers and targets of nitrite.

Authors:  Sruti Shiva
Journal:  Nitric Oxide       Date:  2009-09-27       Impact factor: 4.427

Review 8.  Nitric oxide production pathways in erythrocytes and plasma.

Authors:  Kejing Chen; Aleksander S Popel
Journal:  Biorheology       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 1.875

9.  Nitrite anion provides potent cytoprotective and antiapoptotic effects as adjunctive therapy to reperfusion for acute myocardial infarction.

Authors:  Felix M Gonzalez; Sruti Shiva; Pamela S Vincent; Lorna A Ringwood; Li-Yueh Hsu; Yuen Yi Hon; Anthony H Aletras; Richard O Cannon; Mark T Gladwin; Andrew E Arai
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2008-06-02       Impact factor: 29.690

10.  Blue laser light increases perfusion of a skin flap via release of nitric oxide from hemoglobin.

Authors:  Rainer Mittermayr; Anatoly Osipov; Christina Piskernik; Susanne Haindl; Peter Dungel; Carina Weber; Yuri A Vladimirov; Heinz Redl; Andrey V Kozlov
Journal:  Mol Med       Date:  2007 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 6.354

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