Literature DB >> 16134022

Discovery of some of the biological effects of nitric oxide and its role in cell signaling.

Ferid Murad1.   

Abstract

The role of nitric oxide in cellular signaling in the past 22 years has become one of the most rapidly growing areas in biology with more than 20,000 publications to date. Nitric oxide is a gas and free radical with an unshared electron that can regulate an ever-growing list of biological processes. In many instances nitric oxide mediates its biological effects by activating guanylyl cyclase and increasing cyclic GMP synthesis from GTP. However, the list of effects of nitric oxide that are independent of cyclic GMP is also growing at a rapid rate. For example, nitric oxide can interact with transition metals such as iron, thiol groups, other free radicals, oxygen, superoxide anion, unsaturated fatty acids and other molecules. Some of these reactions result in the oxidation of nitric oxide to nitrite and nitrate to terminate its effect, while other reactions can lead to altered protein structure, function, and/or catalytic capacity. These diverse effects of nitric oxide that are either cyclic GMP dependent or independent can alter and regulate important physiological and biochemical events in cell regulation and function. Nitric oxide can function as an intracellular messenger, an autacoid, a paracrine substance, a neurotransmitter, or as a hormone that can be carried to distant sites for effects. Thus, it is a unique simple molecule with an array of signaling functions. However, as with any messenger molecule, there can be too little or too much of the substance and pathological events result. Some of the methods to regulate either nitric oxide formation, metabolism, or function have been in clinical use for more than a century as with the use of organic nitrates and nitroglycerin in angina pectoris that was initiated in the 1870's. Current and future research with nitric oxide and cyclic GMP will undoubtedly expand the clinicians' therapeutic armamentarium to manage a number of important diseases by perturbing nitric oxide and cyclic GMP formation and metabolism. Such promise and expectations have obviously fueled the interests in these signaling molecules for a growing list of potential therapeutic applications.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 16134022     DOI: 10.1007/s10540-005-2741-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosci Rep        ISSN: 0144-8463            Impact factor:   3.840


  34 in total

1.  Disturbance of regulation of NO synthase activity by peptides of insulin family in rat skeletal muscles in streptozotocin model of neonatal type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  L A Kuznetsova; O V Chistyakova; V M Bondareva; T S Sharova; M N Pertseva
Journal:  Dokl Biochem Biophys       Date:  2010 May-Jun       Impact factor: 0.788

2.  Nitric oxide can acutely modulate its biosynthesis through a negative feedback mechanism on L-arginine transport in cardiac myocytes.

Authors:  Jiaguo Zhou; David D Kim; R Daniel Peluffo
Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol       Date:  2010-05-26       Impact factor: 4.249

3.  Hyperbaric Oxygen Attenuates Withdrawal Symptoms by Regulating Monoaminergic Neurotransmitters and NO Signaling Pathway at Nucleus Accumbens in Morphine-Dependent Rats.

Authors:  Chunxia Chen; Qiuping Fan; Zhihuan Nong; Wan Chen; Yaoxuan Li; Luying Huang; Daorong Feng; Xiaorong Pan; Shengyong Lan
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 3.996

4.  Desensitization of soluble guanylyl cyclase, the NO receptor, by S-nitrosylation.

Authors:  Nazish Sayed; Padmamalini Baskaran; Xiaolei Ma; Focco van den Akker; Annie Beuve
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-07-16       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Recent advances in the chemical biology of nitroxyl (HNO) detection and generation.

Authors:  Zhengrui Miao; S Bruce King
Journal:  Nitric Oxide       Date:  2016-04-20       Impact factor: 4.427

6.  Photobiomodulation of lymphatic drainage and clearance: perspective strategy for augmentation of meningeal lymphatic functions.

Authors:  Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya; Arkady Abdurashitov; Alexander Dubrovsky; Maria Klimova; Ilana Agranovich; Andrey Terskov; Alexander Shirokov; Valeria Vinnik; Anna Kuzmina; Nikita Lezhnev; Inna Blokhina; Anastassia Shnitenkova; Valery Tuchin; Edik Rafailov; Jurgen Kurths
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2020-01-10       Impact factor: 3.732

7.  Proposed Mechanisms of Photobiomodulation or Low-Level Light Therapy.

Authors:  Lucas Freitas de Freitas; Michael R Hamblin
Journal:  IEEE J Sel Top Quantum Electron       Date:  2016 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.544

8.  CCL28-induced CCR10/eNOS interaction in angiogenesis and skin wound healing.

Authors:  Zhenlong Chen; Jacob M Haus; Lin Chen; Stephanie C Wu; Norifumi Urao; Timothy J Koh; Richard D Minshall
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2020-03-02       Impact factor: 5.191

9.  Genetic association analyses of nitric oxide synthase genes and neural tube defects vary by phenotype.

Authors:  Karen L Soldano; Melanie E Garrett; Heidi L Cope; J Michael Rusnak; Nathen J Ellis; Kaitlyn L Dunlap; Marcy C Speer; Simon G Gregory; Allison E Ashley-Koch
Journal:  Birth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol       Date:  2013-12-09

10.  Nitric oxide conduction by the brain aquaporin AQP4.

Authors:  Yi Wang; Emad Tajkhorshid
Journal:  Proteins       Date:  2010-02-15
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