Literature DB >> 16938475

Reduction enhances yields of nitric oxide trapping by iron-diethyldithiocarbamate complex in biological systems.

Anatoly F Vanin1, Lonneke M Bevers, Vasak D Mikoyan, Alexander P Poltorakov, Lioudmila N Kubrina, Ernst van Faassen.   

Abstract

The mechanism of NO trapping by iron-diethylthiocarbamate complexes was investigated in cultured cells and animal and plant tissues. Contrary to common belief, the NO radicals are trapped by iron-diethylthiocarbamates not only in ferrous but in ferric state also in the biosystems. When DETC was excess over endogenous iron ligands like citrate, ferric DETC complexes were directly observed with EPR spectroscopy at g=4.3. This was the case when isolated spinach leaves, endothelial cultured cells were incubated in the medium with 2.5mM DETC or mouse liver was perfused with 100mM DETC solution. After trapping NO, the nitrosylated Fe-DETC adducts are mostly in diamagnetic ferric state, with only a minor fraction having been reduced to paramagnetic ferrous state by endogenous biological reductants. In actual in vivo trapping experiments with mice, the condition of excess DETC was not met. The substantial quantities of iron in animal tissues were bound to ligands other than DETC, in particular citrate. These non-DETC complexes appear as roughly equal mixtures of ferric and ferrous iron. The presence of NO favors the replacement of non-DETC ligands by DETC. In all biological systems considered here, the nitrosylated Fe-DETC adducts appear as mixture of diamagnetic and paramagnetic states. The diamagnetic ferric nitrosyl complexes may be reduced ex vivo to paramagnetic form by exogenous reductants like dithionite. The trapping yields are significantly enhanced upon exogenous reduction, as proven by NO trapping experiments in plants, cell cultures and mice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16938475     DOI: 10.1016/j.niox.2006.06.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nitric Oxide        ISSN: 1089-8603            Impact factor:   4.427


  4 in total

Review 1.  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

2.  Endothelial NOS (NOS3) impairs myocardial function in developing sepsis.

Authors:  Annette M van de Sandt; Rainer Windler; Axel Gödecke; Jan Ohlig; Simone Zander; Michael Reinartz; Jürgen Graf; Ernst E van Faassen; Tienush Rassaf; Jürgen Schrader; Malte Kelm; Marc W Merx
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  2013-02-10       Impact factor: 17.165

3.  Identification of free nitric oxide radicals in rat bone marrow: implications for progenitor cell mobilization in hypertension.

Authors:  Marina A Aleksinskaya; Ernst E H van Faassen; Jelly Nelissen; Ben J A Janssen; Jo G R De Mey; Roeland Hanemaaijer; Ton Rabelink; Anton Jan van Zonneveld
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-03-12       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals alterations in the redox state of endogenous copper and iron complexes in photodynamic stress-induced ischemic mouse liver.

Authors:  Monika A Jakubowska; Janusz Pyka; Dominika Michalczyk-Wetula; Krzysztof Baczyński; Maciej Cieśla; Anna Susz; Paweł E Ferdek; Beata K Płonka; Leszek Fiedor; Przemysław M Płonka
Journal:  Redox Biol       Date:  2020-05-12       Impact factor: 11.799

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.