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Thiols enhance NO formation from nitrate photolysis.

PubMed
Authors: Dejam A, Kleinbongard P, Rassaf T, Hamada S, Gharini P, Rodriguez J, Feelisch M, Kelm M

Year

2003

Paper ID

13004

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

229

Citations

62

Abstract

Nitrate is generally considered an inert oxidative breakdown product of nitric oxide (NO). Whereas it has been shown that limited amounts of NO are produced during the photolysis of nitrate in aqueous solution, the photochemistry of nitrate in biological matrices such as plasma is unknown. We hypothesized that thiols, which are ubiquitously present in biological systems, may significantly enhance NO-quantum yields from nitrate photolysis. Exposure of fresh human plasma to high-intensity UV-light resulted in NO-formation (19 +/- 3 nmol/l/min) as measured by gas phase chemiluminescence, and this signal was almost completely abolished by the removal of plasma N-oxides (2 +/- 1 nmol/l/min). Reconstitution of NOx-depleted plasma samples with a physiological concentration of nitrate, but not nitrite, restored photolytic NO-generation to values comparable to naïve plasma. Addition of the thiol-reducing agent, dithiothreitol or the sulfhydryl-bearing amino acid, L-cysteine increased NO-formation above control levels. Thiol-blockade by either N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) or mercuric chloride (HgCl2) reduced basal NO formation from 19 +/- 3 to 7 +/- 2 and 4 +/- 1 nmol/l/min, respectively. Exposure of plasma to UV-light increased NO-adduct concentrations from 18 +/- 5 to 1662 +/- 658 nmol/l. Collectively, our results show that thiols facilitate photolytic conversion of nitrate to NO and NO-adducts such as S-nitrosothiols. This may lead to substantial overestimation of the latter when photolysis-based methodologies are used for their determination. Whether this novel reaction channel also has in vivo relevance remains to be investigated.

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  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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  • Nitrate is generally considered an inert oxidative breakdown product of nitric oxide (NO).

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