Title of article
Rates of release of nitric oxide from HbSNO and internal electron transfer
Author/Authors
Ship-Peng Lo، نويسنده , , Noam J. and Paul Pezacki، نويسنده , , John and Kluger، نويسنده , , Ronald، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
8
From page
3
To page
10
Abstract
The discovery that hemoglobin (Hb) in erythrocytes contains a fraction of β-Cys-93 thiols as the nitrosylated derivative (HbSNO) led to the suggestion that this species is involved in transporting and releasing nitric oxide, which is the signal for local vasodilation. The release of NO from HbSNO requires an electron transfer to facilitate release and to regenerate the cysteine thiol via one-electron reduction in the absence of added thiols. An alternative mechanism, which has received much attention, transfers the nitrosyl group to an external thiol, which in turn would have to be reduced. The observed first order rate constant for the spontaneous oxidation of the ferrous heme of deoxy HbSNO is 1.0×10−4 s−1 in the absence of thiols. Under the same conditions, native Hb is stable. The oxidation of HbSNO occurs with the same rate constant that can be derived for the rate reported for the formation of HbNO from HbSNO. These similarities suggest that both processes involve the same reaction: internal electron transfer and direct release of nitric oxide.
Journal title
Bioorganic Chemistry: an International Journal
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Bioorganic Chemistry: an International Journal
Record number
1385690
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