Abstract

Measurements of nitrite (NO 2 −) and nitrate (NO 3 −) in biological fluids are proposed as indices of cellular nitric oxide (NO) production. Determination of NO 2 − and NO 3 − in standard solutions is not difficult, however, determinations which reflect accurately cellular NO synthesis represent a considerable analytical challenge. Problems are often encountered arising from background NO 2 −/NO 3 − contamination in experimental solutions and laboratory hardware, and with methods for sample extraction. We investigated potential procedures for the extraction and determination of NO 2 − and NO 3 − in biological samples. Consequently, a protocol was devised which yielded acceptable results regarding extraction efficiency, assay reproducibility, sample throughput and contaminant minimisation. It entailed rigorous washing of all equipment with water of low NO 2 − and NO 3 − content, sample deproteinisation by centrifugal ultrafiltration through a 3K filter and analysis by high-performance anion-exchange liquid chromatography with UV detection. Retention times for NO 2 − and NO 3 − in standards and plasma were 4.4 and 5.6 min, respectively. Assay linearity for standards ranged between 31 n M and 1 m M. The limit of detection for NO 2 − and NO 3 − in standards was 3 pmol. Recoveries of NO 2 − and NO 3 − from spiked plasma (1–100 μ M KNO 2/KNO 3) and from extracted standards (1–250 μ M) were approximately 100%. Intra-assay and inter-assay RSDs for NO 2 − and NO 3 − in spiked and unspiked plasma were 10.6% or less. Assays on washed platelet supernatants demonstrated collagen-induced platelet generation of NO products and analysis of murine and rat cardiac perfusates was achieved. Our procedure may be suitable for routine determination of NO 2 − and NO 3 − in various biological fluids, e.g., plasma.

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