Abstract

In vitro, ferrous deoxy-hemes in hemoglobin (Hb) react with nitrite to generate nitric oxide (NO) through a nitrite reductase reaction. In vivo studies indicate Hb with nitrite can be a source of NO bioactivity. The nitrite reductase reaction does not appear to account fully for this activity because free NO is short lived especially within the red blood cell. Thus, the exporting of NO bioactivity both out of the RBC and over a large distance requires an additional mechanism. A nitrite anhydrase (NA) reaction in which N2O3, a potent S-nitrosating agent, is produced through the reaction of NO with ferric heme-bound nitrite has been proposed (Basu, S., Grubina, R., Huang, J., Conradie, J., Huang, Z., Jeffers, A., Jiang, A., He, X., Azarov, I., Seibert, R., Mehta, A., Patel, R., King, S. B., Hogg, N., Ghosh, A., Gladwin, M. T., and Kim-Shapiro, D. B. (2007) Nat. Chem. Biol. 3, 785-794) as a possible mechanism. Legitimate concerns, including physiological relevance and the nature of the mechanism, have been raised concerning the NA reaction. This study addresses these concerns demonstrating NO and nitrite with ferric hemes under near physiological conditions yield an intermediate having the properties of the purported NA heme-bound N2O3 intermediate. The results indicate that ferric heme sites, traditionally viewed as a source of potential toxicity, can be functionally significant, especially for partially oxygenated/partially met-R state Hb that arises from the NO dioxygenation reaction. In the presence of low levels of nitrite and either NO or a suitable reductant such as L-cysteine, these ferric heme sites can function as a generator for the formation of S-nitrosothiols such as S-nitrosoglutathione and, as such, should be considered as a source of RBC-derived and exportable bioactive NO.

Highlights

  • The mechanism for production of N2O3 from MetHb, nitrite, and nitric oxide (NO) is controversial

  • Legitimate concerns, including physiological relevance and the nature of the mechanism, have been raised concerning the nitrite anhydrase (NA) reaction. This study addresses these concerns demonstrating NO and nitrite with ferric hemes under near physiological conditions yield an intermediate having the properties of the purported NA heme-bound N2O3 intermediate

  • The results indicate that ferric heme sites, traditionally viewed as a source of potential toxicity, can be functionally significant, especially for partially oxygenated/partially met-R state Hb that arises from the NO dioxygenation reaction

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Summary

Background

The mechanism for production of N2O3 from MetHb, nitrite, and NO is controversial. Results: An Hb intermediate attributed to heme-bound N2O3 is characterized. As part of the mechanism, a half-oxygenated R state Hb would have the maximum NO-generating efficacy in the NR reaction [32, 49, 53] because it represents a compromise between accessible reactive deoxy-heme sites and the higher reactivity associated with the R state (i.e. too much deoxygenation results in T state formation and too much oxygenation results in too few sites available for the reaction with nitrite) The importance of this reaction is apparent from HBOC studies. Under the anaerobic conditions of those specific experiments, the most plausible explanation for the increase in DAF fluorescence is N2O3 production rather than NO or any other NO-derived species Based on these results, it has been proposed that this spectroscopically distinct species is the NA intermediate in which N2O3 is bound to a ferrous heme [27, 61, 62]. The results support the assertions that the NA reaction is a plausible mechanism for Hb-mediated production of S-nitrosothiols and that the spectroscopically distinct intermediate is a heme-bound N2O3 derivative of Hb

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