Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin

Nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated as mediator in a variety of physiological functions, including neurotransmission, platelet aggregation, macrophage function, and vasodilation. Mild hypertensive events have been reported during in vivo trials of extracellular protein-based blood substitutes and...

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Main Author: Eich, Raymund Frederick
Other Authors: Olson, John S.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154
id ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/19154
record_format openpolar
spelling ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/19154 2023-05-15T18:26:51+02:00 Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin Eich, Raymund Frederick Olson, John S. 1997 143 p. application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154 eng eng Eich, Raymund Frederick. "Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin." (1997) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154 . https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154 THESIS BIOCHEM. 1997 EICH Biochemistry Thesis Text 1997 ftriceuniv 2022-08-09T20:35:27Z Nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated as mediator in a variety of physiological functions, including neurotransmission, platelet aggregation, macrophage function, and vasodilation. Mild hypertensive events have been reported during in vivo trials of extracellular protein-based blood substitutes and have been attributed to consumption of NO by hemoglobin and subsequent vasoconstriction due to lack of activation of guanylate cyclase. Thus, understanding the reactions of NO with hemoglobin is crucial to the development of a risk-free extracellular oxygen carrier. The reactions of NO with recombinant oxy-, deoxy-, and metmyoglobin have been examined in order to determine the chemical mechanisms involved in these processes. Sperm whale myoglobin was chosen as a simple model system for determining the structural and chemical factors that regulate NO reactivity. These myoglobin studies have led to four major conclusions. (1) NO-induced oxidation of MbO$\sb2$ takes place by direct reaction between NO and bound O$\sb2$, and the rate-limiting step is NO diffusion into the distal pocket. (2) In wild-type ferrous myoglobin, the strength of hydrogen bonding between His64(E7) and bound NO is several-fold stronger than hydrogen bonding to bound CO but is $\sim$100-fold weaker than hydrogen bonding to bound O$\sb2$. (3) The pathway for NO entry into the distal pocket of either deoxy- or metmyoglobin appears to involve a channel between Phe43(CD1), the heme-7-propionate, and Thr67(E10) which is opened by outward rotation of the His64(E7) side chain. (4) The rate-limiting step for aerobic oxidation of MbNO is dissociation of NO followed by NO-induced oxidation of newly-formed MbO$\sb2$. These results have already proved to be applicable to other heme proteins and have led to the design of recombinant hemoglobins which can function as extracellular oxygen-carriers with minimal interference with NO messenger pathways. Thesis Sperm whale Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
institution Open Polar
collection Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
op_collection_id ftriceuniv
language English
topic Biochemistry
spellingShingle Biochemistry
Eich, Raymund Frederick
Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
topic_facet Biochemistry
description Nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated as mediator in a variety of physiological functions, including neurotransmission, platelet aggregation, macrophage function, and vasodilation. Mild hypertensive events have been reported during in vivo trials of extracellular protein-based blood substitutes and have been attributed to consumption of NO by hemoglobin and subsequent vasoconstriction due to lack of activation of guanylate cyclase. Thus, understanding the reactions of NO with hemoglobin is crucial to the development of a risk-free extracellular oxygen carrier. The reactions of NO with recombinant oxy-, deoxy-, and metmyoglobin have been examined in order to determine the chemical mechanisms involved in these processes. Sperm whale myoglobin was chosen as a simple model system for determining the structural and chemical factors that regulate NO reactivity. These myoglobin studies have led to four major conclusions. (1) NO-induced oxidation of MbO$\sb2$ takes place by direct reaction between NO and bound O$\sb2$, and the rate-limiting step is NO diffusion into the distal pocket. (2) In wild-type ferrous myoglobin, the strength of hydrogen bonding between His64(E7) and bound NO is several-fold stronger than hydrogen bonding to bound CO but is $\sim$100-fold weaker than hydrogen bonding to bound O$\sb2$. (3) The pathway for NO entry into the distal pocket of either deoxy- or metmyoglobin appears to involve a channel between Phe43(CD1), the heme-7-propionate, and Thr67(E10) which is opened by outward rotation of the His64(E7) side chain. (4) The rate-limiting step for aerobic oxidation of MbNO is dissociation of NO followed by NO-induced oxidation of newly-formed MbO$\sb2$. These results have already proved to be applicable to other heme proteins and have led to the design of recombinant hemoglobins which can function as extracellular oxygen-carriers with minimal interference with NO messenger pathways.
author2 Olson, John S.
format Thesis
author Eich, Raymund Frederick
author_facet Eich, Raymund Frederick
author_sort Eich, Raymund Frederick
title Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
title_short Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
title_full Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
title_fullStr Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
title_full_unstemmed Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
title_sort reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin
publishDate 1997
url https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_relation Eich, Raymund Frederick. "Reactions of nitric oxide with myoglobin." (1997) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154 .
https://hdl.handle.net/1911/19154
THESIS BIOCHEM. 1997 EICH
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