TY - JOUR
T1 - Trehalose-Based Glassy Matrices as an Effective Tool to Trap Short-Lived Intermediates in the Nitric Oxide Dioxygenation (NOD) Reaction of Hemoglobin
AU - Navati, Mahantesh S.
AU - Chung, Will
AU - Friedman, Joel M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported in part by NIH P01 HL110900, to J.M.F.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2016/5/26
Y1 - 2016/5/26
N2 - The very rapid nitric oxide dioxygenation (NOD) reaction of nitric oxide (NO) with the oxygen bound to the ferrous derivatives of hemeproteins such as hemoglobin and myoglobin to yield nitrate and the ferric derivate (met) of the hemeprotein is of considerable physiological and biomedical importance. The mechanism for this reaction has been elusive due to the rapidity of the reaction. This article describes a method based both on using trehalose-derived glassy matrices to control the reaction of NO with oxyhemoglobin through both a temperature and glass-dependent modulation of the protein dynamics and a novel method of generating NO within the glassy matrix. The results support models in which there is a very rapid formation of an intermediate that immediately decays into an initial nonequilibrium population of high and low ferric nitrate that on a slower time scale relaxed to an easily dissociated equilibrium form of the ferric nitrate derivative of hemoglobin.
AB - The very rapid nitric oxide dioxygenation (NOD) reaction of nitric oxide (NO) with the oxygen bound to the ferrous derivatives of hemeproteins such as hemoglobin and myoglobin to yield nitrate and the ferric derivate (met) of the hemeprotein is of considerable physiological and biomedical importance. The mechanism for this reaction has been elusive due to the rapidity of the reaction. This article describes a method based both on using trehalose-derived glassy matrices to control the reaction of NO with oxyhemoglobin through both a temperature and glass-dependent modulation of the protein dynamics and a novel method of generating NO within the glassy matrix. The results support models in which there is a very rapid formation of an intermediate that immediately decays into an initial nonequilibrium population of high and low ferric nitrate that on a slower time scale relaxed to an easily dissociated equilibrium form of the ferric nitrate derivative of hemoglobin.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b12778
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b12778
M3 - Article
C2 - 27120679
AN - SCOPUS:84973464811
SN - 1520-6106
VL - 120
SP - 4529
EP - 4539
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry B
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry B
IS - 20
ER -