63 research outputs found

    The potent vasodilating and guanylyl cyclase activating dinitrosyl-iron(II) complex is stored in a protein-bound form in vascular tissue and is released by thiols

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    AbstractWe studied the biological activity, stability and interaction of dinitrosyl-iron(II)-L-cysteine with vascular tissue. Dinitrosyl-iron((II)-L-cysteine was a potent activator of purified soluble guanylyl cyclase (EC50 (nM with and 100 nM without superoxide dismutase) and relaxed noradrenaline-precontracted segments of endothelium-denuded rabbit femoral artery (EC50 10 nM superoxide dismutase). Pre-incubation (5 min; 310 K) of endothelium-denuded rabbit aortic segments with dinitrosyl-iron(II)-L-cysteine (0.036–3.6 mM) resulted in a concentration-dependent formation of a dinitrosyl-iron(II complex with protein thiol groups, as detected by ESR spectroscopy. While the complex with proteins was stable for 2 h at 310 K, dinitrosyl-iron(II)-L-cysteine in aqueous solution (30–360 μM) decomposed completely within 15 min, as indicated by disappearance of its isotropic ESR signal at gav = 2.03 (293 K). Aortic segments pre-incubated with dinitrosyl-iron(II)-L-cysteine released a labile vasodilating and guanylyl cyclase activating factor. Perfusion of these segments with N-acetyl-L-cysteine resulted in the generation of a low molecular weight dinitrosyl-iron(II)-dithiolate from the dinitrosyl-iron(II) complex with proteins, as revealed by the shape change of the ESR signal at 293 K. The low molecular weight dinitrosyl-iron(II)-dithiolate accounted to an enhanced guanylyl cyclase activation and vasodilation induced by the aortic effluent. We conclude that nitric oxide (NO) produced by, or acting on vascular cells can be stabilized and stored as a dinitrosyl-iron(II) complex with protein thiols, and can be released from cells in the form of a low molecular weight dinitrosyl-iron(II)-dithiolate by intra- and extracellular thiols

    Insulin Induces the Release of Vasodilator Compounds From Platelets by a Nitric Oxide–G Kinase–VAMP-3–dependent Pathway

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    Insulin-induced vasodilatation is sensitive to nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) inhibitors. However, insulin is unable to relax isolated arteries or to activate endothelial NOS in endothelial cells. Since insulin can enhance platelet endothelial NOS activity, we determined whether insulin-induced vasodilatation can be attributed to a NO-dependent, platelet-mediated process

    Endothelium-Derived Epoxyeicosatrienoic Acids and Vascular Function

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    Mechanical properties of arteries

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