Experimental evidence is presented supporting a mechanism of S- nitrosothiol formation and degradation mediated by copper ions using bovine serum albumin, human hemoglobin and glutathione as models. We found that Cu2+, but not Fe3+, induces in the presence of NO a fast S-nitrosation of bovine serum albumin and human hemoglobin, and the reaction is prevented by thiol blocking reagents. During the reaction, Cu+ is accumulated and accounts for destabilization of the S-nitrosothiol formed. In contrast, glutathione rapidly dimerizes in the presence of Cu2+, the reaction competing with S-nitrosation and therefore preventing the formation of S- nitrosoglutathione. We have combined the presented role of Cu2+ in S- nitrosothiol formation with the known destabilizing effect of Cu+, providing a unique simple picture where the redox state of copper determines either the NO release from S-nitrosothiols or the NO scavenging by thiol groups. The reactions described are fast, efficient, and may occur at micromolar concentration of all reactants. We propose that the mechanism presented may provide a general method for in vitro S-nitrosation.

Mechanism of S-nitrosothiol formation and degradation mediated by copper ions

1999

Abstract

Experimental evidence is presented supporting a mechanism of S- nitrosothiol formation and degradation mediated by copper ions using bovine serum albumin, human hemoglobin and glutathione as models. We found that Cu2+, but not Fe3+, induces in the presence of NO a fast S-nitrosation of bovine serum albumin and human hemoglobin, and the reaction is prevented by thiol blocking reagents. During the reaction, Cu+ is accumulated and accounts for destabilization of the S-nitrosothiol formed. In contrast, glutathione rapidly dimerizes in the presence of Cu2+, the reaction competing with S-nitrosation and therefore preventing the formation of S- nitrosoglutathione. We have combined the presented role of Cu2+ in S- nitrosothiol formation with the known destabilizing effect of Cu+, providing a unique simple picture where the redox state of copper determines either the NO release from S-nitrosothiols or the NO scavenging by thiol groups. The reactions described are fast, efficient, and may occur at micromolar concentration of all reactants. We propose that the mechanism presented may provide a general method for in vitro S-nitrosation.
1999
Istituto di Biologia e Patologia Molecolari - IBPM
copper ion
glutathione
iron
thiol derivative
article
binding affinity
chemical reaction
controlled study
dimerization
human
nitrosation
nonhuman
priority journal
protein binding
protein degradation
protein interaction
reaction time
Animals
Cattle
Copper
Electrochemistry
Humans
Hydrolysis
Mercap
Nitric Oxide
Nitroso Compounds
S-Nitrosothiols
Spectrum Analysis
Bovinae
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/241604
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