NO-ferroheme is a signaling entity in the vasculature

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Abstract

Despite wide appreciation of the biological role of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) signaling, questions remain about the chemical nature of NOS-derived bioactivity. Here we show that NO-like bioactivity can be efficiently transduced by mobile NO-ferroheme species, which can transfer between proteins, partition into a hydrophobic phase and directly activate the sGC–cGMP–PKG pathway without intermediacy of free NO. The NO-ferroheme species (with or without a protein carrier) efficiently relax isolated blood vessels and induce hypotension in rodents, which is greatly potentiated after the blockade of NOS activity. While free NO-induced relaxations are abolished by an NO scavenger and in the presence of red blood cells or blood plasma, a model compound, NO-ferroheme-myoglobin preserves its vasoactivity suggesting the physiological relevance of NO-ferroheme species. We conclude that NO-ferroheme behaves as a signaling entity in the vasculature. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Kleschyov, A. L., Zhuge, Z., Schiffer, T. A., Guimarães, D. D., Zhang, G., Montenegro, M. F., … Lundberg, J. O. (2023). NO-ferroheme is a signaling entity in the vasculature. Nature Chemical Biology, 19(10), 1267–1275. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41589-023-01411-5

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