Affiliation:
1. From the Departments of Surgery (B.L.) and Medicine (D.T.H., J.S.S.) and Biochemistry (M.T.F., J.S.S.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; and Case Western Reserve School of Medicine (D.T.H., J.S.S.).
Abstract
Abstract
:
Well over 2 decades have passed since the endothelium-derived relaxation factor was reported to be the gaseous molecule nitric oxide (NO). Although soluble guanylyl cyclase (which generates cyclic guanosine monophosphate, cGMP) was the first identified receptor for NO, it has become increasingly clear that NO exerts a ubiquitous influence in a cGMP-independent manner. In particular, many, if not most, effects of NO are mediated by
S
-nitrosylation, the covalent modification of a protein cysteine thiol by an NO group to generate an
S
-nitrosothiol (SNO). Moreover, within the current framework of NO biology, endothelium-derived relaxation factor activity (ie, G protein–coupled receptor–mediated, or shear-induced endothelium-derived NO bioactivity) is understood to involve a central role for SNOs, acting both as second messengers and signal effectors. Furthermore, essential roles for
S
-nitrosylation have been implicated in virtually all major functions of NO in the cardiovascular system. Here, we review the basic biochemistry of
S
-nitrosylation (and denitrosylation), discuss the role of
S
-nitrosylation in the vascular and cardiac functions of NO, and identify current and potential clinical applications.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
443 articles.
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