Artigo Revisado por pares

Human heart mitochondria do not produce physiologically relevant quantities of nitric oxide

2006; Elsevier BV; Volume: 80; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.lfs.2006.10.009

ISSN

1879-0631

Autores

Attila Csordás, Eszter Pankotai, James A. Snipes, Attila Cselenyák, Zsolt Sárszegi, Attila Cziráki, Balázs Gaszner, Lajos Papp, Rita Benkő, Levente Kiss, Endre Kovács, Márk Kollai, Csaba Szabó, David W. Busija, Zsombor Lacza,

Tópico(s)

Pulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments

Resumo

Previous studies raised the possibility that nitric oxide synthase is present in heart mitochondria (mtNOS) and the existence of such an enzyme became generally accepted. However, original experimental evidence is rather scarce and positive identification of the enzyme is lacking. We aimed to detect an NOS protein in human and mouse heart mitochondria and to measure the level of NO released from the organelles. Western blotting with 7 different anti-NOS antibodies failed to detect a NOS-like protein in mitochondria. Immunoprecipitation or substrate-affinity purification of the samples concentrated NOS in control preparations but not in mitochondria. Release of NO from live respiring human mitochondria was below 2 ppb after 45 min of incubation. In a bioassay system, mitochondrial suspension failed to cause vasodilation of human mammary artery segments. These results indicate that mitochondria do not produce physiologically relevant quantities of NO in the heart and are unlikely to have any physiological importance as NO donors, nor do they contain a recognizable mtNOS enzyme.

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