Nitric oxide donors modulate ferritin and protect endothelium from oxidative injury
1996; Elsevier BV; Volume: 20; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/0891-5849(95)02024-1
ISSN1873-4596
Autores Tópico(s)Trace Elements in Health
ResumoFerritin protects endothelial cells from the damaging effects of iron-catalyzed oxidative injury. Regulation of ferritin occurs through the formation of an iron-sulfur cluster within a cytoplasmic protein, the iron regulatory protein (IP, P) that controls ferritin mRNA translation. Nitric oxide has been shown to inhibit iron-sulfur proteins and is present at vascular sites of inflammation; therefore, we undertook a study to examine the influence of nitric oxide on changes in endothelial cell ferritin content in response to iron exposure, and the subsequent effects on susceptibility to oxidative injury. Iron-loaded endothelial cells (EC) exposed to nitric oxide donors synthesize markedly less ferritin. Treatment of EC with a nitric oxide donor increases IRP affinity for ferritin mRNA concomitant with a loss of cytoplasmic aconitase activity in iron-laden EC. Iron-treated EC exposed to NO donors were resistant to oxidative injury despite their low ferritin content when examined 1 h after the treatment period. In contrast, 24 h later, these same cells become sensitive to oxidants, whereas iron-treated EC that are ferritin-rich continue to be resistant. In conclusion, NO inhibits the increase of EC ferritin after exposure to iron but provides short-term protection against oxidants; ferritin, in turn, provides durable cytoprotection by inactivating reactive iron.
Referência(s)