Specific binding of nitroglycerin to coronary artery microsomes. Evidence of a vascular nitrate binding site

Bauer, JA; Fung, HL

HERO ID

1663309

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1996

Language

English

PMID

8759035

HERO ID 1663309
In Press No
Year 1996
Title Specific binding of nitroglycerin to coronary artery microsomes. Evidence of a vascular nitrate binding site
Authors Bauer, JA; Fung, HL
Journal Biochemical Pharmacology
Volume 52
Issue 4
Page Numbers 619-625
Abstract The vasodilating action of organic nitrates, such as nitroglycerin (NTG), is thought to be mediated through metabolic conversion to nitric oxide (NO) in vascular smooth muscle. Although the pertinent enzyme(s) that carries out this crucial step has not been identified, previous studies have shown that the primary enzymatic site is located within cellular membrane fractions. In these studies, we examined the binding of [14C]NTG to microsomal fractions from bovine coronary arteries. Specific binding was linearly related to protein concentration, and binding equilibrium was reversible, reached equilibrium within 1 hr, and remained stable for 4 hr at 25 degrees. Competition experiments with unlabeled NTG demonstrated the presence of two binding sites of differing affinities (high-affinity site: Bmax 24.1 +/- 0.9 pmol/mg protein, Kd 554 +/- 22 pM; low-affinity site: Bmax 79.0 +/- 2.9 pmol/mg protein, Kd 151 +/- 3 microM). Both of the thiol alkylators 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and N-ethylmaleimide were found to inhibit [14C]NTG binding, as well as enzymatic generation of NO from NTG, in a concentration-dependent manner. Competition of [14C]NTG was also observed with five other organic nitrate vasodilators, and the degree of competition was linearly related to the in vitro vaso-relaxing potencies of these agents. Parallel experiments also showed that in the absence of thiol cofactor, the enzymatic production of NO from NTG was antagonized competitively by less potent organic nitrates. Intact blood vessel experiments using rat aorta also showed that the presence of isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN), at concentrations that did not induce relaxation alone, caused a slight but significant shift in the relaxation potency of NTG (EC25 9 +/- 2 versus 28 +/- 7 nM, in the presence and absence of 0.3 microM ISDN, respectively; P < 0.05). These results demonstrate the presence of specific binding of organic nitrates to microsomal proteins in vascular smooth muscle, and the observed binding is apparently related to enzymatic conversion to NO and the vasodilating properties of these compounds.
Doi 10.1016/0006-2952(96)00336-x
Pmid 8759035
Wosid WOS:A1996VA23500014
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:A1996VA23500014Scopus URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0029949068&doi=10.1016%2f0006-2952%2896%2900336-X&partnerID=40&md5=556d4ef3edc6dfcdac2616bfa428773b
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword organic nitrates; nitroglycerin; binding; nitric oxide; vascular