In vitro and in vivo kinetic handling of nitrite in blood: effects of varying hemoglobin oxygen saturation

Blood, AB; Power, GG

HERO ID

2447438

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2007

Language

English

PMID

17513487

HERO ID 2447438
In Press No
Year 2007
Title In vitro and in vivo kinetic handling of nitrite in blood: effects of varying hemoglobin oxygen saturation
Authors Blood, AB; Power, GG
Journal American Journal of Physiology: Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Volume 293
Issue 3
Page Numbers H1508-H1517
Abstract Growing evidence suggests that nitrite, acting via reduction to nitric oxide by deoxyhemoglobin, may play an important role in local control of blood flow during hypoxia. To investigate the effect of hypoxia (65 Torr arterial Po-2) on the kinetic properties of nitrite, a bolus injection of sodium nitrite (10 mg/kg iv) was given to normoxic or hypoxic newborn lambs, and the time course of plasma nitrite and methemoglobin (MetHb) concentrations was measured. The in vivo kinetics of nitrite disappearance from plasma were biphasic and were not affected by hypoxia. Changes in MetHb, a product of the nitrite-hemoglobin reaction, also did not differ with the level of oxygenation. Hypoxia potentiated the hypotensive effects of nitrite on pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures. The disappearance of nitrite from plasma was equivalent to the increase in MetHb on a molar basis. In contrast, nitrite metabolism in sheep blood in vitro resulted in more than one MetHb per nitrite equivalent under mid-and high-oxygenation conditions: oxyhemoglobin (HbO(2)) saturation = 50.3 +/- 1.7% and 97.0 +/- 1.3%, respectively. Under the low-oxygenation condition (HbO2 saturation = 5.2 +/- 0.9%), significantly less than 1 mol of MetHb was produced per nitrite equivalent, indicating that a significant portion of nitrite is metabolized through pathways that do not produce MetHb. These data support the idea that the vasodilating effects of nitrite are potentiated under hypoxic conditions due to the reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide by deoxyhemoglobin.
Doi 10.1152/ajpheart.01259.2006
Pmid 17513487
Wosid WOS:000249237800026
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword methemoglobin; hypoxia; nitric oxide