1. Nitrite-mediated antagonism of cyanide inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase in dopamine neurons.
- Author
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Leavesley HB, Li L, Mukhopadhyay S, Borowitz JL, and Isom GE
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Transformed, Cyclic N-Oxides pharmacology, Drug Antagonism, Electron Transport Complex IV metabolism, Free Radical Scavengers pharmacology, Hydrogen Cyanide metabolism, Imidazoles pharmacology, Neurons metabolism, Nitric Oxide metabolism, Rats, Chemical Warfare Agents toxicity, Dopamine physiology, Electron Transport Complex IV antagonists & inhibitors, Hydrogen Cyanide toxicity, Neurons drug effects, Nitric Oxide Donors pharmacology, Sodium Nitrite pharmacology
- Abstract
Cyanide inhibits aerobic metabolism by binding to the binuclear heme center of cytochrome c oxidase (CcOX). Amyl nitrite and sodium nitrite (NaNO(2)) antagonize cyanide toxicity in part by oxidizing hemoglobin to methemoglobin (mHb), which then scavenges cyanide. mHb generation is thought to be a primary mechanism by which the NO(2)(-) ion antagonizes cyanide. On the other hand, NO(2)(-) can undergo biotransformation to generate nitric oxide (NO), which may then directly antagonize cyanide inhibition of CcOX. In this study, nitrite-mediated antagonism of cyanide inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation was examined in rat dopaminergic N27 cells. NaNO(2) produced a time- and concentration-dependent increase in whole-cell and mitochondrial levels of NO. The NO scavenger 2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxy 3-oxide (PTIO) reversed this increase in cellular and mitochondrial NO. NO generated from NaNO(2) decreased cellular oxygen consumption and inhibited CcOX activity. PTIO reversed the NO-mediated inhibition, thus providing strong evidence that NO mediates the action of NaNO(2). Under similar conditions, KCN (20muM) inhibited cellular state-3 oxygen consumption and CcOX activity. Pretreatment with NaNO(2) reversed KCN-mediated inhibition of both oxygen consumption and CcOX activity. The NaNO(2) antagonism of cyanide was blocked by pretreatment with the NO scavenger PTIO. It was concluded that NaNO(2) antagonizes cyanide inhibition of CcOX by generating of NO, which then interacts directly with the binding of KCN x CcOX to reverse the toxicity. In vivo antagonism of cyanide by NO(2)(-) appears to be due to both generation of mHb and direct displacement of cyanide from CcOX by NO.
- Published
- 2010
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