The cytotoxicity of nitroxyl: Possible implications for the pathophysiological role of NO

David A. Wink*, Martin Feelisch, Jon Fukuto, Danae Chistodoulou, David Jourd'heuil, Matthew B. Grisham, Yoram Vodovotz, John A. Cook, Murali Krishna, William G. DeGraff, Sung Mee Kim, Janet Gamson, James B. Mitchell

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

188 Scopus citations

Abstract

In addition to the broad repertoire of regulatory functions nitric oxide (NO) serves in mammalian physiology, the L-arginine:NO pathway is also involved in numerous pathophysiological mechanisms. While NO itself may actually protect cells from the toxicity of reactive oxygen radicals in some cases, it has been suggested that reactive nitrogen oxide species formed from nitric oxide synthase (NOS) can be cytotoxic. In addition to NO, the one electron reduction product NO- has been proposed to be formed from NOS. We investigated the potential cytotoxic role of nitroxyl (NO-), using the nitroxyl donor Angelis's salt, (AS; sodium trioxodinitrate, Na2N2O3) as the source of NO-. AS was found to be cytotoxic to Chinese hamster V79 lung fibroblast cells over a concentration range of 2-4 mM. The presence of equimolar ferricyanide (Fe(III)-(CN6)3-), which converts NO- to NO, afforded dramatic protection against AS-mediated cytotoxicity. Treatment of V79 cells with L-buthionine sulfoximine to reduce intracellular glutathione markedly enhanced AS cytotoxicity, which suggests that GSH is critical for cellular protection against the toxicity of NO-. Further experiments showed that low molecular weight transition metal complexes associated with the formation of reactive oxygen species are not involved in AS-mediated cytotoxicity since metal chelators had no effect. However, under aerobic conditions, AS was more toxic than under hypoxic conditions, suggesting that oxygen dramatically enhanced AS-mediated cytotoxicity. At a molecular level, AS exposure resulted in DNA double strand breaks in whole cells, and this effect was completely prevented by coincubation of cells with ferricyanide or Tempol. The data in this study suggest that nitroxyl may contribute to the cytotoxicity associated with an enhanced expression of the L-arginine:NO pathway under different biological conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)66-74
Number of pages9
JournalArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Volume351
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 1998
Externally publishedYes

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