This site will look much better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.

|
Navamoney Arulsamy |
Nitric oxide (NO) is a neurotransmitter, and a potent therapeutic agent capable of fighting tumor (cytostasis) and inhibiting platelet aggregation. There are also well documented deleterious effects arising from the overproduction of NO. For example, undesired consequences such as vascular diseases (septic shock, post-ischemic cerebral damage, etc.), immuno-pathological diseases and neurodegenerative diseases (cerebral ischemia, Alzheimer disease and Huntington disease) are attributed to NO overproduction. Recent evidences suggest that the closely related redox partner, nitroxyl (HNO, also known as nitrosyl hydride), produced during the biosynthesis of NO from L-arginine or by the one-electron reduction of NO under physiological conditions is also responsible for some of the physiological functions attributed to NO. Therefore, there is new impetus given to the biological chemistry of HNO. In contrast to the rapid growth of biochemical and pharmacological studies of HNO, there is little attention given to the fundamental reactivity studies of NO and HNO. The continued use of classic compounds such as sodium hyponitrate (Na2N2O3, Angeli's salt) and N-hydroxybenzenesulfamide (C6H5SO2NHOH, Piloty's acid), for the in situ generation of the nitroxyl anion (NO-) in various biochemical studies illustrates the status of fundamental research toward the synthesis and characterization of HNO and NO-. The biosynthesis of NO involves the formation of HNO as a byproduct, and there is evidence for the preferential formation of HNO over NO under certain cellular conditions. The capricious biosynthesis of HNO in lieu of NO has blurred the physiological roles of NO and HNO. Studies aimed at distinguishing their chemical properties are complicated by the ready inter-conversion of NO and NO-. The complexity of HNO reactivity still remains poorly understood. |
|
Department of Chemistry
Dept. 3838
1000 E. University Avenue
Laramie, WY 82071
Physical Science Building, Room 403
(307) 766-4363
Email: chemistry@uwyo.edu
