|  |  | NO IN LIPID OXIDATION Shock 1998: Oxígeno, Oxido Nítrico y
          perspectivas terapéuticas
 Simposio Internacional, Academia Nacional de Medicina
 Buenos Aires, 30 abril 1998
 
 NITRIC OXIDE AND PEROXYNITRITE IN LIPID PEROXIDATION
   Homero
          Rubbo Departamento de
          Bioquímica, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de la República,
          Montevideo, Uruguay Key words: nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, superoxide, lipid
          oxidation, free radicals, antioxidants, lipids, low density
          lipoprotein Abstract  Nitric
          oxide (.NO) can mediate tissue protective reactions during oxidant
          stress, as well as toxic and tissue prooxidant effects. Nitric oxide
          regulates critical lipid membrane and lipoprotein oxidation events, by
          1) contributing to the formation of more potent secondary oxidants
          from superoxide (i.e. peroxynitrite) and 2) termination of lipid
          radicals to possibly less reactive secondary nitrogen-containing
          products (LONO, LOONO) which are in part organic peroxynitrites and
          are expected to be produced in vivo. Relative rates of production and
          steady state concentrations of superoxide and .NO and cellular sites
          of production will profoundly influence expression of the differential
          oxidant injury-enhancing and protective effects of .NO. Full
          understanding of the physiological roles of .NO, coupled with detailed
          insight into .NO regulation of oxygen radical-dependent reactions,
          will yield a more rational basis for the use of .NO donors for
          therapeutic purposes. Resumen  Oxido
          nítrico y peroxinitrito en la peroxidación lipídica. El óxido
          nítrico (.NO) regula eventos críticos en procesos de
          lipoperoxidación de membranas o lipoproteinas mediante 1) su
          contribución a la formación de oxidantes secundarios más potentes
          como el peroxinitrito, 2) por su capacidad de terminación de
          reacciones de propagación lipídica con la concomitante formación de
          productos no radicalares del tipo nitrosolípidos (LONO, LOONO). Las
          velocidades relativas y concentraciones en el estado estacionario de
          .NO y radicales libres del oxígeno, así como los sitios de
          producción celular de estas especies, determinan los efectos netos
          observados pro- o antioxidantes del .NO. La mejor comprensión de los
          roles fisiológicos que el .NO cumple en procesos oxidativos puede dar
          bases más racionales para su utilización con fines terapéuticos.  Postal address: Dr. Homero Rubbo, Departamento de Bioquímica
          Facultad de Medicina, General Flores 2125, Montevideo, Uruguay 11800
 Fax: 5982-9249563; E-mail: hrubbo@fmed.edu.uy
 
  
           Nitric oxide (.NO, nitrogen monoxide) is an
          endogenously-synthesized free radical first characterized as a
          non-eicosanoid component of endothelial-derived relaxation factor,
          (EDRF)1. Nitric oxide is produced by a variety of mammalian cells
          including vascular endo-thelium, neurons, smooth muscle cells,
          macrophages, neutrophils, platelets and pulmonary epithelium2. The
          physiological actions of .NO range from mediating vasodilation,
          neurotransmission, inhibition of platelet adherence/aggregation and
          the macrophage and neutrophil killing of pathogens. Many if not all of
          these effects are mediated by the activation of soluble guanylate
          cyclase, synthesis of cyclic guanosine 3’,5’-mono-phosphate (cGMP)
          and the activation of a family of cGMP kinases3.Nitric oxide exerts potent actions in the regulation of cell function
          and tissue viability. Chemical reaction systems, cell and animal
          models and clinical studies have recently revealed an ability of .NO
          to modulate reactions and pathologic processes long associated with
          the excess production and biological effects of reactive oxygen
          species. The focus of this review will be to discuss the observed
          pro-oxidant and antioxidant reactions of .NO in the context of lipid
          oxidative processes based in our own recent observations that the
          protective effects of .NO can often be ascribed to its antioxidant
          properties and its ability to redirect the reactivity of partially
          reduced oxygen species.
 Lipid reactions of .NO are an important area of focus for multiple
          reasons. First, this reactive species significantly concentrates in
          lipophilic cell compartments, with an n-octanol:water partition
          coefficient of 6-8:1. This solvation property will further enhance the
          ability of .NO to regulate oxidant-induced membrane lipid oxidation.
          Second, .NO reacts with lipid alkoxyl and peroxyl radicals (LO. and
          LOO.) at near diffusion-limited rates, inferring that both lipid
          peroxidation processes and reactions of lipophilic antioxidants will
          be influenced by local .NO concentrations4-6. Third, the central role
          that .NO plays in vascular diseases includes important reactivities of
          .NO both as a signal transduction mediator and toward other free
          radical species i.e. superoxide (O2.-) and LOO.. The issues to be
          addressed includes 1) the influences of .NO and reactive species
          commonly associated with oxidant stress on lipid and lipoprotein
          systems, and 2) the mechanisms accounting for the protective effects
          of .NO observed in pathological events associated with excess
          production of reactive oxygen species.
 Nitric oxide reaction with superoxide A critical reaction that .NO undergoes in oxygenated biologic media
          is direct bimolecular reaction with O2.-, yielding peroxynitrite
          (ONOO-) at almost diffusion-limited rates (6.7 x 109 M-1 s-1, ref. 7).
          This rate constant is ~3.5 times faster than the enzymatic
          disproportionation of O2.- catalyzed by superoxide dismutases (SOD) at
          neutral pH (kSOD = 2 x 109 M-1 s-1). Thus, ONOO- formation represents
          a major potential pathway of .NO reactivity which depends on both
          rates of tissue .NO and O2.- production and scavenging (e.g., local
          superoxide dismutase and oxyhemoglobin concentrations). Peroxynitrite
          has a half-life of <1 s under physiological conditions, due to
          proton-catalyzed decomposition of peroxynitrous acid (ONOOH) and
          competing target molecule reactions of ONOOH8. Nitric oxide will
          potentiate many aspects of O2.--mediated tissue damage via ONOO-
          formation. To date, it has been shown that ONOO- is a potent oxidant
          capable of a) directly oxidizing protein and non-protein sulfhydryls9,
          10, b) protonating to ONOOH, which exhibits both unique and hydroxyl
          radical (.OH)-like reactions via metal-independent mechanisms11, 12
          and c) reaction with metal centers to yield a species with the
          reactivity of nitronium cation (NO2+), an oxidizing and nitrating
          intermediate13. It is noteworthy that the mechanisms and extents of
          ONOO- reaction will be strongly influenced by CO2/H2CO3, which is
          typically 25 mM in biological tissues and can significantly exceed
          this concentration during pathologic processes14.Nitric oxide can potentiate O2.--mediated tissue damage and leads to
          ONOO- formation, representing a major potential pathway of .NO
          reactivity. Peroxynitrite is now being revealed as a key contributing
          reactive species in pathological events associated with stimulation of
          tissue production of .NO, e.g., systemic hypotension, inhibition of
          intermediary metabolism, ischemia-reperfusion injury, immune
          complex-stimulated pulmonary edema, cytokine-induced oxidant lung
          injury, and inflammatory cell-mediated pathogen killing/host
          injury15-17. There is growing evidence that .NO-mediated production of
          ONOO- readily occurs in vivo, underscoring the importance of
          understanding the target molecule reactions occurring during the
          coordinated production of oxygen and nitrogen-containing reactive
          species18, 19.
 Antioxidant reactions of nitric oxide Since the reaction of .NO with O2.- yields the potent oxidant
          ONOO-, from a purely chemical point of view it would follow that a) an
          even broader array of target molecules would become susceptible to the
          toxic effects of reactive oxygen species when .NO is present and b)
          .NO will potentiate the toxicity of reactive oxygen species. While
          this is sometimes the case, it is evident that .NO also exerts direct
          or indirect antioxidant actions in biological systems subjected to
          concomitant oxidant stress from excess production of reactive oxygen
          species. The following sections develop these concepts in more detail. a) Nitric oxide reaction with lipid epoxyallylic and peroxyl
          radicals. Nitric oxide has been observed to play a critical role in
          regulating lipid oxidation induced by reactive oxygen and nitrogen
          species and activated reticuloendothelial cells5, 6, 20. Nitric oxide
          (in some conditions) will stimulate O2.- induced lipid and lipoprotein
          oxidation and under other conditions mediate protective reactions in
          membranes by inhibiting O2.-, copper and ONOO--induced lipid oxidation
          (Figure 1). The latter actions require higher (but still biologically
          relevant) rates of .NO production. This revealed that oxygen radicals
          can serve critical roles as modulators of the biological reactions of
          .NO. We now know that .NO reacts with radical species including O2.-
          and lipid peroxyl radicals (LOO.) at almost diffusion-limited rate
          constants4-6.Nitric oxide has been reported to have contrasting effects on low
          density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation. For both macrophage and
          endothelial cell model systems, increased rates of cell .NO production
          via cytokine-mediated stimulation of inducible macrophage nitric oxide
          synthase gene expression and activity or exogenous addition of .NO
          have been shown to inhibit cell and O2.--mediated lipoprotein
          oxidation6, 21-23. In contrast to these examples, the simultaneous
          production of .NO and O2.- by 1,3-morpholino-sydnonimine-HCl (SIN-1)
          or the direct addition of ONOO- has been shown to oxidize lipoproteins
          to potentially atherogenic forms24, 25. Peroxynitrite-dependent
          tyrosine nitration reactions in areas of atherosclerotic vessel lipid
          deposition has also been shown to occur during both early and chronic
          stages of atherosclerotic disease18.
 Nitric oxide not only stimulates O2.- induced lipid and lipoprotein
          oxidation via ONOO- production, but will also inhibit O2.- and
          ONOO--induced lipid oxidation at slightly higher rates of .NO
          production5. The prooxidant versus antioxidant outcome of these
          reactions which are sensitive to .NO regulation are extremely
          dependent on relative concentrations of individual reactive species.
          For example, the continuous infusion of .NO at various rates into LDL
          suspensions exposed to xanthine oxidase first stimulated and then
          inhibited formation of 2-thiobarbituric acid reactive products at
          rates of .NO infusion greater than 3 µM.min-1 (Figure 2). Nitric
          oxide only stimulated O2.--dependent lipid peroxidation in LDL when
          production rates of .NO were less than or equivalent to rates of O2.-
          production. Thus, there is a dynamic competition between O2.- and
          lipid radicals for reaction with .NO. More investigation is required
          to understand the interaction of .NO with lipid epoxyallylic radicals,
          the predominant species to which lipid alkoxyl radical (LO.)
          rearranges following cyclization26.
 The LDL particle consists of an apolar core of cholesteryl esters and
          triglycerides, surrounded by a monolayer of phospholipids,
          unesterified cholesterol and one molecule of apolipoprotein B-100,
          with cholesteryl esters the most abundant lipid class found in LDL and
          cholesteryl linoleate the principal oxidizable lipid. Indeed, we
          observed that .NO inhibited cholesteryl linoleate oxidation in LDL in
          a dose-dependent manner, with the concomitant formation of
          nitrogen-containing lipid adducts27. In addition, analysis of
          atherosclerotic human vessel lipid extracts by liquid
          chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis showed that cholesteryl
          linoleate oxidation products represented more than 85% of the total
          cholesteryl linoleate fraction of atherosclerotic vessels. At least
          25% of the luminal cell and plaque cholesteryl linoleate fraction of
          atherosclerotic vessels consisted of nitrogen-containing oxidized
          lipid derivatives27. It is important to note that the products of .NO
          termination of lipid radical species are unstable and may mediate a
          different spectrum of as yet undefined target molecule and pathologic
          reactions.
 b) Nitric oxide-a-tocopherol interactions in lipid oxidation. a-Tocopherol, a lipophilic chain-breaking antioxidant in biological
          membranes and lipoproteins acts by donating hydrogen atoms to
          chain-propagating peroxyl radical species (LOO.) to form the
          corresponding hydro-peroxide28. Since the reaction of LOO. with
          a-tocopherol occurs at a rate three orders of magnitude less than for
          the reaction of LOO. with .NO, .NO could act more readily than
          a-tocopherol, as an antioxidant defense against oxygen radical derived
          oxidized lipid species. Based on comparison of relative rate
          constants, it is predicted that the termination of LOO. by .NO will be
          significantly more facile than both the reaction of LOO. with
          a-tocopherol (k=2.5 x 106 M-1. s-1) and the initiation of secondary
          peroxidation propagation reactions by LOO. with vicinal unsaturated
          lipids (k= 30 - 200 M-1 . s-1).In support of this argument, introduction of .NO into lipid oxidation
          systems containing a-tocopherol results in preferential reaction of
          .NO with lipid-derived radical species and prevents oxidation of
          a-tocopherol (Figure 3). One mechanism explaining the protection of
          a-tocopherol from oxidation by oxidizing lipids, can be the
          preferential reaction of .NO with LO. and LOO. at significantly
          greater rates than a-tocopherol to yield nitrogen-containing
          radical-radical termination products. Another mechanism can be the
          direct reduction of a-tocopheroxyl radical (and possibly further
          oxidation states of a-tocopherol) by .NO, thus regenerating reduced
          a-tocopherol and limiting the net extent of apparent a-tocopherol
          oxidation29. Nitric oxide is thermodyna-mically capable of inhibiting
          accumulation of a-tocopherol oxidation products via one electron
          reduction of a-tocopheroxyl radical, with DGo’= -5 Kcal/mol. Because
          lipid radicals in the lipophilic milieu do not readily partition into
          the bulk aqueous medium, we postulate that .NO can act as a reductant
          of a-tocopherol in membrane and hydrophobic lipoprotein compartments,
          where reducing equivalents are not readily transferred from
          water-soluble reductants (eg. ascorbate, thiols, ref. 29). This
          mechanism could explain the observed additive antioxidant effects of
          .NO and a-tocopherol in comparison with the pair ascorbate plus
          a-tocopherol (Figure 3). The mobility of a-tocopherol in the lateral
          plane of the membrane and its exact positioning in the membrane may
          restrict its antioxidant actions, in part explaining why .NO can be
          much more facile at terminating lipid peroxyl radical species. Thus,
          because of a high reactivity with other radical species, a relatively
          lower reactivity of lipid radical-.NO termination products and an
          ability of .NO to readily traverse membranes and lipoproteins, .NO can
          effectively terminate radical species throughout all aspects of
          membrane and lipoprotein microenvironments. This can help maintain
          other tissue antioxidant defenses as well, during periods of oxidant
          stress.
 c) Nitric oxide reactions with metals Nitric oxide can react with metal centers in proteins including
          heme iron, iron-sulfur clusters and copper. Examples are the
          activation of soluble guanylate cyclase, a heme-containing enzyme, via
          the formation of an iron-nitrosyl complex30. It has been postulated
          that .NO can exert a protective role towards metal complex and
          metalloprotein-catalyzed lipid oxidation, via formation of
          catalytically inactive metal iron-nitrosyl complexes, thereby
          modulating the pro-oxidant effects of iron and other transition
          metals31. Iron-nitrosyl complexes were detected in several proteins,
          including mammalian ferritin, transferrin, myoglobin and hemoglobin,
          albeit in the presence of high concentrations of .NO32. It is
          important to note that the rate of .NO reaction with most metal
          centers is significantly slower than for the almost diffusion-limited
          reaction of .NO with either O2.- or LO. and LOO. species, critical for
          propagation of radical chain reactions. It should also be noted that
          .NO can exert prooxidant effects with transition metals as well, by
          reducing ferric iron complexes. This can induce the release of bound
          iron and indirectly substitute for other reductants in the Haber-Weiss
          reaction-mediated production of .OH from H2O2.Structural-functional studies of the catalytic site of lipoxygenase
          (SLO) reveals formation of a ferrous-nitrosyl complex following enzyme
          exposure to .NO. From this .NO-SLO interaction, it was proposed that
          .NO inhibits SLO-dependent lipid oxidation via direct enzyme
          inactivation. However, at physiological low rates of .NO production,
          .NO only minimally inhibits lipoxygenase catalytic activity6. At
          µM.min-1 rates of .NO production, no evidence of .NO reaction with
          either Fe-EDTA or the active site of SLO was detectable by electron
          spin resonance analysis6. From all of the above, it is concluded that
          the inhibitory effect of .NO towards oxygen radical or SLO-dependent
          oxidation of multiple lipid and lipoprotein targets, as determined by
          multiple criteria, was due to termination of lipid radical chain
          propagation reactions rather than .NO reaction with transition metals.
 Inflammation and .NO A number of model systems for inflammation, vascular disease
          (atherogenesis, restenosis following angioplasty) and surgical
          problems (ischemia-reperfusion injury, graft reanastomosis) that
          include a pathogenic role for oxidant injury indicate that either
          endogenous .NO biosynthesis or exogenous supplementation with sources
          of .NO inhibit oxidant-dependent damage at both molecular and tissue
          functional levels. Many if not all of these studies have inflammatory
          injury as a common denominator.Atherosclerosis is one example where this phenemenon occurs. The
          changes which occur during atherosclerosis includes loss of the
          control of vascular tone, an .NO-dependent event. Increasing the
          availability of the substrate L-arginine for .NO synthesis will
          restore vascular function, while inhibiting .NO synthesis is
          pro-atherogenic33-35.
 Another early event in the atherosclerotic process is the chemical
          transformation of LDL through the initiation of oxidation. Probably in
          an attempt at host protection, oxidized LDL is taken up by
          macrophages, resulting in lipid-laden foam cells. These cells then
          become part of the problem, because of the effect of their secretory
          products on other cells in the lesion and the release of pro-oxidative
          enzymes such as 15-lipoxygenase. The balance between .NO and O2.-
          production in the artery wall may also play a role in the oxidation of
          LDL (Figure 4). Peroxynitrite oxidizes LDL, causes a rapid depletion
          of several antioxidants (ascorbate, urate, protein thiols and
          ubiquinol) and releases copper ions from the plasma protein
          caeruloplasmin. Copper ions are powerful catalysts of LDL oxidation
          which have been detected in advanced human atherosclerotic lesions.
 It is interesting to note that both animal model and clinical studies
          are showing that chronic administration of L-arginine improves
          endothelial dependent relaxation, decreases inflammatory cell
          accumulation at the vessel wall and reduces intimal hyperplasia, all
          hallmarks of atherosclerotic disease36. Furthermore, balloon
          angio-plasty is often used to treat atherosclerotic vasoocclusive
          problems. Both administration of .NO donors as well as transfection of
          constitutive nitric oxide synthase to balloon-injured vessels reduces
          the intimal cell hyperplasia, often the cause for repeat angioplasty,
          aortocoronary bypass graft surgery or myocardial infarction37.
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 35. Davies MG, Dalen H, Kim J, et al. Control of accelerated vein
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 Fig. 1.- Nitric oxide inhibition of copper or SIN1-dependent low
          density lipoprotein oxidation. Human LDL was incubated for 3 hr at
          37oC with 10 µM cupric sulfate or the peroxynitrite donnor SIN-1 (1
          mM) in the absence and presence of 3 µM.min-1 .NO production from 100
          µM spermine NONOate. Lipid oxidation was assayed by thiobarbituric
          acid positive material formation at 532 nm.
 Fig. 2.- Pro- and antioxidant fates of nitric oxide on low density
          lipoprotein oxidation. Human LDL was incubated for 3 hr at 37oC with
          hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase (3 µM.min-1 O2.- production) in the
          absence and presence of .NO gas.Low .NO / O2.- ratios increase .NO -mediated LDL oxidation via
          formation of peroxynitrite.
 High .NO / O2.- ratios decrease .NO -mediated LDL oxidation by
          termination reaction of .NO with peroxyl radicals.
 Fig. 3.- Inhibition of xanthine oxidase-induced linolenic acid
          oxidation by .NO, a-tocopherol and ascorbate. Linolenic acid was
          incubated for 3 hr at 37oC (control), with 50 µM hypoxanthine/ 5
          mU-ml xanthine oxidase in the presence of ascorbate (50 µM),
          a-tocopherol (50 µM), S-NONOate (100 µM) or a combination of both
          a-tocopherol plus S-NONOate or a-tocopherol plus ascorbate.Nitric oxide and a-tocopherol exert similar cooperative lipid
          antioxidant activities than ascorbate plus a-tocopherol.
 Fig. 4.- The double-edged action of nitric oxide on
          superoxide-mediated lipid oxidation.  
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