nitric oxide
nitric oxide
nitric oxide
ni′tric ox′ide
n.
Noun | 1. | nitric oxide - a poisonous red-brown gas (NO) |
单词 | nitric oxide | |||
释义 | nitric oxidenitric oxidenitric oxideni′tric ox′iden.
nitric oxidenitric oxideornitrogen monoxide,a colorless gas formed by the combustion of nitrogen and oxygen as given by the reaction: energy + N2 + O2 → 2NO; m.p. −163.6°C;; b.p. −151.8°C;. Nitric oxide readily combines with oxygen or air to form nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which can again be separated by ultraviolet light to produce nitric oxide and highly reactive oxygen atoms. These oxygen atoms combine with hydrocarbons producing noxious compounds that irritate the membranes of living organisms and destroy vegetation. Large amounts of nitric oxide are created by internal-combustion engines and manufacturing processes. Its quantity is greatly reduced by passing the oxide gas through a catalyst, thereby converting it back to its constituent nitrogen and oxygen gases.In the environment, nitric oxide is a precursor of smogsmog Nitric oxideAn important messenger molecule in mammals and other animals. It can be toxic or beneficial, depending on the amount and where in the body it is released. Initial research into the chemistry of nitric oxide (NO) was motivated by its production in car engines, which results in photochemical smog and acid rain. In the late 1980s, researchers in immunology, cardiovascular pharmacology, neurobiology, and toxicology discovered that nitric oxide is a crucial physiological messenger molecule. Nitric oxide is now thought to play a role in blood pressure regulation, control of blood clotting, immune defense, digestion, the senses of sight and smell, and possibly learning and memory. Nitric oxide may also participate in disease processes such as diabetes, stroke, hypertension, impotence, septic shock, and long-term depression. See Immunology, Neurobiology Most cellular messengers are large, unreactive biomolecules that make specific contacts with their targets. In contrast, nitric oxide is a small molecule that contains a free radical—that is, an unpaired electron—making it very reactive. Nitric oxide can freely diffuse through aqueous solutions or membranes, reacting rapidly with metal centers in cellular proteins and with reactive groups in other cellular molecules. Nitric oxide is produced in the body by an enzyme called nitric oxide synthase, which converts the amino acid l -arginine to nitric oxide and l -citrulline. There are three types of nitric oxide synthase: brain, endothelial, and inducible. Both brain and endothelial enzymes are constitutive, that is, they are always present in cells, while the production of inducible nitric oxide synthase can be turned on or off when a system needs nitric oxide. After nitric oxide is produced in specific areas of the body by nitric oxide synthase, it diffuses to nearby cells. Nitric oxide then reacts preferentially in the interior of these cells with the metal centers of proteins. Nitric oxide binds specifically to the iron (Fe) atom of the heme group in proteins; it can also interact with other metal sites in proteins as well as with the thiol group (SH) of the amino acid cysteine. The interaction of nitric oxide with these proteins causes a cascade of intracellular events that leads to specific physiological changes within cells. For example, nitric oxide causes the smooth muscle cells surrounding blood vessels to relax, decreasing blood pressure. Nitric oxide plays an important role in the central and peripheral nervous systems; the overproduction of nitric oxide in brain tissues has been implicated in stroke and other neurological problems. Nitric oxide also functions as an important agent in the immune system by killing invading bacterial cells. Nitric oxide released by macrophages can inhibit important cellular processes in the bacteria, including deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis and respiration, by binding to and destroying iron-sulfur centers in key enzymes in these pathways. Although nitric oxide production in the immune system serves a crucial biological function, there can be adverse effects when too much nitric oxide is produced. During a massive bacterial infection, excess nitric oxide can go into the vascular system, causing a dramatic decrease in blood pressure, which may lead to possibly fatal septic shock. Thus, scientists are working on drugs that can selectively inhibit the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase in order to avoid the harmful effects produced by excess nitric oxide without interfering with useful nitric oxide pathways. nitric oxide[′nī·trik ′äk‚sīd]nitric oxidenitric[ni´trik]ni·tric ox·ide (NO·),(nī'trik oks'īd),The short-lived NO molecule is a product of various tissues and plays a role in various processes. NO elaborated by endothelium, which is identical to endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), dilates vessels by relaxing vascular smooth muscle. Nitrites used in coronary and peripheral vascular disease induce or mimic this action. The 1998 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology was awarded to three U.S. pharmacologists, Robert F. Furchgott, Ferid Murad, and Louis J. Ignarro, for their independent discoveries of the role of NO in cardiovascular physiology. In the immune system, macrophages use NO as a cytotoxic agent. Deficiency or inactivation of NO may contribute to the pathogenesis of both hypertension and atherosclerosis. An excess of NO, which is a free radical, is toxic to brain cells, and NO is also responsible for the precipitate, often fatal drop in blood pressure accompanying septic shock. Free NO in the bloodstream is rapidly reduced by the iron of hemoglobin. nitric oxideA multifaceted bioregulatory agent and environmental pollutant capable of causing genotoxicity.Environment A gas byproduct of high-temperature combustion (e.g., internal combustion engines) which, on exposure to light, results in nitrous oxide (N2O) formation, an irritating air pollutant and major greenhouse gas. Physiology A neurotransmitter released when glutamate binds to the NMDA receptor, which is critical in regulating vascular tone. nitric oxideA multifaceted bioregulatory agent and environmental pollutant, capable of causing genotoxicity Environment A gas byproduct of high temperature combustion–eg, internal combustion engines which, on exposure to light, results in NO2 formation, an irritating air pollutant, and major greenhouse gas Physiology Endothelium-derived relaxing factor A neurotransmitter released when glutamate binds to the NMDA receptor, which is critical in regulating vascular tone. See Nitric oxide synthase.ni·tric ox·ide(nī'trik ok'sīd)nitric oxideNitrogen monoxide (NO), one of the eight oxides of nitrogen consisting of a single nitrogen atom and a single oxygen atom. In 1987 nitric oxide was found to be an important physiological mediator, a relaxant of smooth muscle in the walls of blood vessels that was derived from the inner lining (endothelium) of blood vessels. Later it was shown that nitric oxide was far more than simply an endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF). Three different enzymes synthesize nitric oxide, from endothelium, nerves and macrophages and the NO produced has actions all over the body. Nitric oxide is involved in controlling blood pressure; in the phagocytic action of MACROPHAGES; in inhibiting PLATELET aggregation and hence blood clotting; in limiting the development of ATHEROSCLEROSIS; in controlling the heart action; in relaxing the smooth muscle in the air tubes of the lungs and the walls of the intestine; in a range of brain functions; and in promoting penile erection (see SILDENAFIL).nitric oxide
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