Over the last several years nitric oxide (NO) has emerged as an important mediator in several key physiological processes. In general, when synthesized for blood vessel homeostasis, neuronal communication, and immune system function the levels of NO are tightly controlled. In addition, sustained or elevated synthesis of NO can be deleterious and may be important in the etiology of endotoxic shock, inflammation-related tissue damage, neuronal pathology and N-nitrosamine-induced carcinogenesis. Furthermore, NO can cause mutations in human cells and bacteria via deamination reactions with DNA. The inducible NOS has been implicated as the source of the sustained NO formation. Receptor mediated NO formation by the constitutive enzyme in response to the excitatory amino acid glutamate has now been exciting but has opened the door to some important questions regarding the toxicity of this reactive molecule. The overall long-term goal for this project is a thorough characterization of the reactivity of NO under biological conditions. An understanding of this reactivity is integral to the disease states brought about by high and sustained levels of NO synthesis.
The specific aims of this project are as follows:
The aims of this reactions, (2) characterize the neutrophil NOS, (3) study peroxidase and myeloperoxidase catalyzed reactions with NO and nitrosation reactions, (4) study non- target cell defense systems against NO, (5) provide key reagents to other projects including: cDNA for the murine macrophage NO synthase (NOS) for the collaborative liver expression experiments, N-alkyl-L-arginine derivatives as inhibitors for the NOS, and polyclonal antibodies against the inducible NOS.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA026731-16
Application #
3729432
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Cambridge
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02139
Gu, Chen; Ramos, Jillian; Begley, Ulrike et al. (2018) Phosphorylation of human TRM9L integrates multiple stress-signaling pathways for tumor growth suppression. Sci Adv 4:eaas9184
Wadduwage, Dushan N; Kay, Jennifer; Singh, Vijay Raj et al. (2018) Automated fluorescence intensity and gradient analysis enables detection of rare fluorescent mutant cells deep within the tissue of RaDR mice. Sci Rep 8:12108
Tajai, Preechaya; Fedeles, Bogdan I; Suriyo, Tawit et al. (2018) An engineered cell line lacking OGG1 and MUTYH glycosylases implicates the accumulation of genomic 8-oxoguanine as the basis for paraquat mutagenicity. Free Radic Biol Med 116:64-72
Rothenberg, Daniel A; Taliaferro, J Matthew; Huber, Sabrina M et al. (2018) A Proteomics Approach to Profiling the Temporal Translational Response to Stress and Growth. iScience 9:367-381
Wang, Xin; Garcia, Carlos T; Gong, Guanyu et al. (2018) Automated Online Solid-Phase Derivatization for Sensitive Quantification of Endogenous S-Nitrosoglutathione and Rapid Capture of Other Low-Molecular-Mass S-Nitrosothiols. Anal Chem 90:1967-1975
Chan, Cheryl; Pham, Phuong; Dedon, Peter C et al. (2018) Lifestyle modifications: coordinating the tRNA epitranscriptome with codon bias to adapt translation during stress responses. Genome Biol 19:228
Fedeles, Bogdan I (2017) G-quadruplex-forming promoter sequences enable transcriptional activation in response to oxidative stress. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 114:2788-2790
Townsend, Todd A; Parrish, Marcus C; Engelward, Bevin P et al. (2017) The development and validation of EpiComet-Chip, a modified high-throughput comet assay for the assessment of DNA methylation status. Environ Mol Mutagen 58:508-521
Kimoto, Takafumi; Kay, Jennifer E; Li, Na et al. (2017) Recombinant cells in the lung increase with age via de novo recombination events and clonal expansion. Environ Mol Mutagen 58:135-145
Edrissi, Bahar; Taghizadeh, Koli; Moeller, Benjamin C et al. (2017) N6-Formyllysine as a Biomarker of Formaldehyde Exposure: Formation and Loss of N6-Formyllysine in Nasal Epithelium in Long-Term, Low-Dose Inhalation Studies in Rats. Chem Res Toxicol 30:1572-1576

Showing the most recent 10 out of 361 publications