- Production of nitric oxide by human salivary peroxidase and by bovine lactoperoxidase.
Production of nitric oxide by human salivary peroxidase and by bovine lactoperoxidase.
Peroxidases catalyze the oxidation of nitrite to nitrate in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. Two pathways may occur: one entailing the intermediate formation of NO(2) and the other implying the generation of peroxynitrite. The products of nitrite (NO(2) (-) ) oxidation by salivary peroxidase (SPO) and commercial bovine lactoperoxidase (LPO) are studied by utilizing an electrochemical assay that allows the direct, continuous monitoring of NO and/or NO(2) and by HPLC to assess nitrates at the end of the reaction. Dialyzed saliva and LPO, in the presence of H(2) O(2) , convert nitrite into nitrate and form some NO, with a molar ratio of 10(3) . In our experimental conditions, no NO(2) was detectable among the products of nitrite oxidation. SCN(-) inhibits NO formation and so does I(-) , although at higher concentrations. No effects are observed with Cl(-) or Br(-) . We conclude that SPO and LPO transform NO(2) (-) into nitrate-forming small amounts of NO in the presence of H(2) O(2) as an intermediate or a by-product, synthesized through the peroxynitrite pathway.