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Dive into the research topics where Douglas D. Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas D. Thomas.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A biochemical rationale for the discrete behavior of nitroxyl and nitric oxide in the cardiovascular system.

Katrina M. Miranda; Nazareno Paolocci; Tatsuo Katori; Douglas D. Thomas; Eleonora Ford; Michael D. Bartberger; Michael Graham Espey; David A. Kass; Martin Feelisch; Jon M. Fukuto; David A. Wink

The redox siblings nitroxyl (HNO) and nitric oxide (NO) have often been assumed to undergo casual redox reactions in biological systems. However, several recent studies have demonstrated distinct pharmacological effects for donors of these two species. Here, infusion of the HNO donor Angelis salt into normal dogs resulted in elevated plasma levels of calcitonin gene-related peptide, whereas neither the NO donor diethylamine/NONOate nor the nitrovasodilator nitroglycerin had an appreciable effect on basal levels. Conversely, plasma cGMP was increased by infusion of diethylamine/NONOate or nitroglycerin but was unaffected by Angelis salt. These results suggest the existence of two mutually exclusive response pathways that involve stimulated release of discrete signaling agents from HNO and NO. In light of both the observed dichotomy of HNO and NO and the recent determination that, in contrast to the O2/documentclass[10pt]{article} usepackage{amsmath} usepackage{wasysym} usepackage{amsfonts} usepackage{amssymb} usepackage{amsbsy} usepackage{mathrsfs} pagestyle{empty} setlength{oddsidemargin}{-69pt} begin{document} begin{equation*}{mathrm{O}}_{2}^{-}end{equation*}end{document} couple, HNO is a weak reductant, the relative reactivity of HNO with common biomolecules was determined. This analysis suggests that under biological conditions, the lifetime of HNO with respect to oxidation to NO, dimerization, or reaction with O2 is much longer than previously assumed. Rather, HNO is predicted to principally undergo addition reactions with thiols and ferric proteins. Calcitonin gene-related peptide release is suggested to occur via altered calcium channel function through binding of HNO to a ferric or thiol site. The orthogonality of HNO and NO may be due to differential reactivity toward metals and thiols and in the cardiovascular system, may ultimately be driven by respective alteration of cAMP and cGMP levels.


Biological Chemistry | 2004

The chemistry of nitrosative stress induced by nitric oxide and reactive nitrogen oxide species. Putting perspective on stressful biological situations.

Lisa A. Ridnour; Douglas D. Thomas; Daniele Mancardi; Michael Graham Espey; Katrina M. Miranda; Nazareno Paolocci; Martin Feelisch; Jon M. Fukuto; David A. Wink

Abstract This review addresses many of the chemical aspects of nitrosative stress mediated by N(2)O(3). From a cellular perspective, N(2)O(3) and the resulting reactive nitrogen oxide species target specific motifs such as thiols, lysine active sites, and zinc fingers and is dependant upon both the rates of production as well as consumption of NO and must be taken into account in order to access the nitrosative environment. Since production and consumption are integral parts of N(2)O(3) generation, we predict that nitrosative stress occurs under specific conditions, such as chronic inflammation. In contrast to conditions of stress, nitrosative chemistry may also provide cellular protection through the regulation of critical signaling pathways. Therefore, a careful evaluation of the chemistry of nitrosation based upon specific experimental conditions may provide a better understanding of how the subtle balance between oxidative and nitrosative stress may be involved in the etiology and control of various disease processes.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2002

A chemical perspective on the interplay between NO, reactive oxygen species, and reactive nitrogen oxide species.

Michael Graham Espey; Katrina M. Miranda; Douglas D. Thomas; Sandhya Xavier; Deborah Citrin; Michael P. Vitek; David A. Wink

Abstract: Nitric oxide (nitrogen monoxide, NO) plays a veritable cornucopia of regulatory roles in normal physiology. In contrast, NO has also been implicated in the etiology and sequela of numerous neurodegenerative diseases that involve reactive oxygen species (ROS) and nitrogen oxide species (RNOS). In this setting, NO is often viewed solely as pathogenic; however, the chemistry of NO can also be a significant factor in lessening injury mediated by both ROS and RNOS. The relationship between NO and oxidation, nitrosation, and nitration reactions is summarized. The salient factors that determine whether NO promotes, abates, or interconnects these chemistries are emphasized. From this perspective of NO chemistry, the type, magnitude, location, and duration of either ROS or RNOS reactions may be predicted.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2003

Comparison of the reactivity of nitric oxide and nitroxyl with heme proteins: A chemical discussion of the differential biological effects of these redox related products of nos

Katrina M. Miranda; Raymond W. Nims; Douglas D. Thomas; Michael Graham Espey; Deborah Citrin; Michael D. Bartberger; Nazareno Paolocci; Jon M. Fukuto; Martin Feelisch; David A. Wink

Investigations on the biological effects of nitric oxide (NO) derived from nitric oxide synthase (NOS) have led to an explosion in biomedical research over the last decade. The chemistry of this diatomic radical is key to its biological effects. Recently, nitroxyl (HNO/NO(-)) has been proposed to be another important constituent of NO biology. However, these redox siblings often exhibit orthogonal behavior in physiological and cellular responses. We therefore explored the chemistry of NO and HNO with heme proteins in different redox states and observed that HNO favors reaction with ferric heme while NO favors ferrous, consistent with previous reports. Further results show that HNO and NO were equally effective in inhibiting cytochrome P450 activity, which involves ferric and ferrous complexes. The differential chemical behavior of NO and HNO toward heme proteins provides insight into mechanisms of activity that not only helps explain some of the opposing effects observed in NOS-mediated events, but offers a unique control mechanism for the biological action of NO.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2002

Ingress and reactive chemistry of nitroxyl-derived species within human cells.

Michael Graham Espey; Katrina M. Miranda; Douglas D. Thomas; David A. Wink

The mechanisms that control the biological signaling and toxicological properties of the nitrogen oxide species nitroxyl (HNO) are largely unknown. The ingress and intracellular reactivity of nitroxyl-derived species were examined using Angelis salt (AS), which decomposes initially to HNO and nitrite at physiologic pH. Exposure of 4,5-diaminofluorescein (DAF) to AS resulted in fluorescent product formation only in the presence of molecular oxygen. Kinetic analysis and the lack of signal from a nitric oxide (NO)-sensitive electrode suggested that these processes did not involve conversion of HNO to NO. On an equimolar basis, bolus peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) exposure generated only 15% of fluorescent product formation observed from AS decomposition. Moreover, infusion of synthetic ONOO(-) at a rate comparable to AS decomposition resulted in only 4% of the signal. Quenching of AS-mediated product formation within intact human MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells containing DAF by addition of urate to buffer suggested involvement of an oxidized intermediate formed from reaction between HNO and oxygen. Conversely, intact cells competitively sequestered the HNO-derived species from reaction with DAF in solution. These data show this intermediate to be a long-lived diffusible species. Relative product yield from intracellular DAF was decreased 5- to 8-fold when cells were lysed immediately prior to AS addition, consistent with the partitioning of HNO and/or derived species into the cellular membrane, thereby shielding these reactive intermediates from either hydrolysis or cytoplasmic scavenger pools. These findings establish that oxygen-derived species of nitroxyl can readily penetrate and engage the intracellular milieu of cells and suggest this process to be independent of NO and ONOO(-) intermediacy. The substantial facilitation of oxygen-dependent nitroxyl chemistry by intact lipid bilayers supports a focusing role for the membrane in modulation of cellular constituents proteins by this unique species.


Current Molecular Medicine | 2004

The Chemical Dynamics of NO and Reactive Nitrogen Oxides: A Practical Guide

Daniele Mancardi; Lisa A. Ridnour; Douglas D. Thomas; Tatsuo Katori; Carlo G. Tocchetti; Michael Graham Espey; Katrina M. Miranda; Nazareno Paolocci; David A. Wink

Nitric oxide has emerged as one of the most important and diverse players in physiology. This small diatomic radical stunned researchers because of its existence and unique biological properties in human physiology. Over the last two decades it was found that NO often has fickle behavior in pathophysiological mechanisms. Where benefiting the host in one case yet inducing and augmenting injury in another. This has lead to confusion in is NO good or bad? Much of the answers to this dichotomy lies in the chemistry of NO and its related nitrogen oxide species. To help understand the complex chemistry with perspective to biology, a discussion on the chemical biology of NO is useful. The chemical biology defines the relevant chemical reaction of NO and nitrogen monoxide in the context of the biological conditions. We discuss in this article the chemistry of nitrogen oxide with different types of biological motifs. Reaction of NO with metal complexes and radicals require low concentration, where formation of reactive nitrogen oxide species require considerably higher amounts and generally are isolated to specific microenvironments in vivo. Though many reactive nitrogen oxide species are formed from chemical reactions with NO, there are several which appear to not require NO to be present, HNO and NO(2). These two species have unique physiological effects and represent additional complexity to this biological picture. From this discussion, a picture can be formed concerning the possible chemical dynamics, which can be plausible in different biological mechanisms.


Archive | 2010

Determinants of Nitric Oxide Chemistry

Douglas D. Thomas; Wilmarie Flores-Santana; Christopher H. Switzer; David A. Wink; Lisa A. Ridnour

Publisher Summary Nitric oxide (NO) has emerged as one of the most diverse and important ubiquitous biological mediators. It plays a functional role in processes ranging from neurological function and vascular tonicity to pathogen eradication. It is a signaling mediator with diverse as well as opposing biological activities. The complexity of the NO response reflects the variety of its chemical reactions and biological properties. Steady-state NO concentration is a key determinant of its biological outcome as precise cellular responses are differentially regulated by specific NO concentrations. In general, lower NO concentrations promote cell survival and proliferation, while higher levels favor cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and/or senescence. Free radical interactions also influence NO signaling by reducing NO bioavailability. Reactive nitrogen species generated during these processes also have biological effects by increasing oxidative and nitrosative stress responses. Moreover, a number of factors influence NO formation and concentration, including diffusion, consumption, and substrate availability, which are referred to as kinetic determinants for molecular target interactions. Kinetic determinants are the chemical and biochemical parameters that shape cellular responses to NO. This chapter discusses these chemical interactions and their influence on NO signaling and cellular response. It also discusses the involvement of kinetic determinants as they relate to the direct and indirect effects of NO responses during normal physiology and disease processes. Rates of NO formation, diffusion and consumption, radical/target interactions, and O 2 concentration all contribute to cellular and tissue-specific responses to NO. NO concentration drives its chemistry (direct vs indirect effects), diffusion distance, and the specific targets that it interacts with.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Distinction between Nitrosating Mechanisms within Human Cells and Aqueous Solution

Michael Graham Espey; Katrina M. Miranda; Douglas D. Thomas; David A. Wink


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

Mechanism of Aerobic Decomposition of Angeli's Salt (Sodium Trioxodinitrate) at Physiological pH

Katrina M. Miranda; Andrew S. Dutton; Lisa A. Ridnour; Christian A. Foreman; Eleonora Ford; Nazareno Paolocci; Tatsuo Katori; Carlo G. Tocchetti; Daniele Mancardi; Douglas D. Thomas; Michael Graham Espey; K. N. Houk; Jon M. Fukuto; David A. Wink


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2003

Orthogonal properties of the redox siblings nitroxyl and nitric oxide in the cardiovascular system: a novel redox paradigm

David A. Wink; Katrina M. Miranda; Tatsuo Katori; Daniele Mancardi; Douglas D. Thomas; Lisa A. Ridnour; Michael Graham Espey; Martin Feelisch; Carol A. Colton; Jon M. Fukuto; Pasquale Pagliaro; David A. Kass; Nazareno Paolocci

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Michael Graham Espey

National Institutes of Health

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David A. Wink

National Institutes of Health

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Lisa A. Ridnour

National Institutes of Health

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Daniele Mancardi

National Institutes of Health

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Tatsuo Katori

Johns Hopkins University

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Carlo G. Tocchetti

University of Naples Federico II

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Martin Feelisch

University of Southampton

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