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Dive into the research topics where Hobe J. Schroeder is active.

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Featured researches published by Hobe J. Schroeder.


Circulation | 2011

Inhaled Nitrite Reverses Hemolysis-Induced Pulmonary Vasoconstriction in Newborn Lambs Without Blood Participation

Arlin B. Blood; Hobe J. Schroeder; Michael H. Terry; Jeanette Merrill-Henry; Shannon L. Bragg; Kurt Vrancken; Taiming Liu; Jason L. Herring; Lawrence C. Sowers; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power

Background— Nitrite can be converted to nitric oxide (NO) by a number of different biochemical pathways. In newborn lambs, an aerosol of inhaled nitrite has been found to reduce pulmonary blood pressure, possibly acting via conversion to NO by reaction with intraerythrocytic deoxyhemoglobin. If so, the vasodilating effects of nitrite would be attenuated by free hemoglobin in plasma that would rapidly scavenge NO. Methods and Results— Pulmonary vascular pressures and resistances to flow were measured in anesthetized newborn lambs. Plasma hemoglobin concentrations were then elevated, resulting in marked pulmonary hypertension. This effect was attenuated if infused hemoglobin was first oxidized to methemoglobin, which does not scavenge NO. These results further implicate NO as a tonic pulmonary vasodilator. Next, while free hemoglobin continued to be infused, the lambs were given inhaled NO gas (20 ppm), inhaled sodium nitrite aerosol (0.87 mol/L), or an intravascular nitrite infusion (3 mg/h bolus, 5 mg · kg−1 · h−1 infusion). Inhaled NO and inhaled nitrite aerosol both resulted in pulmonary vasodilation. Intravascular infusion of nitrite, however, did not. Increases in exhaled NO gas were observed in lambs while breathing the nitrite aerosol (≈20 ppb NO) but not during intravascular infusion of nitrite. Conclusions— We conclude that the pulmonary vasodilating effect of inhaled nitrite results from its conversion to NO in airway and parenchymal lung tissue and is not dependent on reactions with deoxyhemoglobin in the pulmonary circulation. Inhaled nitrite aerosol remains a promising candidate to reduce pulmonary hypertension in clinical application.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2016

Local and systemic vasodilatory effects of low molecular weight S-nitrosothiols.

Taiming Liu; Hobe J. Schroeder; Sean M. Wilson; Michael H. Terry; Monica Romero; Lawrence D. Longo; Gordon G. Power; Arlin B. Blood

S-nitrosothiols (SNOs) such as S-nitroso-L-cysteine (L-cysNO) are endogenous compounds with potent vasodilatory activity. During circulation in the blood, the NO moiety can be exchanged among various thiol-containing compounds by S-transnitrosylation, resulting in SNOs with differing capacities to enter the cell (membrane permeability). To determine whether the vasodilating potency of SNOs is dependent upon membrane permeability, membrane-permeable L-cysNO and impermeable S-nitroso-D-cysteine (D-cysNO) and S-nitroso-glutathione (GSNO) were infused into one femoral artery of anesthetized adult sheep while measuring bilateral femoral and systemic vascular conductances. L-cysNO induced vasodilation in the infused hind limb, whereas D-cysNO and GSNO did not. L-cysNO also increased intracellular NO in isolated arterial smooth muscle cells, whereas GSNO did not. The infused SNOs remained predominantly in a low molecular weight form during first-passage through the hind limb vasculature, but were converted into high molecular weight SNOs upon systemic recirculation. At systemic concentrations of ~0.6 μmol/L, all three SNOs reduced mean arterial blood pressure by ~50%, with pronounced vasodilation in the mesenteric bed. Pharmacokinetics of L-cysNO and GSNO were measured in vitro and in vivo and correlated with their hemodynamic effects, membrane permeability, and S-transnitrosylation. These results suggest local vasodilation by SNOs in the hind limb requires membrane permeation, whereas systemic vasodilation does not. The systemic hemodynamic effects of SNOs occur after equilibration of the NO moiety amongst the plasma thiols via S-transnitrosylation.


Pediatric Research | 2010

Pulmonary Distribution of Lucinactant and Poractant Alfa and Their Peridosing Hemodynamic Effects in a Preterm Lamb Model of Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Michael H. Terry; Travis Merritt; Benjamin Harding; Hobe J. Schroeder; Jeanette Merrill-Henry; Jan Mazela; Timothy J. Gregory; Robert Segal; Gordon G. Power; Arlin B. Blood

Tracheal instillation of surfactant to premature newborns improves their survivability but may transiently obstruct airways resulting in undesirable acute effects on cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygenation. The acute peridosing hemodynamic effects of surfactant administration may be avoided by minimizing the volume of surfactant administered, but smaller surfactant volumes may also result in less even distribution of surfactant throughout the lung. These experiments were undertaken to compare responses to two surfactants with different dose volumes (porcine-derived poractant alfa, 2.5 mL/kg vs peptide-based synthetic lucinactant, 5.8 mL/kg) given to newly delivered lambs at 85% gestation. Both surfactants resulted in similar improvements in blood gas values, a doubling of dynamic compliance, increases in brain tissue oxygen tension, and stable blood pressure with no significant change in CBF. Distribution of surfactant throughout the lungs was more uniform with lucinactant than poractant alfa when assessed by labeled microspheres. We conclude that improvements in lung mechanics, gas exchange, and changes in CBF are comparable for a porcine-derived and peptide-containing synthetic surfactant, despite instilled volumes differing by 2-fold. Intrapulmonary distribution of surfactant is more uniform after a larger volume is instilled.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014

Role of blood and vascular smooth muscle in the vasoactivity of nitrite

Taiming Liu; Hobe J. Schroeder; Lisa Barcelo; Shannon L. Bragg; Michael H. Terry; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power; Arlin B. Blood

Recent evidence from humans and rats indicates that nitrite is a vasodilator under hypoxic conditions by reacting with metal-containing proteins to produce nitric oxide (NO). We tested the hypothesis that near-physiological concentrations of nitrite would produce vasodilation in a hypoxia- and concentration-dependent manner in the hind limb of sheep. Anesthetized sheep were instrumented to measure arterial blood pressure and femoral blood flows continuously in both hind limbs. Nitrite was infused into one femoral artery to raise the nitrite concentration in the femoral vein by 10 to 15-fold while the sheep breathed 50%, 14% or 12% oxygen in inspired air. In contrast to reports in humans and rats, the nitrite infusion had no measurable effect on mean femoral blood flows or vascular conductances, regardless of inspired O2 levels. In vitro experiments showed no significant difference in the release of NO from nitrite in sheep and human red blood cells. Further experiments demonstrated nitrite is converted to NO in rat artery homogenates faster than sheep arteries, and that this source of NO production is attenuated in the presence of a heme oxidizer. Finally, western blots indicate that concentrations of the heme-containing protein cytoglobin, but not myoglobin, are markedly lower in sheep arteries compared with rats. Overall, the results demonstrate that nitrite is not a physiological vasodilator in sheep. This is likely due to a lack of conversion of nitrite to NO within the vascular smooth muscle, perhaps due to deficient amounts of the heme-containing protein cytoglobin.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2013

Role of ceruloplasmin in nitric oxide metabolism in plasma of humans and sheep: a comparison of adults and fetuses

Kurt Vrancken; Hobe J. Schroeder; Lawrence D. Longo; Gordon G. Power; Arlin B. Blood

Nitric oxide (NO) is metabolized in plasma, in part by the ferroxidase ceruloplasmin (Cp), to form nitrite and nitrosothiols (SNOs), which are proposed to mediate protective responses to hypoxia and ischemia. We hypothesized that NO metabolism would be attenuated in fetal plasma due to low Cp activity. We measured Cp concentrations and activity in plasma samples collected from adults and fetuses of humans and sheep. We then added NO ([NO]: 1.5 or 100 μM) to plasma and aqueous buffer and measured rates of NO disappearance and the production of nitrite and SNO. Cp concentrations in fetal plasma were <15% of adult levels. In aqueous buffer, 1.5 μM NO disappeared with a half-life of 347 ± 64 s (means ± SE) but in plasma of humans the half-life was 19 ± 2 s (adult) and 11 ± 1 s (fetus, P = 0.004) and in sheep it was 31 ± 3 s (adult) and 43 ± 5 s (fetus, P = 0.04). Cp activity was not correlated with the overall elimination half-life of NO or with the amount of SNO ([NO]: 100 μM) or nitrite ([NO]: 1.5 or 100 μM) produced but correlated with SNO yields at 1.5 μM [NO] (r = 0.92, P = 0.04). Our data demonstrate that Cp is not essential to the increased rate of metabolism of NO in plasma relative to aqueous buffers and that it is not essential to the production of nitrite from NO. Cp may be involved in the conversion of NO to SNO in plasma under near-physiological concentrations of NO.


Nitric Oxide | 2018

Nitrite potentiates the vasodilatory signaling of S-nitrosothiols

Taiming Liu; Meijuan Zhang; Michael H. Terry; Hobe J. Schroeder; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power; Qian Li; Trent E Tipple; Dan Borchardt; Arlin B. Blood

Nitrite and S-nitrosothiols (SNOs) are both byproducts of nitric oxide (NO) metabolism and are proposed to cause vasodilation via activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). We have previously reported that while SNOs are potent vasodilators at physiological concentrations, nitrite itself only produces vasodilation at supraphysiological concentrations. Here, we tested the hypothesis that sub-vasoactive concentrations of nitrite potentiate the vasodilatory effects of SNOs. Multiple exposures of isolated sheep arteries to S-nitroso-glutathione (GSNO) resulted in a tachyphylactic decreased vasodilatory response to GSNO but not to NO, suggesting attenuation of signaling steps upstream from sGC. Exposure of arteries to 1 μM nitrite potentiated the vasodilatory effects of GSNO in naive arteries and abrogated the tachyphylactic response to GSNO in pre-exposed arteries, suggesting that nitrite facilitates GSNO-mediated activation of sGC. In intact anesthetized sheep and rats, inhibition of NO synthases to decrease plasma nitrite levels attenuated vasodilatory responses to exogenous infusions of GSNO, an effect that was reversed by exogenous infusion of nitrite at sub-vasodilating levels. This study suggests nitrite potentiates SNO-mediated vasodilation via a mechanism that lies upstream from activation of sGC.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2018

Hemodynamic Effects of Glutathione-Liganded Binuclear Dinitrosyl Iron Complex: Evidence for Nitroxyl Generation and Modulation by Plasma Albumin

Taiming Liu; Meijuan Zhang; Michael H. Terry; Hobe J. Schroeder; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power; Qian Li; Trent E Tipple; Dan Borchardt; Arlin B. Blood

Glutathione-liganded binuclear dinitrosyl iron complex (glut-BDNIC) has been proposed to be a donor of nitric oxide (NO). This study was undertaken to investigate the mechanisms of vasoactivity, systemic hemodynamic effects, and pharmacokinetics of glut-BDNIC. To test the hypothesis that glut-BDNICs vasodilate by releasing NO in its reduced [nitroxyl (HNO)] state, a bioassay method of isolated, preconstricted ovine mesenteric arterial rings was used in the presence of selective scavengers of HNO or NO free radical (NO•); the vasodilatory effects of glut-BDNIC were found to have characteristics similar to those of an HNO donor and markedly different than an NO• donor. In addition, products of the reaction of glut-BDNIC with CPTIO [2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5-tetramethyl imidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide] were found to have electron paramagnetic characteristics similar to those of an HNO donor compared with an NO• donor. In contrast to S-nitroso-glutathione, which was vasodilative both in vitro and in vivo, the potency of glut-BDNIC–mediated vasodilation was markedly diminished in both rats and sheep. Wire myography showed that plasma albumin contributed to this loss of hypotensive effects, an effect abolished by modification of the cysteine-thiol residue of albumin. High doses of glut-BDNIC caused long-lasting hypotension in rats that can be at least partially attributed to its long circulating half-life of ∼44 minutes. This study suggests that glut-BDNIC is an HNO donor, and that its vasoactive effects are modulated by binding to the cysteine residue of plasma proteins, such as albumin.


Circulation | 2011

Inhaled nitrite reverses hemolysis-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction in newborn lambs without blood participation: Blood- Conversion of inhaled nitrite to NO

Arlin B. Blood; Hobe J. Schroeder; Michael H. Terry; Jeanette Merrill-Henry; Shannon L. Bragg; Kurt Vrancken; Taiming Liu; Jason L. Herring; Lawrence C. Sowers; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power

Background— Nitrite can be converted to nitric oxide (NO) by a number of different biochemical pathways. In newborn lambs, an aerosol of inhaled nitrite has been found to reduce pulmonary blood pressure, possibly acting via conversion to NO by reaction with intraerythrocytic deoxyhemoglobin. If so, the vasodilating effects of nitrite would be attenuated by free hemoglobin in plasma that would rapidly scavenge NO. Methods and Results— Pulmonary vascular pressures and resistances to flow were measured in anesthetized newborn lambs. Plasma hemoglobin concentrations were then elevated, resulting in marked pulmonary hypertension. This effect was attenuated if infused hemoglobin was first oxidized to methemoglobin, which does not scavenge NO. These results further implicate NO as a tonic pulmonary vasodilator. Next, while free hemoglobin continued to be infused, the lambs were given inhaled NO gas (20 ppm), inhaled sodium nitrite aerosol (0.87 mol/L), or an intravascular nitrite infusion (3 mg/h bolus, 5 mg · kg−1 · h−1 infusion). Inhaled NO and inhaled nitrite aerosol both resulted in pulmonary vasodilation. Intravascular infusion of nitrite, however, did not. Increases in exhaled NO gas were observed in lambs while breathing the nitrite aerosol (≈20 ppb NO) but not during intravascular infusion of nitrite. Conclusions— We conclude that the pulmonary vasodilating effect of inhaled nitrite results from its conversion to NO in airway and parenchymal lung tissue and is not dependent on reactions with deoxyhemoglobin in the pulmonary circulation. Inhaled nitrite aerosol remains a promising candidate to reduce pulmonary hypertension in clinical application.


Circulation | 2011

Inhaled Nitrite Reverses Hemolysis-Induced Pulmonary Vasoconstriction in Newborn Lambs Without Blood ParticipationClinical Perspective

Arlin B. Blood; Hobe J. Schroeder; Michael H. Terry; Jeanette Merrill-Henry; Shannon L. Bragg; Kurt Vrancken; Taiming Liu; Jason L. Herring; Lawrence C. Sowers; Sean M. Wilson; Gordon G. Power

Background— Nitrite can be converted to nitric oxide (NO) by a number of different biochemical pathways. In newborn lambs, an aerosol of inhaled nitrite has been found to reduce pulmonary blood pressure, possibly acting via conversion to NO by reaction with intraerythrocytic deoxyhemoglobin. If so, the vasodilating effects of nitrite would be attenuated by free hemoglobin in plasma that would rapidly scavenge NO. Methods and Results— Pulmonary vascular pressures and resistances to flow were measured in anesthetized newborn lambs. Plasma hemoglobin concentrations were then elevated, resulting in marked pulmonary hypertension. This effect was attenuated if infused hemoglobin was first oxidized to methemoglobin, which does not scavenge NO. These results further implicate NO as a tonic pulmonary vasodilator. Next, while free hemoglobin continued to be infused, the lambs were given inhaled NO gas (20 ppm), inhaled sodium nitrite aerosol (0.87 mol/L), or an intravascular nitrite infusion (3 mg/h bolus, 5 mg · kg−1 · h−1 infusion). Inhaled NO and inhaled nitrite aerosol both resulted in pulmonary vasodilation. Intravascular infusion of nitrite, however, did not. Increases in exhaled NO gas were observed in lambs while breathing the nitrite aerosol (≈20 ppb NO) but not during intravascular infusion of nitrite. Conclusions— We conclude that the pulmonary vasodilating effect of inhaled nitrite results from its conversion to NO in airway and parenchymal lung tissue and is not dependent on reactions with deoxyhemoglobin in the pulmonary circulation. Inhaled nitrite aerosol remains a promising candidate to reduce pulmonary hypertension in clinical application.


Nitric Oxide | 2016

S-nitrosothiols dilate the mesenteric artery more potently than the femoral artery by a cGMP and L-type calcium channel-dependent mechanism

Taiming Liu; Hobe J. Schroeder; Meijuan Zhang; Sean M. Wilson; Michael H. Terry; Lawrence D. Longo; Gordon G. Power; Arlin B. Blood

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