[HTML][HTML] Nitric oxide synthases in mammals.

RG Knowles, S Moncada - Biochemical Journal, 1994 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
RG Knowles, S Moncada
Biochemical Journal, 1994ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Nitric oxide is an inorganic free radical gas, of formula* N= O (abbreviated as NO). The
discovery in 1987/88 that vascular endothelial cells are able to synthesize NO from L-
arginine as a transcellular signal [1-4] was initially received by most biologists with
considerable scepticism. By now, however, the existence of the L-arginine: NO pathway has
been thoroughly documented and its relevance in biology is slowly being unravelled. All of
this has led to the appearance ofa new and vigorous field of research, as evidenced by the …
Nitric oxide is an inorganic free radical gas, of formula* N= O (abbreviated as NO). The discovery in 1987/88 that vascular endothelial cells are able to synthesize NO from L-arginine as a transcellular signal [1-4] was initially received by most biologists with considerable scepticism. By now, however, the existence of the L-arginine: NO pathway has been thoroughly documented and its relevance in biology is slowly being unravelled. All of this has led to the appearance ofa new and vigorous field of research, as evidenced by the increasing number of publications relating to NO and NO synthases (Figure 1). This review will describe the known biochemical mechanisms involved in the synthesis of NO from L-arginine by the NO synthases and will also describe the nature of these enzymes, their inhibition and their molecular characteristics. For more extensive reviews about the biological roles of NO, see [5-7].
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