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Half a million Americans are diagnosed each year
with heart failure, a progressively debilitating condition
characterized by the heart's declining ability to pump blood
efficiently. The condition causes about 50,000 deaths annually and
accounts for 1 million hospitalizations more than for all forms of
cancer combined.
Since the 1980s, nitroglycerin and other
medications that release nitric oxide (NO) into the bloodstream have
been the usual approach to treating this condition. Though these drugs
benefit the ailing heart by improving its ability to relax, they also
have a negative flipside: they leave the heart with a diminished
capacity for pumping.
Hoping to improve on that formula, researchers at
The Johns Hopkins University have developed a new class of NO-based
compounds called nitroxyl (HNO) precursors that produce HNO. In early
studies, these compounds seem to play a role in protecting the
cardiovascular system from further damage during heart failure and in
restoring function to organs affected by the debilitating condition.
Scientists will announce their results in late August at the American
Chemical Society's annual summer meeting, held this year in
Philadelphia.
"Our results are preliminary, but very promising,"
said John P. Toscano, professor in the Chemistry Department in the
Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins. "Our goal is not
only to develop new classes of nitroxyl precursors, but also to figure
out the mechanisms by which they seem to affect heart function. This
has the potential to lead to alternative treatments for cardiac
failure in humans. But we are still in the very early testing stage."
Toscano's research partner, Nazareno Paolocci,
assistant professor in the Department of Cardiology at The Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, administered normal, conscious dogs and
those with heart failure with a compound called Angeli's salt, which
generates HNO. It turned out that this treatment doubled the dogs'
hearts' ability to pump and enhanced their ability to relax between
contractions -- a promising development.
"Our previous work in collaboration with Dr. David
A Kass (of Johns Hopkins) and Dr. David A Wink (of the National Cancer
Institute) has shown that nitroxyl donors appear to be very good
candidates to treat failing hearts that are characterized by pressure
overload, poor contractile function and delayed relaxation. Moreover,
these compounds can be successfully combined with other drugs used in
heart failure patients, namely, beta-blockers," Paolocci said.
Essentially all physiological studies probing the
effects of nitroxyl have used Angeli's salt as a donor of that
substance, prompting Toscano's team to set to work to develop new
sources. New nitroxyl donors not only would confirm that the
physiological effects seen with Angeli's salt are truly due to HNO,
but they also would help researchers determine if the rate of HNO
release had any effect on the resulting physiological response.
"One of the main reactions of nitroxyl is
dimerization that is, the reaction of one HNO molecule with another
which is dependent on the local concentration," Toscano said. "So,
compounds that release HNO at faster rates generate higher initial
concentrations of it and therefore may result in HNO being consumed by
the dimerization reaction, rather than being available to elicit the
desired physiologic response."
So far, Toscano's team has cultivated one class of
compounds based on the reaction of certain secondary amines with
nitric oxide to form compounds called diazeniumdiolates, which
traditionally are NO donors, but have been turned into HNO donors by
Toscano's team.
Paolocci and his team have tested two of these
derivatives one a pure HNO donor, which behaves similarly to
Angeli's salt and one a pure NO donor, which behaves analogously to
standard NO donors on dogs to assess their cardiovascular action.
"We're very optimistic with what we have seen so
far," Toscano said. "This looks promising. We know that NO is an
important biological molecule, and we are just beginning to learn that
HNO may, in potentially very different ways, be just as important." |