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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Increased S-nitrosothiols and S-nitrosoalbumin in cerebrospinal fluid after severe traumatic brain injury in infants and children: indirect association with intracranial pressure.

Nitric oxide (NO) is implicated in both secondary damage and recovery after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Transfer of NO groups to cysteine sulfhydryls on proteins produces S-nitrosothiols (RSNO). S-nitrosothiols may be neuroprotective after TBI by nitrosylation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor and caspases. S-nitrosothiols release NO on decomposition for which endogenous reductants (i.e., ascorbate) are essential, and ascorbate is depleted in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) after pediatric TBI. This study examined the presence and decomposition of RSNO in CSF and the association between CSF RSNO level and physiologic parameters after severe TBI. Cerebrospinal fluid samples (n = 72) were obtained from 18 infants and children on days 1 to 3 after severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score < 8) and 18 controls. Cerebrospinal fluid RSNO levels assessed by fluorometric assay peaked on day 3 versus control (1.42 +/- 0.11 micromol/L vs. 0.86 +/- 0.04, P< 0.05). S-nitrosoalbumin levels were also higher after TBI (n = 8, 0.99 +/- 0.09 micromol/L on day 3 vs. n = 6, 0.42 +/- 0.02 in controls, P< 0.05). S-nitrosoalbumin decomposition was decreased after TBI. Multivariate analysis showed an inverse relation between CSF RSNO and intracranial pressure and a direct relation with barbiturate treatment. Using a novel assay, the presence of RSNO and S-nitrosoalbumin in human CSF, an approximately 1.7-fold increase after TBI, and an association with low intracranial pressure are reported, supporting a possible neuroprotective role for RSNO. The increase in RSNO may result from increased NO production and/or decreased RSNO decomposition.[1]

References

  1. Increased S-nitrosothiols and S-nitrosoalbumin in cerebrospinal fluid after severe traumatic brain injury in infants and children: indirect association with intracranial pressure. Bayir, H., Kochanek, P.M., Liu, S.X., Arroyo, A., Osipov, A., Jiang, J., Wisniewski, S., Adelson, P.D., Graham, S.H., Kagan, V.E. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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