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Article

A new sensitive assay reveals that hemoglobin is oxidatively modified in vivo

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Citation

Vollaard N, Reeder BJ, Shearman JP, Menu P, Wilson MT & Cooper CE (2005) A new sensitive assay reveals that hemoglobin is oxidatively modified in vivo. Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 39 (9), pp. 1216-1228. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2005.06.012

Abstract
Free radical formation in heme proteins is recognised as a factor in mediating the toxicity of peroxides in oxidative stress. As well as initiating free radical damage, heme proteins damage themselves. Under extreme conditions, where oxidative stress and low pH coincide (e.g., myoglobin in the kidney following rhabdomyolysis and hemoglobin in the CSF subsequent to subarachnoid hemorrhage), peroxide can induce covalent heme to protein cross-linking. In this paper we show that, even at neutral pH, the heme in hemoglobin is covalently modified by oxidation. The product, which we term OxHm, is a "green heme" iron chlorin with a distinct optical spectrum. OxHm formation can be quantitatively prevented by reductants of ferryl iron, e.g., ascorbate. We have developed a simple, robust, and reproducible HPLC assay to study the extent of OxHm formation in the red cell in vivo. We show that hemoglobin is oxidatively damaged even in normal blood; approximately 1 in 2000 heme groups exist as OxHm in the steady state. We used a simple model (physical exercise) to demonstrate that OxHm increases significantly during acute oxidative stress. The exercise-induced increase is short-lived, suggesting the existence of an active mechanism for repairing or removing the damaged heme proteins.

Keywords
Free radical; Hemoglobin; Myoglobin; Peroxide; Exercise; Oxidative stress; Blood substitute; Oxidative modification; Assay; Chlorin

Journal
Free Radical Biology and Medicine: Volume 39, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date01/11/2005
Publication date online10/08/2005
Date accepted by journal21/06/2005
URL
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0891-5849

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Dr Niels Vollaard

Dr Niels Vollaard

Lecturer in Health and Exercise Science, Sport

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