The Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute has today decided to award
the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine jointly to
Robert F Furchgott, Louis
J Ignarro and Ferid Murad
for their discoveries concerning
"nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system"
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Summary
Nitric oxide (NO) is a gas that transmits signals
in the organism. Signal transmission by a gas that is produced by one cell, penetrates
through membranes and regulates the function of another cell represents an entirely new
principle for signalling in biological systems. The discoverers of NO as a signal molecule
are awarded this year�s Nobel Prize.
Robert F Furchgott, pharmacologist in New York,
studied the effect of drugs on blood vessels but often achieved contradictory results. The
same drug sometimes caused a contraction and at other occasions a dilatation. Furchgott
wondered if the variation could depend on whether the surface cells (the endothelium)
inside the blood vessels were intact or damaged. In 1980, he demonstrated in an ingenious
experiment that acetylcholine dilated blood vessels only if the endothelium was intact. He
concluded that blood vessels are dilated because the endothelial cells produce an unknown
signal molecule that makes vascular smooth muscle cells relax. He called this signal
molecule EDRF, the endothelium-derived relaxing factor, and his findings led to a quest to
identify the factor.
Ferid Murad, MD and pharmacologist now in Houston,
analyzed how nitroglycerin and related vasodilating compounds act and discovered in 1977
that they release nitric oxide, which relaxes smooth muscle cells. He was fascinated by
the concept that a gas could regulate important cellular functions and speculated that
endogenous factors such as hormones might also act through NO. However, there was no
experimental evidence to support this idea at the time.
Louis J Ignarro, pharmacologist in Los Angeles,
participated in the quest for EDRF�s chemical nature. He performed a brilliant series of
analyses and concluded in 1986, together with and independently of Robert Furchgott, that
EDRF was identical to NO. The problem was solved and Furchgott�s endothelial factor
identified.
When Furchgott and Ignarro presented their
conclusions at a conference in July, 1986, it elicited an avalanche of research activities
in many different laboratories around the world. This was the first discovery that a gas
can act as a signal molecule in the organism.
Background
Nitric oxide protects the heart, stimulates the
brain, kills bacteria etc.
It was a sensation that this simple, common air
pollutant, which is formed when nitrogen burns, for instance in automobile exhaust fumes,
could exert important functions in the organism. It was particularly surprising since NO
is totally different from any other known signal molecule and so unstable that it is
converted to nitrate and nitrite within 10 seconds. NO was known to be produced in
bacteria but this simple molecule was not expected to be important in higher animals such
as mammals.
Further research results rapidly confirmed that NO
is a signal molecule of key importance for the cardiovascular system and it was also found
to exert a series of other functions. We know today that NO acts as a signal molecule in
the nervous system, as a weapon against infections, as a regulator of blood pressure and
as a gate keeper of blood flow to different organs. NO is present in most living creatures
and made by many different types of cells.
- When NO is produced by the innermost cell layer of the arteries, the endothelium, it
rapidly spreads through the cell membranes to the underlying muscle cells. Their
contraction is turned off by NO, resulting in a dilatation of the arteries. In this way,
NO controls the blood pressure and its distribution. It also prevents the formation of
thrombi.
- When NO is formed in nerve cells, it spreads rapidly in all directions, activating all
cells in the vicinity. This can modulate many functions, from behaviour to
gastrointestinal motility.
- When NO is produced in white blood cells (such as macrophages), huge quantities are
achieved and become toxic to invading bacteria and parasites.
Importance in medicine today and tomorrow
Heart: In atherosclerosis, the endothelium has a
reduced capacity to produce NO. However, NO can be furnished by treatment with
nitroglycerin. Large efforts in drug discovery are currently aimed at generating more
powerful and selective cardiac drugs based on the new knowledge of NO as a signal
molecule.
Shock: Bacterial infections can lead to sepsis and
circulatory shock. In this situation, NO plays a harmful role. White blood cells react to
bacterial products by releasing enormous amounts of NO that dilate the blood vessels. The
blood pressure drops and the patient may become unconscious. In this situation, inhibitors
of NO synthesis may be useful in intensive care treatment.
Lungs: Intensive care patients can be treated by
inhalation of NO gas. This has provided good results and even saved lives. For instance,
NO gas has been used to reduce dangerously high blood pressure in the lungs of infants.
But the dosage is critical since the gas can be toxic at high concentrations.
Cancer: White blood cells use NO not only to kill
infectious agents such as bacteria, fungi and parasites, but also to defend the host
against tumours. Scientists are currently testing whether NO can be used to stop the
growth of tumours since this gas can induce programmed cell death, apoptosis.
Impotence: NO can initiate erection of the penis
by dilating the blood vessels to the erectile bodies. This knowledge has already led to
the development of new drugs against impotence.
Diagnostic analyses: Inflammatory diseases can be
revealed by analysing the production of NO from e.g. lungs and intestines. This is used
for diagnosing asthma, colitis, and other diseases.
NO is important for the olfactory sense and our
capacity to recognise different scents. It may even be important for our memory.
Nitroglycerin
Alfred Nobel invented dynamite, a product in which
the explosion-prone nitroglycerin is curbed by being absorbed in kieselguhr, a porous soil
rich in shells of diatoms.
When Nobel was taken ill with heart disease, his doctor prescribed nitroglycerin. Nobel
refused to take it, knowing that it caused headache and ruling out that it could eliminate
chest pain.
In a letter, Nobel wrote: It is ironical that I am now ordered by my physician to eat
nitroglycerin.
It has been known since last century that the explosive, nitroglycerin, has beneficial
effects against chest pain. However, it would take 100 years until it was clarified that
nitroglycerin acts by releasing NO gas.
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