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DOI: 10.1073/pnas.162095599
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

The reduction potential of nitric oxide (NO) and its importance to NO biochemistry

Michael D. Bartberger,Wei Liu,Eleonora Ford,Katrina M. Miranda,Christopher Switzer,Jon M. Fukuto,Patrick J. Farmer,David A. Wink,K. N. Houk

Nitroxyl
Chemistry
Cyclic voltammetry
2002
A potential of about −0.8 (±0.2) V (at 1 M versus normal hydrogen electrode) for the reduction of nitric oxide (NO) to its one-electron reduced species, nitroxyl anion ( 3 NO − ) has been determined by a combination of quantum mechanical calculations, cyclic voltammetry measurements, and chemical reduction experiments. This value is in accord with some, but not the most commonly accepted, previous electrochemical measurements involving NO. Reduction of NO to 1 NO − is highly unfavorable, with a predicted reduction potential of about −1.7 (±0.2) V at 1 M versus normal hydrogen electrode. These results represent a substantial revision of the derived and widely cited values of +0.39 V and −0.35 V for the NO/ 3 NO − and NO/ 1 NO − couples, respectively, and provide support for previous measurements obtained by electrochemical and photoelectrochemical means. With such highly negative reduction potentials, NO is inert to reduction compared with physiological events that reduce molecular oxygen to superoxide. From these reduction potentials, the pKa of 3 NO − has been reevaluated as 11.6 (±3.4). Thus, nitroxyl exists almost exclusively in its protonated form, HNO, under physiological conditions. The singlet state of nitroxyl anion, 1 NO − , is physiologically inaccessible. The significance of these potentials to physiological and pathophysiological processes involving NO and O 2 under reductive conditions is discussed.
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    The reduction potential of nitric oxide (NO) and its importance to NO biochemistry” is a paper by Michael D. Bartberger Wei Liu Eleonora Ford Katrina M. Miranda Christopher Switzer Jon M. Fukuto Patrick J. Farmer David A. Wink K. N. Houk published in 2002. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.