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© Newswise. |
New Method for Detecting Nitroxyl Will Boost Cardiac Drug Research
Newswise — Wake Forest University scientists have developed a new research tool in the pursuit of heart medications based on the compound nitroxyl by identifying unique chemical markers for its presence in biological systems. Researchers can generate nitroxyl from precursor chemicals under controlled conditions, but studying the molecule’s activity in cells is difficult because its constituent elements—nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen—react so readily with other molecules. King’s research team used compounds that are not present in normal cell biology to produce a reaction that yields the identifying chemical markers. The research is described in an article, “Reductive Phosphine-Mediated Ligation of Nitroxyl (HNO),” published online in the American Chemical Society’s journal Organic Letters. King co-authored the paper with Wake Forest graduate chemistry students Julie Reisz and Erika Klorig, and chemistry department staff member Marcus Wright, an instrumentation manager. King’s research team has received support from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the American Heart Association and the North Carolina Biotechnology Center.
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