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 Plenary 
            Speaker
 Application of Nitric Oxide Research 
            to Drug Development and Disease Therapy
 Ferid Murad
 USA
 
 The role of nitric oxide in cellular signaling 
            in the past three decades has become one of the most rapidly growing 
            areas in biology. Nitric oxide is a gas and a free radical with an 
            unshared electron that can regulate an ever-growing list of biological 
            processes. Nitric oxide is formed from L-arginine by a family of enzymes 
            called nitric oxide synthases. These enzymes have a complex requirement 
            for a number of cofactors and regulators including NADPH, tetrahydrobioterin, 
            flavins, calmodulin and heme. The enzymes are present in most cells 
            and tissues. In many instances, nitric oxide mediates its biological 
            effects by activating the soluble isoform of guanylyl cyclase and 
            increasing cyclic GMP synthesis from GTP. Cyclic GMP, in turn, can 
            activate cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) and can cause smooth 
            muscles and blood vessels to relax, decrease platelet aggregation, 
            alter neuron function, etc. These effects can decrease blood pressure, 
            increase blood flow to tissues, alter memory and behavior, decrease 
            blood clotting, etc. The list of effects of nitric oxide that are 
            independent of cyclic GMP formation is also growing at a rapid rate. 
            For example, nitric oxide can interact with transition metals such 
            as iron, thiol groups, other free radicals, oxygen, superoxide anion, 
            unsaturated fatty acids, and other molecules. Some of these reactions 
            result in the oxidation of nitric oxide to nitrite and nitrate to 
            terminate the effect, while other reactions can lead to altered protein 
            structure function and/or catalytic capacity. These effects probably 
            regulate bacterial infections, inflammation of tissues, tumor growth, 
            and other disorders. These diverse effects of nitric oxide that are 
            cyclic GMP dependent or independent can alter and regulate numerous 
            important physiological events in cell regulation and function. Nitric 
            oxide can function as an intracellular messenger, an antacoid, a paracrine 
            substance, a neurotransmitter, or as a hormone that can be carried 
            to distant sites for effects. Thus, it is a unique molecule with an 
            array of signaling functions. However, with any messenger molecule, 
            there can be too little or too much of the substance, resulting in 
            pathological events. Some of the methods to regulate either nitric 
            oxide formation, metabolism, or function have been in clinical use 
            for more than a century, as with the use of organic nitrates and nitroglycerin 
            in angina pectoris that was initiated in the 1870s. Inhalation of 
            low concentrations of nitric oxide can be beneficial in premature 
            infants with pulmonary hypertension and increase survival rates. Ongoing 
            clinical trials with nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and nitric oxide 
            scavengers are examining the effects of these agents in septic shock, 
            hypotension with dialysis, inflammatory disorders, cancer therapy, 
            etc. Recognition of additional molecular targets in the areas of nitric 
            oxide and cyclic GMP research will continue to promote drug discovery 
            and development programs in this field. Current and future research 
            will undoubtedly expand the clinician’s therapeutic armamentarium 
            to manage a number of important diseases by perturbing nitric oxide 
            formation and metabolism. Such promise and expectations have obviously 
            fueled the interests in nitric oxide research for a growing list of 
            potential therapeutic applications. There have been and will continue 
            to be many opportunities from nitric oxide and cyclic GMP research 
            to develop novel and important therapeutic agents. There are presently 
            more than 80,000 publications in the area of nitric oxide research. 
            The lecture will discuss our discovery of the first biological effects 
            of nitric oxide and how the field has evolved since our original reports 
            in 1977. The possible utility of this signaling pathway to facilitate 
            novel drug development and the creation of numerous projects in the 
            Pharmaceutical and biotechnology industrials will also be discussed.
 
 References
 
 1). Ignarro L and Murad F. (eds) Nitric Oxide: Biochemistry, Molecular 
            Biology and Therapeutic implications. Advances in Pharmacology, 34:1-516, 
            Academic Press, 1995.
 
 2). Murad F. Signal transduction using nitric oxide and cyclic guanoside 
            monophosphate. Lasker Award. Journal of the American Medical Association, 
            276:1189-1192, 1996.
 
 3).Murad F. Discovery of some of the biological effects of nitric 
            oxide and its role in cellular signaling. Nobel Lecture, Bioscience 
            Reports 19:133-154, 1999 and Les Prix Nobel, 1998 (the Nobel Prizes, 
            1998), pp. 273-307, 1999.
 
 4).Murad F. Shattuck Lecture. The Discovery of nitric oxide and cyclic 
            GMP in cell signaling and their role in drug development. New England 
            J. Med 355, 2003-2011, 2006.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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