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Breath Formate Is a Marker of Airway S-Nitrosothiol Depletion in Severe Asthma

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  • Roby Greenwald
  • Anne M Fitzpatrick
  • Benjamin Gaston
  • Nadzeya V Marozkina
  • Serpil Erzurum
  • W Gerald Teague

Abstract

Background: Children with severe asthma have poor symptom control and elevated markers of airway oxidative and nitrosative stress. Paradoxically, they have decreased airway levels of S-nitrosothiols (SNOs), a class of endogenous airway smooth muscle relaxants. This deficiency results from increased activity of an enzyme that both reduces SNOs to ammonia and oxidizes formaldehyde to formic acid, a volatile carboxylic acid that is more easily detected in exhaled breath condensate (EBC) than SNOs. We therefore hypothesize that depletion of airway SNOs is related to asthma pathology, and breath formate concentration may be a proxy measure of SNO catabolism. Methods and Findings: We collected EBC samples from children and adolescents, including 38 with severe asthma, 46 with mild-to-moderate asthma and 16 healthy adolescent controls, and the concentration of ionic constituents was quantified using ion chromatography. The concentrations of EBC components with volatile conjugates were log-normally distributed. Formate was the principal ion that displayed a significant difference between asthma status classifications. The mean EBC formate concentration was 40% higher in samples collected from all asthmatics than from healthy controls (mean = 5.7 µM, mean±standard deviation = 3.1−10.3 µM vs. 4.0, 2.8−5.8 µM, p = 0.05). EBC formate was higher in severe asthmatics than in mild-to-moderate asthmatics (6.8, 3.7−12.3 µM vs. 4.9, 2.8−8.7 µM, p = 0.012). In addition, formate concentration was negatively correlated with methacholine PC20 (r = −0.39, p = 0.002, asthmatics only), and positively correlated with the NO-derived ion nitrite (r = 0.46, p

Suggested Citation

  • Roby Greenwald & Anne M Fitzpatrick & Benjamin Gaston & Nadzeya V Marozkina & Serpil Erzurum & W Gerald Teague, 2010. "Breath Formate Is a Marker of Airway S-Nitrosothiol Depletion in Severe Asthma," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 5(7), pages 1-6, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0011919
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011919
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Limin Liu & Alfred Hausladen & Ming Zeng & Loretta Que & Joseph Heitman & Jonathan S. Stamler, 2001. "A metabolic enzyme for S-nitrosothiol conserved from bacteria to humans," Nature, Nature, vol. 410(6827), pages 490-494, March.
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