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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1998, p. 3195-3201, Vol. 64, No. 9
Centre for the Study of Metals in Biology and
Medicine, King's College London, London W8 7AH, United Kingdom
Received 10 November 1997/Accepted 10 June 1998
The potent bactericidal activity of sodium nitroprusside {SNP;
Na2[Fe(CN)5(NO)]} towards Clostridium
sporogenes has been investigated. SNP inhibited cell growth in
the concentration range of 10 to 40 µM. Concentrations above 80 µM
caused irreversible loss of cell viability and cell lysis. Inhibition
of cell growth was similar in complex and in defined media. SNP was
found to be unreactive towards individual components of the defined
medium, with the exception of cysteine. The chemical characteristics
responsible for the potency of SNP were investigated by synthesizing
analogs of SNP in which the Fe was replaced by different metals. The
inhibitory potency of the pentacyanonitrosyl complexes decreased in the
order Fe > Cr > V, which correlates with N-O stretching
frequency (vNO). In contrast, the Ru complex which had a
vNO comparable to that of Fe was a poor inhibitor. Electron
paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that SNP was rapidly reduced
to the paramagnetic Fe(I) compound
[Fe(CN)4(NO)]2
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of the Bactericidal Effects of Sodium
Nitroprusside and Other Pentacyanonitrosyl Complexes on the Food
Spoilage Bacterium Clostridium sporogenes

on contact with cells.
Analysis of fractions from SNP-treated cells showed 90% oxidation of
thiols in the cell walls compared with those in control cells. The
toxicity of SNP involves S-nitrosation and reduction, the lack of
toxicity of the Ru analog being consistent with the fact that it has
poor reactivity towards thiols. When C. sporogenes cells
were exposed to sublethal concentrations of SNP and viewed under the
electron microscope, they showed blisters on the surface. These results
point to the cell wall surface as a primary point of attack of the
nitrosyl complex.
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, UMDS, Guys' Hospital, St. Thomas St., London SE1 9RT, United Kingdom. Phone: 171 955 4525. Fax: 171 955 8881. E-mail: C.Joannou{at}umds.ac.uk.
Present address: Instituto do Fisica, Universidade Federal,
C. P. 68528, C.E.P. 21945, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
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