F1000Research (Jan 2020)

Flavohaemoglobin: the pre-eminent nitric oxide–detoxifying machine of microorganisms [version 1; peer review: 6 approved]

  • Robert K. Poole

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.20563.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Flavohaemoglobins were first described in yeast as early as the 1970s but their functions were unclear. The surge in interest in nitric oxide biology and both serendipitous and hypothesis-driven discoveries in bacterial systems have transformed our understanding of this unusual two-domain globin into a comprehensive, yet undoubtedly incomplete, appreciation of its pre-eminent role in nitric oxide detoxification. Here, I focus on research on the flavohaemoglobins of microorganisms, especially of bacteria, and update several earlier and more comprehensive reviews, emphasising advances over the past 5 to 10 years and some controversies that have arisen. Inevitably, in light of space restrictions, details of nitric oxide metabolism and globins in higher organisms are brief.