The interaction of organic nitrates (nitroethyleneglycol, dinitroglycerol, and their esters with arachidonic acid) with oxyhemoglobin and methemoglobin has been studied. Addition of nitroethyleneglycol and dinitroglycerol to oxyhemoglobin is accompanied by a modest but significant increase in oxidation rate of the heme protein to the high-spin ferri-form--methemoglobin. Arachidonoylglycerol dinitrate exerts a similar but more pronounced effect on hemoglobin: a molar excess of this dinitrate induces the transformation of a significant portion of oxyhemoglobin to methemoglobin, whereas arachidonoylnitroethyleneglycol is inactive. Arachidonoylglycerol dinitrate also induces changes in the spectral characteristics of methemoglobin; this may be due to disintegration of the methemoglobin with the loss of heme. The data demonstrate that some organic nitrates can interact with hemoglobin; this should be taken into account when using the oxyhemoglobin technique for measuring nitric oxide generation from these compounds.