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1.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1-3):159-166
Addition of histidyl-peptides containing the glycyl-glycyl-L-histidyl sequence stimulated the catalysis of Ni(II) hydrogen peroxide reduction. Maximum bleaching of murexide or nitrosodimethylaniline was obtained with glycyl-glycyl-L-histidine. A decrease in the bleaching rates was observed upon addition of SOD or hydroxyl radical scavengers, showing that the hydrogen peroxide/Ni(II)/glycyl-glycyl-L-histidine system generated superoxide anions as well as hydroxyl radicals. In contrast, addition of glycyl-glycyl-L-histidine inhibited the Cu(II) hydrogen peroxide reduction.

When peptides or proteins were exposed to oxygen radicals produced by Ni(II)/glycyl-glycyl-L-histidine catalysis of hydrogen peroxide reduction, the observed effects were similar to those produced by oxygen radicals generated by water radiolysis or by Fe(II) or Cu(II) mediated Fenton-reactions: hydroxylation of phenylalanine, interchange of disulfides, destruction of tryptophans and dityrosine formation.  相似文献   

2.
ESR studies using spin traps, 5,5-dimethylpyrroline-N-oxide and alpha-(4-pyridyl 1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone, revealed that hydroxyl radical adducts are produced by the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide in the presence of nickel(II) oligopeptides. Order of catalytic activities of nickel(II) oligopeptides used in the production of hydroxyl radical adducts was tetraglycine greater than pentaglycine greater than triglycine greater than GlyGly, GlyHis. Ni(II) GlyGlyHis plus hydrogen peroxide produced superoxide in addition to hydroxyl radical adduct. Trapping experiments with 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidone suggested that singlet oxygen was generated by the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with Ni(II) GlyGlyHis, but not in the case of tetraglycine, pentaglycine, triglycine, GlyGly or GlyHis.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) during redox cycling of newly synthesized potential antitumor 2,5-bis (1-aziridinyl)-1,4-benzoquinone (BABQ) derivatives has been studied by assaying the production of ROI (superoxide, hydroxyl radical, and hydrogen peroxide) by xanthine oxidase in the presence of BABQ derivatives. At low concentrations (< 10 microM) some BABQ derivatives turned out to inhibit the production of superoxide and hydroxyl radicals by xanthine oxidase, while the effect on the xanthine-oxidase-induced production of hydrogen peroxide was much less pronounced. Induction of DNA strand breaks by reactive oxygen species generated by xanthine oxidase was also inhibited by BABQ derivatives. The DNA damage was comparable to the amount of hydroxyl radicals produced. The inhibiting effect on hydroxyl radical production can be explained as a consequence of the lowered level of superoxide, which disrupts the Haber-Weiss reaction sequence. The inhibitory effect of BABQ derivatives on superoxide formation correlated with their one-electron reduction potentials: BABQ derivatives with a high reduction potential scavenge superoxide anion radicals produced by xanthine oxidase, leading to reduced BABQ species and production of hydrogen peroxide from reoxidation of reduced BABQ. This study, using a unique series of BABQ derivatives with an extended range of reduction potentials, demonstrates that the formation of superoxide and hydroxyl radicals by bioreductively activated antitumor quinones can in principle be uncoupled from alkylating activity.  相似文献   

4.
The ability of the histidine-rich peptides, histatin-5 (Hst-5) and histatin-8 (Hst-8), to support the generation of reactive oxygen species during the Cu-catalyzed oxidation of ascorbate and cysteine has been evaluated. High levels of hydrogen peroxide (70–580 mol/mol Cu/h) are produced by aqueous solutions containing Cu(II), Hst-8 or Hst-5, and a reductant, either ascorbate or cysteine, as determined by the postreaction Amplex Red assay. When the reactions are conducted in the presence of superoxide dismutase, the total hydrogen peroxide produced is decreased, more so in the presence of the peptides (up to 50%), suggesting the intermediacy of superoxide in these reactions. On the other hand, the presence of sodium azide or sodium formate, traps for hydroxyl radicals, has no appreciable effect on the total hydrogen peroxide production for the Cu–Hst systems. EPR spin-trapping studies using 5-(2,2-dimethyl-1,3-propoxy cyclophosphoryl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (CYPMPO) in the cysteine–Cu(II) reactions reveal the formation of the CYPMPO–hydroperoxyl and CYPMPO–hydroxyl radical adducts in the presence of Hst-8, whereas only the latter was observed with Cu alone.  相似文献   

5.
Adriamycin forms a chelate with Fe(III) that exhibits complex redox chemistry. The drug ligand is able to directly reduce the bound Fe(III) with the concomitant production of a one-electron oxidized drug radical. This Fe(II) can reduce oxygen to hydrogen peroxide and cleave the peroxide to yield the hydroxyl radical. In addition, the drug X Fe complex can catalyze the transfer of electrons from reduced glutathione to molecular oxygen to yield superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals. The adriamycin X Fe complex binds to DNA to form a ternary drug X Fe X DNA complex, which is also able to catalyze the thiol-dependent reduction of oxygen and the formation of hydroxyl radical from hydrogen peroxide. As a consequence of this chemistry, the adriamycin X Fe complex can cleave DNA on the addition of glutathione or hydrogen peroxide. Although less well defined, the adriamycin X Fe complex can bind to cell membranes and cause oxidative destruction of these membranes in the presence of thiols or hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

6.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as superoxide anion, hydroxyl ((*)OH), peroxyl, and alkoxyl radicals may attack biological macromolecules giving rise to oxidative stress-originated diseases. Since (*)OH is very short-lived, secondary products resulting from (*)OH attack to various probes are measured. Although the measurement of aromatic hydroxylation with HPLC/electrochemical detection is more specific than the low-yield TBARS test, it requires sophisticated instrumentation. As a more convenient and less costly alternative, we used p-aminobenzoate, 2,4- and 3,5-dimethoxybenzoate probes for detecting hydroxyl radicals generated from an equivalent mixture of Fe(II)+EDTA with hydrogen peroxide. The produced hydroxyl radicals attacked both the probe and the water-soluble antioxidants in 37 degrees C-incubated solutions for 2h. The CUPRAC (i.e., our original method for total antioxidant capacity assay) absorbance of the ethylacetate extract due to the reduction of Cu(II)-neocuproine reagent by the hydroxylated probe decreased in the presence of (*)OH scavengers, the difference being proportional to the scavenging ability of the tested compound. A rate constant for the reaction of the scavenger with hydroxyl radical can be deduced from the inhibition of color formation. The second-order rate constants of the scavengers were determined with competition kinetics by means of a linear plot of A(0)/A as a function of C(scavenger)/C(probe), where A(0) and A are the CUPRAC absorbances of the system in the absence and presence of scavenger, respectively, and C is the molar concentration of relevant species. The 2,4- and 3,5-dimethoxybenzoates were the best probes in terms of linearity and sensitivity. Iodide, metabisulfite, hexacyanoferrate(II), thiourea, formate, and dimethyl sulfoxide were shown by the modified CUPRAC assay to be more effective scavengers than mannitol, glucose, lysine, and simple alcohols, as in the TBARS assay. The developed method is less lengthy, more specific, and of a higher yield than the classical TBARS assay. The hydroxyl radical scavenging rate constants of ascorbic acid, formate, and hexacyanoferrate(II) that caused interference in other assays could be easily found with the proposed procedure.  相似文献   

7.
A spin-trapping EPR technique has been employed to explore the generation of hydroxyl radicals from reactions between a series of first row transition metal ions and aqueous hydrogen peroxide at pH 10, and with a range of chelating agents (EDTA, DTPMP and the readily biodegradable ligands S,S-EDDS and IDS). In the absence of these chelating agents only Cu(II) generates a significant level of hydroxyl radicals; in their presence with Cu(II) EDTA and IDS give similar behaviour whereas EDDS and DTPMP inhibit hydroxyl radical generation. For Fe(II), EDTA, DTPMP and IDS significantly enhance OH production under these conditions whereas EDDS does not. Results from model cellulose damage experiments broadly confirm the findings for copper, though experiments with Fe(II) lead to somewhat contrasting results. Our findings are discussed in terms of binding constants and implications for alkaline peroxygen bleaching systems.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidase reaction of lipoamide dehydrogenase with NADH generates superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxide under aerobic conditions. ESR spin trapping using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) was applied to characterize the oxygen radical species generated by lipoamide dehydrogenase and the mechanism of their generation. During the oxidase reaction of lipoamide dehydrogenase, DMPO-OOH and DMPO-OH signals were observed. The DMPO-OOH signal disappeared on addition of superoxide dismutase. These results demonstrate that the DMPO-OOH adduct was produced from the superoxide radical generated by lipoamide dehydrogenase. In the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide, a DMPO-CH3 signal appeared at the expense of the DMPO-OH signal, indicating that the DMPO-OH adduct was produced directly from the hydroxyl radical rather than by decomposition of the DMPO-OOH adduct. The DMPO-OH signal decreased on addition of superoxide dismutase, catalase, or diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, indicating that the hydroxyl radical was generated via the metal-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction from the superoxide radical and hydrogen peroxide. Addition of ferritin to the NADH-lipoamide dehydrogenase system resulted in a decrease of the DMPO-OOH signal, indicating that the superoxide radical interacted with ferritin iron.  相似文献   

9.
There is clear evidence implicating oxidative stress in the pathology of many neurodegenerative diseases. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are the primary mediators of oxidative stress, and hydrogen peroxide, a key ROS, is generated during aggregation of the amyloid proteins associated with some of these diseases. Hydrogen peroxide is catalytically converted to the aggressive hydroxyl radical in the presence of Fe(II) and Cu(I), which renders amyloidogenic proteins such as beta-amyloid and alpha-synuclein (implicated in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD), respectively) vulnerable to self-inflicted hydroxyl radical attack. Here, we report some of the peptide-derived radicals, detected by electron spin resonance spectroscopy employing sodium 3,5-dibromo-4-nitrosobenzenesulfonate as a spin-trap, following hydroxyl radical attack on Abeta(1-40), alpha-synuclein and some other related peptides. Significantly, we found that sufficient hydrogen peroxide was self-generated during the early stages of aggregation of Abeta(1-40) to produce detectable peptidyl radicals, on addition of Fe(II). Our results support the hypothesis that oxidative damage to Abeta (and surrounding molecules) in the brain in AD could be due, at least in part, to the self-generation of ROS. A similar mechanism could operate in PD and some other "protein conformational" disorders.  相似文献   

10.
The NADPH-supported enzymatic reduction of molecular oxygen by ferredoxin-ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase was investigated. The ESR spin trapping technique was employed to identify the free radical metabolites of oxygen. The spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) was used to trap and identify the oxygen-derived free radicals. [17O]Oxygen was employed to demonstrate that the oxygen-centered radicals arose from molecular oxygen. From the data, the following scheme is proposed: (Formula:see text). The formation of the free hydroxyl radical during the reduction of oxygen was demonstrated with quantitative competition experiments. The hydroxyl radical abstracted hydrogen from ethanol or formate, and the resulting scavenger-derived free radical was trapped with known rate constants. If H2O2 was added to the enzymatic reaction, a stimulation of the production of the hydroxyl radical was obtained. This stimulation was manifested in both the concentration and the rate of formation of the DMPO/hydroxyl radical adduct. Catalase was shown to inhibit formation of the hydroxyl radical adduct, further supporting the formation of hydrogen peroxide as an intermediate during the reduction of oxygen. All three components, ferredoxin, ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase, and NADPH, were required for reduction. Ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase reduces ferredoxin, which in turn is responsible for the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide and ultimately the hydroxyl radical. The effect of transition metal chelators on the DMPO/hydroxyl radical adduct concentration suggests that the reduction of chelated iron by ferredoxin is responsible for the reduction of hydrogen peroxide to the hydroxyl radical via Fenton-type chemistry.  相似文献   

11.
Growth inhibitory factor (GIF), a brain-specific member of the metallothionein family (MT-III), has been characterized as a inhibitory substance for neurotrophic factors in Alzheimer's disease brains. However, the function of GIF, other than the inhibition of neurotrophic factors, remains unknown. We demonstrate here that exogenous GIF prevents neurite extension of cortical neurons in the early period of differentiation and the death of differentiated neurons caused by high oxygen exposure. Down-regulation of GIF in cortical neurons with antisense S-oligonucleotides promoted neuronal death under high oxygen conditions. ESR spin-trapping studies demonstrated that GIF at 2-6 microm scavenged hydroxyl radicals generated by a Fenton-type reaction or the photolysis of hydrogen peroxide much more effectively than the same concentration of metallothionein I+II. GIF did not scavenge either superoxide produced by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction or NO generated from 1-hydroxy-2-oxo-3-(N-methyl-3-aminopropyl)-3-methyl-1-triazene. Moreover, GIF at 40-80 microm inhibited tyrosine nitration by peroxynitrite as efficiently as metallothionein I+II at the same concentration. These results indicate that GIF prevents neurite extension of neurons in the early period of differentiation and supports the survival of differentiated neurons by scavenging hydroxyl radicals.  相似文献   

12.
Quinolinate (pyridine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid, Quin) is a neurotoxic tryptophan metabolite produced mainly by immune-activated macrophages. It is implicated in the pathogenesis of several brain disorders including HIV-associated dementia. Previous evidence suggests that Quin may exert its neurotoxic effects not only as an agonist on the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor, but also by a receptor-independent mechanism. In this study we address ability of ferrous quinolinate chelates to generate reactive oxygen species. Autoxidation of Quin-Fe(II) complexes, followed in Hepes buffer at pH 7.4 using ferrozine as the Fe(II) detector, was found to be markedly slower in comparison with iron unchelated or complexed to citrate or ADP. The rate of Quin-Fe(II) autoxidation depends on pH (squared hydroxide anion concentration), is catalyzed by inorganic phosphate, and in both Hepes and phosphate buffers inversely depends on Quin concentration. These observations can be explained in terms of anion catalysis of hexaaquairon(II) autoxidation, acting mainly on the unchelated or partially chelated pool of iron. In order to follow hydroxyl radical generation in the Fenton chemistry, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) was employed. In the mixture consisting of 100 mM DMPO, 0.1 mM Fe(II), and 8.8 mM hydrogen peroxide in phosphate buffer pH 7.4, 0.5 mM Quin approximately doubled the yield of DMPO-OH adduct, and higher Quin concentration increased the spin adduct signal even more. When DMPO-OH was pre-formed using Ti3+/hydrogen peroxide followed by peroxide removal with catalase, only addition of Quin-Fe(II), but not Fe(II), Fe(III), or Quin-Fe(III), significantly promoted decomposition of pre-formed DMPO-OH. Furthermore, reaction of Quin-Fe(II) with hydrogen peroxide leads to initial iron oxidation followed by appearance of iron redox cycling, detected as slow accumulation of ferrous ferrozine complex. This phenomenon cannot be abolished by subsequent addition of catalase. Thus, we propose that redox cycling of iron by a Quin derivative, formed by initial attack of hydroxyl radicals on Quin, rather than effects of iron complexes on DMPO-OH stability or redox cycling by hydrogen peroxide, is responsible for enhanced DMPO-OH signal in the presence of Quin. The present observations suggest that Quin-Fe(II) complexes display significant pro-oxidant characteristics that could have implications for Quin neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

13.
When potassium tetraperoxochromate (K3CrO8) is added to platelet suspension media it decomposes to the oxygen species hydrogen peroxide, superoxide radicals, hydroxyl radicals, and singlet oxygen. K3CrO8 induces a reversible shape change and aggregation of human platelets and, in the presence of Tris or sucrose, also the release of serotonin. Its effect on shape change and aggregation is due to the long-lived species hydrogen peroxide and is abolished by indomethacin and acetylsalicylic acid. Superoxide radicals, which are formed from K3CrO8 in HEPES-containing media do not evoke a platelet response. The release of serotonin depends on an interaction of hydroxyl radicals with Tris or sucrose and is associated with excessive formation of thiobarbituric acid-reactive material from platelets. Other scavengers of hydroxyl radicals such as mannitol, dimethylsulfoxide, EDTA or histidine prevent the release and the formation of thiobarbituric acid chromogen. Interaction of hydroxyl radicals with Tris or sucrose most likely results in the generation of short-lived intermediates which may act on platelets to produce thiobarbituric acid chromogen and to promote serotonin release. These effects on platelets are not inhibited by acetylsalicylic acid or indomethacin. Therefore the highly reactive hydroxyl radical and singlet oxygen, when generated extracellularly, do not mediate their effects via the enzyme-catalyzed prostaglandin pathway, in contrast to those evoked by the less reactive hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

14.
Epidemiological studies have suggested that the use of aspirin is associated with a decreased incidence of human malignancies, particularly colorectal cancer. Since reactive oxygen species (ROS) are critically involved in multistage carcinogenesis, this study was undertaken to examine the ability of aspirin to inhibit ROS-mediated DNA damage. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)+Cu(II) and hydroquinone (HQ) + Cu(II) were used to cause oxidative DNA strand breaks in phiX-174 plasmid DNA. We demonstrated that the presence of aspirin at concentrations (0.5-2 mM) compatible with amounts in plasma during chronic anti-inflammatory therapy resulted in a marked inhibition of oxidative DNA damage induced by either H2O2/Cu(II) or HQ/Cu(II). The inhibition of oxidative DNA damage by aspirin was exhibited in a concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, aspirin was found to be much more potent than the hydroxyl radical scavengers, mannitol and dimethyl sulfoxide, in protecting against the H2O2/Cu(II)-mediated DNA strand breaks. Since the reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) is crucially involved in both H2O2/Cu(II)- and HQ/Cu(II)-mediated formation of hydroxyl radical or its equivalent, and the subsequent oxidative DNA damage, we examined whether aspirin could inhibit this Cu(II)/Cu(I) redox cycle. It was observed that aspirin at concentrations that showed the inhibitory effect on oxidative DNA damage did not alter the Cu(II)/Cu(I) redox cycle in either H2O2/Cu(II) or HQ/Cu(II) system. In addition, aspirin was not found to significantly scavenge H2O2. This study demonstrates for the first time that aspirin potently inhibits both H2O2/Cu(II)- and HQ/Cu(II)-mediated oxidative DNA strand breaks most likely through scavenging the hydroxyl radical or its equivalent derived from these two systems. The potent inhibition of oxidative DNA damage by aspirin may thus partially contribute to its anticancer activities observed in humans.  相似文献   

15.
Semicarbazide, a hydrazine derivative, is carcinogenic to mice but shows no or little mutagenicity in the Salmonella-microsome test. To clarify whether or not the genotoxic mechanism contributes to the non-mutagenic carcinogenicity of semicarbazide, we investigated DNA damage induced by semicarbazide using 32P-5'-end-labeled DNA fragments obtained from the c-Ha-ras-1 protooncogene and the p53 tumor suppressor gene. Semicarbazide caused DNA damage frequently at the thymine and cytosine residues in the presence of Cu(II). Catalase and bathocuproine partially inhibited DNA damage, suggesting that hydrogen peroxide plus Cu(I) participates in DNA damage. When a high concentration of semicarbazide was used in the presence of catalase, DNA damage was induced, especially at G in 5'-AG and slightly at 5'-G in GG and GGG sequences. An electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic study has confirmed that the reaction of semicarbazide with Cu(II) produces carbamoyl radicals (z.rad;CONH(2)), possibly generated via the nitrogen-centered radicals of semicarbazide. Azodicarbonamide also produced carbamoyl radicals and induced DNA damage frequently at 5'-G in GG and GGG sequences, suggesting that carbamoyl radicals participate in this sequence-specific DNA damage by semicarbazide. On the basis of our previous reports, we consider that the sequence-specific DNA damage at G in 5'-AG in the present study is due to the nitrogen-centered radicals. This study has shown that semicarbazide induces DNA damage in the presence of Cu(II) through the formation of hydrogen peroxide and Cu(I). In addition, semicarbazide-derived free radicals participate in DNA damage. DNA damage induced by these reactive species may be relevant to the carcinogenicity of semicarbazide.  相似文献   

16.
Quinolinate (pyridine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid, Quin) is a neurotoxic tryptophan metabolite produced mainly by immune-activated macrophages. It is implicated in the pathogenesis of several brain disorders including HIV-associated dementia. Previous evidence suggests that Quin may exert its neurotoxic effects not only as an agonist on the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor, but also by a receptor-independent mechanism. In this study we address ability of ferrous quinolinate chelates to generate reactive oxygen species. Autoxidation of Quin-Fe(II) complexes, followed in Hepes buffer at pH 7.4 using ferrozine as the Fe(II) detector, was found to be markedly slower in comparison with iron unchelated or complexed to citrate or ADP. The rate of Quin-Fe(II) autoxidation depends on pH (squared hydroxide anion concentration), is catalyzed by inorganic phosphate, and in both Hepes and phosphate buffers inversely depends on Quin concentration. These observations can be explained in terms of anion catalysis of hexaaquairon(II) autoxidation, acting mainly on the unchelated or partially chelated pool of iron. In order to follow hydroxyl radical generation in the Fenton chemistry, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) was employed. In the mixture consisting of 100 mM DMPO, 0.1 mM Fe(II), and 8.8 mM hydrogen peroxide in phosphate buffer pH 7.4, 0.5 mM Quin approximately doubled the yield of DMPO-OH adduct, and higher Quin concentration increased the spin adduct signal even more. When DMPO-OH was pre-formed using Ti3+/hydrogen peroxide followed by peroxide removal with catalase, only addition of Quin-Fe(II), but not Fe(II), Fe(III), or Quin-Fe(III), significantly promoted decomposition of pre-formed DMPO-OH. Furthermore, reaction of Quin-Fe(II) with hydrogen peroxide leads to initial iron oxidation followed by appearance of iron redox cycling, detected as slow accumulation of ferrous ferrozine complex. This phenomenon cannot be abolished by subsequent addition of catalase. Thus, we propose that redox cycling of iron by a Quin derivative, formed by initial attack of hydroxyl radicals on Quin, rather than effects of iron complexes on DMPO-OH stability or redox cycling by hydrogen peroxide, is responsible for enhanced DMPO-OH signal in the presence of Quin. The present observations suggest that Quin-Fe(II) complexes display significant pro-oxidant characteristics that could have implications for Quin neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

17.
A recently developed method has been utilized to demonstrate the generation of hydroxyl radicals (HObullet) in the immediate proximity of DNA by cop-per(II)/iron(HI)-adriamycin in the presence of ascorbate and hydrogen peroxide. SECCA, a succinylated derivative of coumarin, generates the fluorescent 7-hydroxy-SECCA following reaction with HObullet. SECCA was coupled to polylysine or to histone HI and then complexed to DNA. When HO' was generated in the proximity of DNA by polylysine-coupled iodine-125, which emits short range Auger electrons, 7-hydroxy-SECCA was produced. DMSO was only moderately efficient in reducing the fluorescence induction, demonstrating the “local” generation of HObullet in this system. Copper(II)/iron(III)-adriamycin in the presence of ascorbate and hydrogen peroxide generated the fluorescent 7-hydroxy-SECCA both when SECCA was free in solution and when SECCA was DNA-conjugated. With SECCA free in solution, the fluorescence induction was almost eliminated in the presence of HObullet scavengers (ethanol, tertbutanol or DMSO) and the relative efficiency of the scavengers in reducing the fluorescence followed their rate constant with HObullet. Furthermore, SECCA incubated with a singlet oxygen-generating compound demonstrated no fluorescence induction. When SECCA was positioned in close proximity to DNA as a SECCA-histone-H1-DNA complex, the relative efficiency of the scavengers in reducing the fluorescence still followed their rate constant with HO'; overall however the scavengers were much less effective in reducing the fluorescence, due presumably to the formation of HObullet radical in the immediate vicinity of DNA. These data suggest that copper(II)/iron(III)-adriamycin produces HO' in the presence of ascorbate and hydrogen peroxide whether unbound or bound to DNA and suggest that in the latter case scavengers would not prevent HObullet from attacking chromatin. In addition, the ability of DMSO to trap HObullet was shown to decrease as the conformation of the HI-DNA complex becomes more compact indicating the strong dependence of the trapping ability on chromatin conformation.  相似文献   

18.
Oxidative deposition of iron in ferritin or the autoxidation of iron in the absence of protein produces radicals from Good's buffers. Radical species are formed from the piperazine ring-based buffers Hepes (4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid), Epps 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinepropanesulfonic acid, and Pipes 1,4-piperazinediethanesulfonic acid, but not from Mes (4-morpholineethanesulfonic acid) which contains a morpholine ring. The radicals all have half-lives around 10 min and display very similar electron paramagnetic resonance spectra consisting of at least 30 lines. The Hepes radical can be formed by the addition of potassium superoxide directly to the buffer and its production during iron(II) autoxidation is inhibited by superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1). Catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) accelerates the decay of the EPR spectrum. Thus the buffer radicals are secondary radical species produced from oxygen radicals formed during the iron catalyzed Haber-Weiss process. The deoxyribose/thiobarbituric acid assay for hydroxyl radical production shows that Hepes is an effective hydroxyl radical scavenging agent. The Hepes radical can also be formed electrolytically at a potential of +0.8 V (vs standard hydrogen electrode). Oxidation of Hepes at pH 10 during the autoxidation of iron(II) or by the addition of hydrogen peroxide produces a nitroxide radical. These results indicate that piperazine ring Good buffers should be avoided in studies of redox processes in biochemistry.  相似文献   

19.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced as intermediates in the reduction of O2 to H2O (superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical), are generally regarded as harmful products of oxygenic metabolism causing cell damage in plants, animals and microorganisms. However, oxygen radical chemistry can also play useful roles if it takes place outside of the protoplast. In plants, the production of these ROS initiated by the plasma membrane NAD(P)H oxidase can be used for controlled polymer breakdown leading to wall loosening during extension growth. Backbone cleavage of cell wall polysaccharides can be accomplished by hydroxyl radicals produced from hydrogen peroxide and superoxide in a reaction catalyzed by cell wall peroxidase. Growing plant organs such as coleoptiles or roots of maize seedlings produce these ROS specifically in the apoplast of actively growing tissues, e.g. in the epidermis of the coleoptile and the growing zone of the root. Auxin promotes the release of hydroxyl radicals when inducing elongation growth. Experimental generation of hydroxyl radicals in the wall causes an increase in wall extensibility in vitro and replaces auxin in inducing growth. Auxin-induced growth can be inhibited by scavengers of ROS or inhibitors interfering with the formation of these molecules in the cell wall. These results provide the experimental background for a novel hypothesis on the mechanism of plant cell growth in which the generation of hydroxyl radicals, initiated by the plasma membrane NAD(P)H oxidase, plays a central role.  相似文献   

20.
In our study, EPR spin-trapping technique was employed to study dark production of two reactive oxygen species, hydroxyl radicals (OH.) and singlet oxygen ((1)O2), in spinach photosystem II (PSII) membrane particles exposed to elevated temperature (47 degrees C). Production of OH., evaluated as EMPO-OH adduct EPR signal, was suppressed by the enzymatic removal of hydrogen peroxide and by the addition of iron chelator desferal, whereas externally added hydrogen peroxide enhanced OH. production. These observations reveal that OH. is presumably produced by metal-mediated reduction of hydrogen peroxide in a Fenton-type reaction. Increase in pH above physiological values significantly stimulated the formation of OH., whereas the presence of chloride and calcium ions had the opposite effect. Based on our results it is proposed that the formation of OH. is linked to the thermal disassembly of water-splitting manganese complex on PSII donor side. Singlet oxygen production, followed as the formation of nitroxyl radical TEMPO, was not affected by OH. scavengers. This finding indicates that the production of these two species was independent and that the production of (1)O2 is not closely linked to PSII donor side.  相似文献   

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