首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Evidence for the production of singlet molecular oxygen (1O2) during the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed decomposition of ethyl hydroperoxide has been obtained through the use of optical spectroscopy, oxygen electrode experiments, and electron spin resonance (ESR). ESR spin-trapping experiments with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) demonstrate the production of the ethyl peroxyl free radical during the chloroperoxidase/ethyl hydroperoxide reaction. Oxygen and acetaldehyde concentrations suggest that the production of ethyl peroxyl radicals constitutes less than 2% of the decomposition of ethyl hydroperoxide at the concentrations of reactants used. The phosphorescence of 1O2 at 1268 nm was observed during the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed decomposition of ethyl hydroperoxide in deuterium oxide buffer. Chloroperoxidase also catalyzes the decomposition of tert-butyl hydroperoxide to its corresponding peroxyl radical. Alkoxyl and alkyl-DMPO spin adducts were also detected. A much lower yield of 1O2 phosphorescence was observed during the chloroperoxidase-catalyzed decomposition of tert-butyl hydroperoxide. This phosphorescence probably arises through secondary production of alkyl peroxyl radicals. These results suggest that the initial enzyme-dependent production of ethyl peroxyl radicals is followed by enzyme-independent reaction of two peroxyl radicals through the tetroxide intermediate, as originally proposed by Russell (Russell, G. A. (1957) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 79, 3871-3877), to form acetaldehyde, ethyl alcohol, and molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

2.
Sun S  Bao Z  Ma H  Zhang D  Zheng X 《Biochemistry》2007,46(22):6668-6673
Generation of singlet oxygen is first investigated in the decomposition of polyunsaturated lipid peroxide, alpha-linolenic acid hydroperoxide (LAOOH), by heme-proteins such as cytochrome c and lactoperoxidase. Chemiluminescence and electron spin resonance methods are used to confirm the singlet oxygen generation and quantify its yield. Decomposition products of LAOOH are characterized by HPLC-ESI-MS, which suggests that singlet oxygen is produced via the decomposition of a linear tetraoxide intermediate (Russell's mechanism). Free radicals formed in the decomposition are also identified by the electron spin resonance technique, and the results show that peroxyl, alkyl, and epoxyalkyl radicals are involved. The changes of cytochrome c and lactoperoxidase in the reaction are monitored by UV-visible spectroscopy, revealing the action of a monoelectronic and two-electronic oxidation for cytochrome c and lactoperoxidase, respectively. These results suggest that cytochrome c causes a homolytic reaction of LAOOH, generating alkoxyl radical and then peroxyl radical, which in turn releases singlet oxygen following the Russell mechanism, whereas lactoperoxidase leads to a heterolytic reaction of LAOOH, and the resulting ferryl porphyryl radical of lactoperoxidase abstracts the hydrogen atom from LAOOH to give peroxyl radical and then singlet oxygen. This observation would be important for a better understanding of the damage mechanism of cell membrane or lipoprotein by singlet oxygen and various radicals generated in the peroxidation and decomposition of lipids induced by heme-proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Direct electron spin resonance was used to detect tert-alkylperoxyl radicals generated by hematin and the corresponding hydroperoxides at near-physiological pH values. The spin-trapping method was necessary to detect the less persistent primary ethylperoxyl radical. Under a nitrogen atmosphere, the electron spin resonance signal of the tert-alkylperoxyl radicals decreased, and the ethylperoxyl spin-adduct concentration did not change. Concomitant studies, using a Clark oxygen electrode, show that oxygen was consumed by the hematin-tert-alkyl hydroperoxide systems, but was released by the hematin-ethyl hydroperoxide reaction. Thus, molecular oxygen seems to play a subsidiary role in the hematin-catalyzed decomposition of hydroperoxides. Based on the electron spin resonance and oxygen electrode results, a mechanism for the continuous production of the peroxyl free radicals is proposed for hematin/hydroperoxide systems. The present spectroscopic methodology can be used to search for peroxyl free radical formation by hemoprotein/hydroperoxide systems.  相似文献   

4.
The decomposition of organic hydroperoxides as catalyzed by chloroperoxidase was investigated with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. Tertiary peroxyl radicals were directly detected by ESR from incubations of tert-butyl hydroperoxide or cumene hydroperoxide with chloroperoxidase at pH 6.4. Peroxyl, alkoxyl, and carbon-centered free radicals from tertiary hydroperoxide/chloroperoxidase systems were successfully trapped by the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide, whereas alkoxyl radicals were not detected in the ethyl hydroperoxide/chloroperoxidase system. The carbon-centered free radicals were further characterized by spin-trapping studies with tert-nitrosobutane. Oxygen evolution measured by a Clark oxygen electrode was detected for all the hydroperoxide/chloroperoxidase systems. The classical peroxidase mechanism is proposed to describe the formation of peroxyl radicals. In the case of tertiary peroxyl radicals, their subsequent self-reactions result in the formation of alkoxyl free radicals and molecular oxygen. beta-Scission and internal hydrogen atom transfer reactions of the alkoxyl free radicals lead to the formation of various carbon-centered free radicals. In the case of the primary ethyl peroxyl radicals, decay through the Russell pathway forms molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

5.
Hypochlorite or its acid, hypochlorous acid, may exert both beneficial and toxic effects in vivo. In order to understand the role and action of hypochlorite, the formation of active oxygen species and its kinetics were studied in the reactions of hypochlorite with peroxides and amino acids. It was found that tert-butyl hydroperoxide and methyl linoleate hydroperoxide reacted with hypochlorite to give peroxyl and/or alkoxyl radicals with little formation of singlet oxygen in contrast to hydrogen peroxide, which gave singlet oxygen exclusively. Amino acids and ascorbate reacted with hypochlorite much faster than peroxides. Free radical-mediated lipid peroxidation of micelles and membranes in aqueous suspensions was induced by hypochlorite, the chain initiation being the decomposition of hydroperoxides by hypochlorite. It was suppressed efficiently by ebselen which reduced hydroperoxides and by alpha-tocopherol, which broke chain propagation, but less effectively by hydrophilic antioxidants present in the aqueous phase. Cysteine suppressed the oxidation, but it was poorer antioxidant than alpha-tocopherol. Ascorbate also exerted moderate antioxidant capacity, but it acted as a synergist with alpha-tocopherol. Taken together, it was suggested that the primary target of hypochlorite must be sulfhydryl and amino groups in proteins and that the lipid peroxidation may proceed as the secondary reaction, which is induced by radicals generated from sulfenyl chlorides and chloramines.  相似文献   

6.
Hydroperoxides are known to induce the formation of tyrosyl free radicals in prostaglandin (PG) H synthase. To evaluate the role of these radicals in cyclooxygenase catalysis we have analyzed the temporal correlation between radical formation and substrate conversion during reaction of the synthase with arachidonic acid. PGH synthase reacted with equimolar levels of arachidonic acid generated sequentially the wide doublet (34 G peak-to-trough) and wide singlet (32 G peak-to-trough) tyrosyl radical signals previously reported for reaction with hydroperoxide. The kinetics of formation and decay of the doublet signal corresponded reasonably well with those of cyclooxygenase activity. However, the wide singlet free radical signal accumulated only after prostaglandin formation had ceased, indicating that the wide singlet is not likely to be an intermediate in cyclooxygenase catalysis. When PGH synthase was reacted with 25 equivalents of arachidonic acid, the wide doublet and wide singlet radical signals were not observed. Instead, a narrower singlet (24 G peak-to-trough) tyrosyl radical was generated, similar to that found upon reaction of indomethacin-treated synthase with hydroperoxide. Only about 11 mol of prostaglandin were formed per mol of synthase before complete self-inactivation of the cyclooxygenase, far less than the 170 mol/mol synthase produced under standard assay conditions. Phenol (0.5 mM) increased the extent of cyclooxygenase reaction by only about 50%, in contrast to the 460% stimulation seen under standard assay conditions. These results indicate that the narrow singlet tyrosyl radical observed in the reaction with high levels of arachidonate in this study and by Lassmann et al. (Lassmann, G., Odenwaller, R., Curtis, J.F., DeGray, J.A., Mason, R.P., Marnett, L.J., and Eling, T.E. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 20045-20055) is associated with abnormal cyclooxygenase activity and is probably nonphysiological. In titrations of the synthase with arachidonate or with hydroperoxide, the loss of enzyme activity and destruction of heme were linear functions of the amount of titrant added. Complete inactivation of cyclooxygenase activity was found at about 10 mol of arachidonate, ethyl hydrogen peroxide, or hydrogen peroxide per mol of synthase heme; maximal bleaching of the heme Soret absorbance peak was found with 10 mol of ethyl hydroperoxide or 20 mol of either arachidonate or hydrogen peroxide per mol of synthase heme. The peak concentration of the wide doublet tyrosyl radical did not change appreciably with increased levels of ethyl hydroperoxide. In contrast, higher levels of hydroperoxide gave higher levels of the wide singlet radical species, in parallel with enzyme inactivation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Enzyme-bound pentadienyl and peroxyl radicals in purple lipoxygenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
M J Nelson  S P Seitz  R A Cowling 《Biochemistry》1990,29(29):6897-6903
Samples of purple lipoxygenase prepared by addition of either 13-hydroperoxy-9,11-octadecadienoic acid or linoleic acid and oxygen to ferric lipoxygenase contain pentadienyl and/or peroxyl radicals. The radicals are identified by the g values and hyperfine splitting parameters of natural abundance and isotopically enriched samples. The line shapes of their EPR spectra suggest the radicals are conformationally constrained when compared to spectra of the same radicals generated in frozen linoleic acid. Further, the EPR spectra are unusually difficult to saturate. The radicals are stable in buffered aqueous solution at 4 degrees C for several minutes. All of this implies that these species are bound to the enzyme, possibly in proximity to the iron. Only peroxyl radical is seen when the purple enzyme is generated with either hydroperoxide or linoleic acid in O2-saturated solutions. Addition of natural abundance hydroperoxide under 17O-enriched O2 leads to the 17O-enriched peroxyl radical, while the opposite labeling results in the natural abundance peroxyl radical, demonstrating the exchange of oxygen. Both radicals are detected in samples of purple lipoxygenase prepared with either linoleic acid or hydroperoxide under air. Addition of the hydroperoxide in the absence of oxygen favors the pentadienyl radical. We propose that addition of either linoleic acid or hydroperoxide to ferric lipoxygenase leads to multiple mechanistically connected enzyme complexes, including those with (hydro)peroxide, peroxide, peroxyl radical, pentadienyl radical, and linoleic acid bound. This hypothesis is essentially identical with the proposed radical mechanism of oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids by lipoxygenase.  相似文献   

8.
Singlet oxygen production by soybean lipoxygenase isozymes   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The oxidation of linoleic acid catalyzed by soybean lipoxygenase isozymes was accompanied by 1268 nm chemiluminescence characteristic of singlet oxygen. The recombination of peroxy radicals as first proposed by Russell (Russell, G.A. (1957) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 79, 3871-3877) is a plausible mechanism for the observed singlet oxygen production. Lipoxygenase-3 was the most active isozyme. Under the optimal aerobic conditions of p2H 7, 100 micrograms/ml lipoxygenase-3, 100 microM linoleic acid, 100 microM 13-hydroperoxylinoleic acid, and air-saturated buffer, the yield of singlet oxygen was 12 +/- 0.4 microM or 12% of the amount predicted by the Russell mechanism. High yields of singlet oxygen required the presence of 13-hydroperoxylinoleic acid. Systems containing lipoxygenase-2 and lipoxygenase-3 produced comparable yields of singlet oxygen without added 13-hydroperoxylinoleic acid, since the lipoxygenase-2 served as an in situ source of hydroperoxide. Lipoxygenase-1 was active only at low oxygen concentrations. Its singlet oxygen-producing capacity was greatly increased by the addition of acetone to the system. Lipoxygenase-2 did not produce detectable quantities of singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

9.
The formation of electronically excited states during hydroperoxide metabolism is analysed in terms of recombination reactions involving secondary peroxyl radicals and scission of the O? O bond of peroxides by haemoproteins, mainly myoglobin. Both processes may be sequentially interrelated, for the cleavage of H2O2 by metmyoglobin leads to the formation of a strong oxidizing equivalent with the capability to promote peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids. The decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides by ferryl-hydroxo complexes, as that formed during the oxidation of metmyoglobin by H2O2, is a source of peroxyl radicals, the recombination of which proceeds with elimination of a conjugated triplet carbonyl or singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

10.
The decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides (LOOH) into peroxyl radicals is a potential source of singlet molecular oxygen ((1)O(2)) in biological systems. Recently, we have clearly demonstrated the generation of (1)O(2) in the reaction of lipid hydroperoxides with biologically important oxidants such as metal ions, peroxynitrite and hypochlorous acid. The approach used to unequivocally demonstrate the generation of (1)O(2) in these reactions was the use of an isotopic labeled hydroperoxide, the (18)O-labeled linoleic acid hydroperoxide, the detection of labeled compounds by HPLC coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) and the direct spectroscopic detection and characterization of (1)O(2) light emission. Using this approach we have observed the formation of (18)O-labeled (1)O(2) by chemical trapping of (1)O(2) with anthracene derivatives and detection of the corresponding labeled endoperoxide by HPLC-MS/MS. The generation of (1)O(2) was also demonstrated by direct spectral characterization of (1)O(2) monomol light emission in the near-infrared region (lambda = 1270 nm). In summary, our studies demonstrated that LOOH can originate (1)O(2). The experimental evidences indicate that (1)O(2) is generated at a yield close to 10% by the Russell mechanism, where a linear tetraoxide intermediate is formed in the combination of two peroxyl radicals. In addition to LOOH, other biological hydroperoxides, including hydroperoxides formed in proteins and nucleic acids, may also participate in reactions leading to the generation (1)O(2). This hypothesis is currently being investigated in our laboratory.  相似文献   

11.
Spin trapping using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) has been used to detect and distinguish between the carbon-centred, alkoxyl, and peroxyl radicals produced during the photolytic decomposition of hydroperoxides. Photolysis of tert-butyl and cumene hydroperoxides, and peroxidized fatty acids, in toluene, with low levels of u.v. light, is shown to lead to the initial production of alkoxyl radicals by homolysis of the oxygen-oxygen bond. Subsequent reaction of these radicals with excess hydroperoxide leads, by hydrogen abstraction, to the production of peroxyl radicals that can be detected as their corresponding adducts with the spin trap. Subsequent breakdown of these adducts produces alkoxyl radicals and a further species that is believed to be the oxidized spin-trap radical 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrrolidone-2-oxyl. No evidence was obtained at low hydroperoxide concentrations, with either the cumene or lipid alkoxyl radicals, for the occurrence of beta-scission reactions; the production of low levels of carbon-centred radicals is believed to be due to the alternative reactions of hydrogen abstraction, ring closure, and/or 1,2 hydrogen shifts. Analogous experiments with 3,3,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (TMPO) led only to the trapping of alkoxyl radicals with no evidence for peroxyl radical adducts, this is presumably due to a decreased rate of radical addition because of increased steric hindrance.  相似文献   

12.
The singlet oxygen trap diphenylfuran was rapidly oxidized to cis dibenzoylethylene during the decomposition of linoleic acid hydroperoxide catalyzed by ceric ions, methemoglobin or hematin. This conversion was enhanced in a deuterated medium and inhibited by other singlet oxygen quenchers or traps. The chemiluminescence accompanying the decomposition of the linoleic acid hydroperoxide was also markedly enhanced in a deuterated medium and inhibited by other singlet oxygen quenchers or traps. Antioxidants markedly inhibited these reactions. It is concluded that singlet oxygen is formed in substantial quantities during the metal catalyzed decomposition of linoleic acid hydroperoxide.  相似文献   

13.
Recently, Stock et al. (J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15915-15922 [1986]) described a model enzyme system composed of horseradish peroxidase, hydrogen peroxide, phenol, glutathione and styrene. This system forms glutathione-styrene conjugates. Glutathione radicals and carbon-centered radicals are intermediates in this process. In the present study, this model enzyme system was also shown to generate singlet oxygen, probably via a Russell mechanism. No singlet oxygen was generated in the absence of styrene. Thus, contrary to prior suggestions, the reaction of glutathione radical with oxygen to produce a thiyl peroxyl radical is not a significant source of singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the mechanism of formation of oxygen radicals during ferrous ion-induced decomposition of linoleic acid hydroperoxide using the spin trapping and chemiluminescence methods. The formation of the superoxide anion (O2*-) was verified in the present study. The hydroxyl radical is also generated through Fenton type decomposition of hydrogen peroxide produced on disproportionation of O2*-. A carbon-centered radical was detected using 5-(diethoxyphosphoryl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DEPMPO) as a spin trap. Alkoxyl radical formation is essential for the conversion of linoleic acid hydroperoxide into the peroxyl radical by ferrous ion. It is likely that the alkoxyl radical [R1CH(O*)R2] is converted into the hydroxylcarbon radical [R1C*(OH)R2] in water, and that this carbon radical reacts with oxygen to give the alpha-hydroxyperoxyl radical [R1R2C(OH)OO*], which decomposes into the carbocation [R1C+(OH)R2] and O2*-.  相似文献   

15.
The aerobic oxidation of indole-3-acetic acid catalyzed by horseradish peroxidase produces 1268 nm emission characteristic of singlet oxygen. Lactoperoxidase also oxidizes indole-3-acetic acid to produce singlet oxygen, but in contrast to horseradish peroxidase, this enzyme system requires hydrogen peroxide. In both of these systems, the intensity of the 1268 nm emission is small due to quenching of the singlet oxygen by indole-3-acetic acid and by reaction products derived from indole-3-acetic acid. The biomolecular reaction of peroxyl radicals via a Russell mechanism is a plausible mechanism for the singlet oxygen generation in these systems. Under typical conditions of p2H 4.0, 1 microM horseradish peroxidase, 1 mM indole-3-acetic acid, and 240 microM oxygen, the singlet oxygen yield was 15 +/- 1 microM or 13% of the amount predicted by the Russell mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
R Labeque  L J Marnett 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):7060-7070
Reaction of 10-hydroperoxyoctadec-8-enoic acid (10-OOH-18:1) (50 microM) with hematin (0.5 microM) in sodium phosphate buffer containing Tween 20 (200 microM) generates 10-oxooctadec-8-enoic acid, 10-oxodec-8-enoic acid (10-oxo-10:1), and 10-hydroxyoctadec-8-enoic acid in relative yields of 79, 4, and 17%, respectively. The product profile and relative distribution are unaffected by 1 mM butylated hydroxyanisole. Approximately 5% of the hydroperoxide isomerizes from the 10- to the 8-position. 10-Oxo-10:1 most likely arises via beta-scission of an intermediate alkoxyl radical to the aldehyde and the n-octyl radical. To test this, 10-hydroperoxyoctadeca-8,12-dienoic acid was reacted with hematin under identical conditions. 10-Oxooctadeca-8,12-dienoic acid, 10-oxodec-8-enoic acid, and 10-hydroxyoctadeca-8,12-dienoic acid are formed in relative yields of 50, 45, and 5%, respectively. The product ratios are constant with time and hydroperoxide to catalyst ratio and unaffected by inclusion of phenolic antioxidants. The higher yield of 10-oxo-10:1 from 10-OOH-18:2 compared to 10-OOH-18:1 is due to the higher rate of beta-scission of the intermediate alkoxyl radical from the former to the resonance-stabilized octenyl radical. Two products of reaction of the 2-octenyl radical with O2, octenal and octenol, were detected in 10% yield relative to 10-oxo-10:1. Inclusion of 7,8-dihydroxy-7,8-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BP-7,8-diol) led to epoxidation by both 10-OOH-18:1 and 10-OOH-18:2. Studies with isotopically labeled hydroperoxide or O2 indicated approximately 65% of the epoxide oxygen was derived from O2 and 35% from hydroperoxide oxygen, consistent with the involvement of peroxyl free radicals as the oxidizing agents. The available evidence indicates that hematin reduces the fatty acid hydroperoxides homolytically to alkoxyl radicals that are oxidized to ketones, reduced to alcohols, or undergo beta-scission to aldehydes. Carbon radicals generated during these reactions couple to O2, generating peroxyl free radicals that epoxidize BP-7,8-diol. The smaller percentage of epoxidation that results from hydroperoxide oxygen may arise from oxidation of the hydroperoxide group to peroxyl radicals or from heterolytic cleavage of the hydroperoxide to alcohol and an iron-oxo complex.  相似文献   

17.
Consumption of carotenoids is associated with an enhanced immune response and protection against neoplasia and atherosclerosis. Because these effects have been achieved using carotenoids with no pro-vitamin A activity, they are assumed to be due to the antioxidant properties of carotenoids. Carotenoids protect against photosensitized oxidation by quenching singlet oxygen. In addition, beta-carotene reacts chemically with peroxyl radicals to produce epoxide and apocarotenal products. To investigate the potential significance of these reactions to biological systems, we have used soybean lipoxygenase to generate peroxyl radical enzymatically. beta-Carotene inhibits the oxidation of linoleic acid by soybean lipoxygenase as well as the formation of the hydroperoxide product. In addition, the absorption of beta-carotene is diminished (bleached) by soybean lipoxygenase. The potential significance of these antioxidant reactions of carotenoids to biological function is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase to interact with iron and generate oxygen radicals was evaluated by assaying for low level chemiluminescence. The basic reaction system which contained the reductase, an NADPH-generating system, ferric-EDTA as an electron acceptor, and t-butyl hydroperoxide as the oxidant acceptor, resulted in the production of chemiluminescence. Omission of any of these components resulted in a complete loss of chemiluminescence. The light emission was completely sensitive to inhibition by glutathione and butylated hydroxytoluene, partially sensitive (about 60% decrease) to catalase and hydroxyl radical scavengers, and relatively insensitive (about 20% decrease) to superoxide dismutase. The ability of other ferric chelates to replace ferric-EDTA in catalyzing the reductase-dependent chemiluminescence was evaluated. Ferric-citrate, -ADP, -ATP, and ferric-ammonium sulfate were ineffective in promoting chemiluminescence, whereas ferric-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid was even more effective than ferric-EDTA. Thus, the ferric chelates, which catalyze reductase-dependent chemiluminescence, are those which are efficient electron acceptors from the reductase and were previously shown to be those capable of catalyzing hydroxyl radical production by microsomes and the reductase. It is suggested that chemiluminescence results from (a) the direct interaction of the reduced iron chelate with the hydroperoxide (Fenton-type of reaction) to generate alkoxyl and peroxyl radicals, and (b) the generation of hydroxyl radicals, which subsequently react with the hydroperoxide to generate secondary radicals. The latter, but not the former, would be sensitive to inhibition by catalase and competitive hydroxyl radical scavengers, whereas both would be sensitive to antioxidants such as butylated hydroxytoluene. Chemiluminescence appears to be a versatile tool for studying the reductase-dependent generation of oxygen radicals and for the interaction of reductase with iron.  相似文献   

19.
The production of singlet oxygen by H2O2 disproportionation and via the oxidation of H2O2 by NaOCl in a neutral medium was monitored by spin trapping with 2,2,6,6 tetramethyl-4-piperidone (TMPone). The singlet oxygen formed in both reactions oxidized 2,2,6,6 tetramethyl-4-piperidone to give nitroxide radicals. However the production of nitroxide radicals was relatively small considering the concentrations of H2O2 and NaOCl used in the reaction systems. Addition of electron donating agents: ascorbate, Fe2+ and desferrioxamine leads to an increase in the production of nitroxide radicals. We assumed that a very slow step of the reaction sequence, the homolytic breaking of the O-O bond of N-hydroperoxide (formed as an intermediate product during the reaction of 1O2 with TMPone) could be responsible for the relatively small production of nitroxide radicals. Electron donating agents added to the reaction system probably raise the rate of the hydroperoxide decomposition by allowing a more rapid heterolytic cleavage of the O-O bond leading to a greater production of nitroxide radicals. The largest effect was observed in the presence of desferrioxamine. Its participation in this process is proved by the concomitant appearance of desferrioxamine nitroxide radicals. The results obtained demonstrate that the method proposed by several authors and tested in this study to detect singlet oxygen is not convenient for precise quantitative studies. The reactivity of TMPone towards O2-7HO2' and 'OH has been also investigated. It has been found that both O2-7HO2' and 'OH radicals formed in a phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.4, 37°C), respectively by a xanthine-oxidase/hypoxanthine system and via H2O2 UV irradiation, do not oxidize 2,2,6,6 tetramethyl-4-piperidone to nitroxide radicals.  相似文献   

20.
We have carried out a study of the reaction of 13-hydroperoxy-9-cis,11-trans-octadecadienoic acid (linoleic acid hydroperoxide) with hematin. The major products are erythro-11-hydroxy-12,13-epoxy-9-octadecenoic acid, threo-11-hydroxy-12,13-epoxy-9-octadecenoic acid, 9,12,13-trihydroxy-10-octadecenoic acid, 13-keto-9,11-octadecadienoic acid, and 13-hydroxy-9,11-octadecadienoic acid. Several minor products have also been identified, including 9-hydroxy-12,13-epoxyoctadecenoic acid, 11-hydroxy-9,10-epoxy-12-octadecenoic acid, 9-hydroxy-10,12-octadecadienoic acid, and 9-keto-10,12-octadecadienoic acid. Oxygen labeling studies indicate that the observed products arise by at least two pathways. In the major pathway, hematin reduces 13-hydroperoxy-9,11-octadecadienoic acid by one electron to an alkoxyl radical that cyclizes to an adjacent double bond to form an epoxy allylic radical. The allylic radical either couples to the hydroxyl radical coordinated to hematin or diffuses from the solvent cage and couples to O2, forming a peroxyl radical. In the minor pathway, the hydroperoxide is oxidized by one electron to a 13-peroxyl radical that undergoes beta-scission to a pentadienyl radical and O2. Exchange of hydroperoxide-derived O2 for dissolved O2 occurs at this stage followed by coupling of O2 to either terminus of the pentadienyl radical. Both pathways of hydroperoxide metabolism generate significant quantities of peroxyl radicals that epoxidize the isolated double bonds of dihydroaromatic molecules. The products of hydroperoxide reaction with hematin and the oxygen labeling patterns are very similar to the products of unsaturated fatty acid hydroperoxide metabolism by platelets, aorta, and lung. Our results not only provide a mechanism for the formation of a series of mammalian metabolites of linoleic and arachidonic acids but also offer an estimate of the yield of peroxyl radicals generated during the process.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号