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1.
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   

2.
Quercetin (3,3',4',5,7-pentahydroxyflavone), one of the most abundant dietary flavonoids, has been investigated for its ability to bind Fe(II), Fe(III), Cu(I) and Cu(II) in acidic to neutral solutions. In particular, analysis by UV-visible spectroscopy allows to determine the rate constants for the formation of the 1:1 complexes. In absence of added metal ion, quercetin undergoes a slow autoxidation in neutral solution with production of low hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) concentrations. Autoxidation is accelerated by addition of the metal ions according to: Cu(I) > Cu(II)>Fe(II) Fe(III). In fact, the iron-quercetin complexes seem less prone to autoxidation than free quercetin in agreement with the observation that EDTA addition, while totally preventing iron-quercetin binding, slightly accelerates quercetin autoxidation. By contrast, the copper-quercetin complexes appear as reactive intermediates in the copper-initiated autoxidation of quercetin. In presence of the iron ions, only low concentrations of H(2)O(2) can be detected. By contrast, in the presence of the copper ions, H(2)O(2) is rapidly accumulated. Whereas Fe(II) is rapidly autoxidized to Fe(III) in the presence or absence of quercetin, Cu(I) bound to quercetin or its oxidation products does not undergo significant autoxidation. In addition, Cu(II) is rapidly reduced by quercetin. By HPLC-MS analysis, the main autoxidation products of quercetin are shown to be the solvent adducts on the p-quinonemethide intermediate formed upon two-electron oxidation of quercetin. Finally, in strongly acidic conditions (pH 1-2), neither autoxidation nor metal complexation is observed but Fe(III) appears to be reactive enough to quickly oxidize quercetin (without dioxygen consumption). Up to ca. 7 Fe(III) ions can be reduced per quercetin molecule, which points to an extensive oxidative degradation.  相似文献   

3.
Quercetin, one of flavonoids, has been reported to be carcinogenic. There have been no report concerning carcinogenicity of kaempferol and luteolin which have structure similar to quercetin. DNA damage was examined by using DNA fragments obtained from the human p53 tumor suppressor gene. Quercetin induced extensive DNA damage via reacting with Cu(II), but kaempferol and luteolin induced little DNA damage even in the presence of Cu(II). Excessive quercetin inhibited copper-dependent DNA damage induced by quercetin. Bathocuproine, a Cu(I)-specific chelator, catalase and methional inhibited the DNA damage by quercetin, whereas free hydroxyl radical scavengers did not. Site specificity of the DNA damage was thymine and cytosine residues. The site specificity and the inhibitory effects suggested that DNA-copper-oxygen complex rather than free hydroxyl radical induced the DNA damage. Formation of 8-oxodG by quercetin increased extensively in the presence of Cu(II), whereas 8-oxodG formation by kaempferol or luteolin increased only slightly. This study suggests a good relationship between carcinogenicity and oxidative DNA damage of three flavonoids. The mechanism of DNA damage by quercetin was discussed in relation to the safety in cancer chemoprevention by flavonoids.  相似文献   

4.
 Copper(II) complexes derived from the tripodal ligand bis(3′-t–butyl-2′-hydroxybenzyl)(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (LH2) have been studied in order to mimic the redox active site of the free radical-containing copper metalloenzyme galactose oxidase. In non-coordinating solvents such as dichloromethane, only an EPR-silent dimeric complex was obtained (L2Cu2). The crystal structure of L2Cu2 revealed a "butterfly" design of the [Cu(μOR)2Cu] unit, which is not flattened and leads to a short Cu–Cu distance, the t–butyl groups being localized on the same side of the [Cu(μOR)2Cu] unit. The dimeric structure was broken down by acetonitrile or by alcohols, leading quantitatively to a brown mononuclear copper(II) complex. UV-visible and EPR data indicated the coordination of the solvent in these mononuclear complexes. Electrochemical as well as chemical (silver acetate) one-electron oxidation of acetonitrile solutions of the monomeric complex led to a yellow-green solution. Based on EPR, UV-visible and resonance Raman spectroscopy, the one-electron oxidation product was identified as a cupric phenoxyl radical system. It slowly decomposes into a product where the ligand has been substituted (dimerization) in the para position of the hydroxyl group, for one of the phenolic groups. The data for the one-electron oxidized species provides strong evidence for a free-radical copper (II) complex. Received: 19 July 1996 / Accepted: 16 October 1996  相似文献   

5.
The enzymatic oxidation of Fe(II) by nitrate‐reducing bacteria was first suggested about two decades ago. It has since been found that most strains are mixotrophic and need an additional organic co‐substrate for complete and prolonged Fe(II) oxidation. Research during the last few years has tried to determine to what extent the observed Fe(II) oxidation is driven enzymatically, or abiotically by nitrite produced during heterotrophic denitrification. A recent study reported that nitrite was not able to oxidize Fe(II)‐EDTA abiotically, but the addition of the mixotrophic nitrate‐reducing Fe(II)‐oxidizer, Acidovorax sp. strain 2AN, led to Fe(II) oxidation (Chakraborty & Picardal, 2013). This, along with other results of that study, was used to argue that Fe(II) oxidation in strain 2AN was enzymatically catalyzed. However, the absence of abiotic Fe(II)‐EDTA oxidation by nitrite reported in that study contrasts with previously published data. We have repeated the abiotic and biotic experiments and observed rapid abiotic oxidation of Fe(II)‐EDTA by nitrite, resulting in the formation of Fe(III)‐EDTA and the green Fe(II)‐EDTA‐NO complex. Additionally, we found that cultivating the Acidovorax strains BoFeN1 and 2AN with 10 mm nitrate, 5 mm acetate, and approximately 10 mm Fe(II)‐EDTA resulted only in incomplete Fe(II)‐EDTA oxidation of 47–71%. Cultures of strain BoFeN1 turned green (due to the presence of Fe(II)‐EDTA‐NO) and the green color persisted over the course of the experiments, whereas strain 2AN was able to further oxidize the Fe(II)‐EDTA‐NO complex. Our work shows that the two used Acidovorax strains behave very differently in their ability to deal with toxic effects of Fe‐EDTA species and the further reduction of the Fe(II)‐EDTA‐NO nitrosyl complex. Although the enzymatic oxidation of Fe(II) cannot be ruled out, this study underlines the importance of nitrite in nitrate‐reducing Fe(II)‐ and Fe(II)‐EDTA‐oxidizing cultures and demonstrates that Fe(II)‐EDTA cannot be used to demonstrate unequivocally the enzymatic oxidation of Fe(II) by mixotrophic Fe(II)‐oxidizers.  相似文献   

6.
The microbial retardation of the spin adduct, DMPO-OH, formed in a copper(II)–hydrogen peroxide–DMPO (5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide) solution was examined in relation to copper biosorption. A hydroxyl radical is formed in the solution through two steps, the reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) by H2O2 and the Fenton-type reaction of Cu(I) with H2O2. The resultant radical is trapped by DMPO to form DMPO-OH. Microbial cells retarded the DMPO-OH in the Cu(II)–H2O2–DMPO far more significantly than in the UV-irradiated H2O2–DMPO solution. Egg albumin showed a higher DMPO-OH retardation than microbial cells both in the Cu(II)–H2O2–DMPO and the UV-irradiated H2O2–DMPO solutions. These results indicated that the retardation effect is related to organic matter and not to microbial activity. Microorganisms having higher affinities for copper ion retarded DMPO-OH more significantly. The linear relationship between the amounts of copper biosorption and the inverse of the median inhibitory doses for DMPO-OH indicated that the microbial cells inhibited the reduction of Cu(II) to Cu(I) by H2O2, followed by the decrease of hydroxyl radical formation and the retardation of DMPO-OH. These results also suggest that the coupling between microbial cells and Cu(II) ion can be estimated from their ability to retard DMPO-OH.  相似文献   

7.
Galactose oxidase is a radical copper oxidase, an enzyme making use of a covalently modified tyrosine residue as a free radical redox cofactor in alcohol oxidation catalysis. We report here a combination of spectroscopic and magnetochemical studies developing insight into the interactions between the active site Cu(II) and two distinct tyrosine ligands in the biological complex. One of the tyrosine ligands (Y495) is coordinated to the Cu(II) metal center as a phenolate in the resting enzyme and serves as a general base to abstract a proton from the coordinated substrate, thus activating it for oxidation. The structure of the resting enzyme is temperature-dependent as a consequence of an internal proton equilibrium associated with this tyrosine that mimics this catalytic proton transfer step. The other tyrosine ligand (Y272) is covalently crosslinked to a cysteine residue forming a tyrosine–cysteine dimer free radical redox site that is required for hydrogen atom abstraction from the activated substrate alkoxide. The presence of the free radical in the oxidized active enzyme results in formation of an EPR-silent Cu(II) complex shown by multifield magnetic saturation experiments to be a diamagnetic singlet arising from antiferromagnetic exchange coupling between the metal and radical spins. A paramagnetic contribution observed at higher temperature may be associated with thermal population of the triplet state, thus permitting an estimate of the magnitude of the isotropic exchange coupling (J>200 cm−1, JS1·S2) in this complex. Structural correlations and the possible mechanistic significance of metal–radical coupling in the active enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Tyrosinase catalyzes the ortho hydroxylation of monophenols and the subsequent oxidation of the diphenolic products to the resulting quinones. In efforts to create biomimetic copper complexes that can oxidize C–H bonds, Stack and coworkers recently reported a synthetic μ-η22-peroxodicopper(II)(DBED)2 complex (DBED is N,N′-di-tert-butylethylenediamine), which rapidly hydroxylates phenolates. A reactive intermediate consistent with a bis-μ-oxo-dicopper(III)-phenolate complex, with the O–O bond fully cleaved, is observed experimentally. Overall, the evidence for sequential O–O bond cleavage and C–O bond formation in this synthetic complex suggests an alternative mechanism to the concerted or late-stage O–O bond scission generally accepted for the phenol hydroxylation reaction performed by tyrosinase. In this work, the reaction mechanism of this peroxodicopper(II) complex was studied with hybrid density functional methods by replacing DBED in the μ-η22-peroxodicopper(II)(DBED)2 complex by N,N′-dimethylethylenediamine ligands to reduce the computational costs. The reaction mechanism obtained is compared with the existing proposals for the catalytic ortho hydroxylation of monophenol and the subsequent oxidation of the diphenolic product to the resulting quinone with the aim of gaining some understanding about the copper-promoted oxidation processes mediated by 2:1 Cu(I)O2-derived species. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A promising chemical absorption–biological reduction integrated process has been proposed. A major problem of the process is oxidation of the active absorbent, ferrous ethylenediaminetetraacetate (Fe(II)EDTA), to the ferric species, leading to a significant decrease in NO removal efficiency. Thus the biological reduction of Fe(III)EDTA is vitally important for the continuous NO removal. Oxygen, an oxidizing agent and biological inhibitor, is typically present in the flue gas. It can significantly retard the application of the integrated process. This study investigated the influence mechanism of oxygen on the regeneration of Fe(II)EDTA in order to provide insight on how to eliminate or decrease the oxygen influence. The experimental results revealed that the dissolved oxygen and Fe(III)EDTA simultaneously served as electron acceptor for the microorganism. The Fe(III)EDTA reduction activity were directly inhibited by the dissolved oxygen. When the bioreactor was supplied with 3% and 8% oxygen in the gas phase, the concentration of initial dissolved oxygen in the liquid phase was 0.28 and 0.68 mg l−1. Correspondingly, the instinct Fe(III)EDTA reduction activity of the microorganism determined under anoxic condition in a rotation shaker decreased from 1.09 to 0.84 and 0.49 mM h−1. The oxidation of Fe(II)EDTA with dissolved oxygen prevented more dissolved oxygen access to the microorganism and eased the inhibition of dissolved oxygen on the microorganisms.  相似文献   

11.
A nitroxide spin label (SL) has been used to probe the electron spin relaxation times and the magnetic states of the oxygen-binding heme–copper dinuclear site in Escherichia coli cytochrome bo 3, a quinol oxidase (QO), in different oxidation states. The spin lattice relaxation times, T 1, of the SL are enhanced by the paramagnetic metal sites in QO and hence show a strong dependence on the oxidation state of the latter. A new, general form of equations and a computer simulation program have been developed for the calculation of relaxation enhancement by an arbitrary fast relaxing spin system of S ≥ 1/2. This has allowed us to obtain an accurate estimate of the transverse relaxation time, T 2, of the dinuclear coupled pair Fe(III)–CuB(II) in the oxidized form of QO that is too short to measure directly. In the case of the F′ state, the relaxation properties of the heme–copper center have been shown to be consistent with a ferryl [Fe(IV)=O] heme and CuB(II) coupled by approximately 1.5–3 cm−1 to a radical. The magnitude suggests that the coupling arises from a radical form of the covalently linked tyrosine–histidine ligand to Cu(II) with unpaired spin density primarily on the tyrosine component. This work demonstrates that nitroxide SLs are potentially valuable tools to probe both the relaxation and the magnetic properties of multinuclear high-spin paramagnetic active sites in proteins that are otherwise not accessible from direct EPR measurements.  相似文献   

12.
ICRF-187 (dexrazoxane) is currently in clinical trials as a cardioprotective agent for the prevention of doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. ICRF-187 likely acts through its strongly metal ion-binding rings-opened hydrolysis product ADR-925 by removing iron from its complex with doxorubicin or by chelating free iron. The ability of NADPH-cytochrome-P450 reductase to promote hydroxyl radical formation by iron complexes of ADR-925 and EDTA was compared by EPR spin trapping. The iron-EDTA complex produced hydroxyl radicals at six times the rate that the iron-ADR-925 complex did. The aerobic oxidation of ferrous complexes of ADR-925, its tetraacid analog, EDTA and DTPA was followed spectropho-tometrically. The iron(II)-ADR-925 complex was aerobically oxidized 700 times slower than was the EDTA complex. It is concluded that even though ADR-925 does not completely eliminate iron-based hydroxyl radical production, it likely protects by preventing site-specific hydroxyl radical damage by the iron-doxorubicin complex.  相似文献   

13.
 The unfolding of oxidized and reduced azurin by guanidine hydrochloride has been monitored by circular dichroism. Dilution experiments showed the unfolding to be reversible, and the equilibrium data have been interpreted in terms of a two-state model. The protein is stabilized by the strong metal binding in the native state, so that the folding free energy is as high as –52.2 kJ mol–1 for the oxidized protein. The reduced protein is less stable, with a folding free energy of –40.0 kJ mol–1. A thermodynamic cycle shows, as a consequence, that unfolded azurin has a reduction potential 0.13 V above that of the folded protein. This is explained by the bipyramidal site in the native fold stabilizing Cu(II) by a rack mechanism, with the same geometry being maintained in the Cu(I) form. In the unfolded protein, on the other hand, the coordination geometries are expected to differ for the two oxidation states, Cu(I) being stabilized by the cysteine thiol group in a linear or trigonal symmetry, whereas Cu(II) prefers oxygen ligands in a tetragonal geometry. Received: 15 January 1997 / Accepted: 3 April 1997  相似文献   

14.
The interaction of a quercetin copper(II) complex with DNA was investigated using UV–vis spectra, fluorescence measurement, viscosity measurement, agarose gel electrophoresis, and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances assay. The results indicate that the quercetin copper(II) complex can promote the cleavage of plasmid DNA, producing single and double DNA strand breaks, and intercalate into the stacked base pairs of DNA. Moreover, the complex can induce oxidative DNA damage involving generation of reactive oxygen species such as H2O2 and Cu(I)OOH. In addition, the cytotoxicity experiments carried out with A549 cells confirmed its apoptosis-inducing activity. And we also demonstrate that the levels of survivin protein expression in A549 cells decreased, and that relative activity of caspase-3 increased significantly after treatment with the complex. So our results suggest that the antitumor mechanism of the quercetin copper(II) complex involves not only its oxidative DNA damage with generation of reactive oxygen species but also its specific interaction with DNA. Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Camptothecin (CPT) is an anticancer drug that inhibits topoisomerase I (Topo I) by forming a ternary DNA-CPT-Topo I complex. However, it has also been shown that UVA-irradiated CPT in the absence of Topo I produces significant DNA damage to cancer cells. In this work, we explored and identified free radicals generated in these processes. From the low-temperature EPR spectrum of Cu(II)-CPT complex, a proximity between Cu(II) ion and 20-hydroxy group of lactone E ring of CPT is proposed. Upon irradiation (λ = 365 nm) of the Cu(II)-CPT complex in de-oxygenated dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), the EPR signal of Cu(II) measured in situ at room temperature shows formal first-order exponential decay with a formal half-life of 11 min. By the use of a specific Cu(I) chelating agent, neocuproine, it was shown that, during this process, Cu(II) is reduced to Cu(I). The loss in EPR signal intensity of the Cu(II)-CPT complex upon irradiation is accompanied by the appearance of a new EPR signal at g ≈ 2.0022. Application of the spin trap nitrosodurene (ND) revealed that the main radical product formed upon continuous irradiation of CPT in DMSO solutions is the hydroxyl radical (trapped in DMSO as the CH3 adduct) and superoxide radical. Application of 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinol has revealed that irradiation of CPT in aerated DMSO solution also leads to formation of singlet oxygen (1O2). Our spectroscopic experiments indicate that CPT is a promising photosensitizer and that radicals and singlet oxygen generated upon illumination play a central role in DNA cleavage and in the induction of apoptosis in cancer cells.  相似文献   

17.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):499-508
The hydrogen peroxide dependent oxidation of the epinephrinecopper complex to adrenochrome is mediated by free copper ions. The oxidation is enhanced by chloride ions and by the presence of serum albumin. The reaction is not inhibited by SOD or by hydroxyl radical scavengers.

The 2:1 epinephrine or dopamine:Cu(II) complexes are able to bind to DNA and to catalyze its oxidative destruction in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. The DNA-epinephrine-Cu(II) terenary complex has characteristic spectral properties. It has the capacity to catalyze the reduction of oxygen or H2O2 and it preserves the capacity over a wide range of comp1ex:DNA ratios. The rate of DNA cleavage is proportional to the rate of epinephrine oxidation and the rate determining step of the reaction Seems to be the reduction of free Cu(II) ions. The ability to form redox active stable DNA ternary complexes, suggests that under specific physiological conditions, when “free” copper ions are available. catecholamina may induce oxidative degradation of DNA and other biological macromolecules.  相似文献   

18.
Most crustacean metallothioneins (MTs) contain 18 Cys residues and bind six divalent metal ions. The copper-specific CuMT-2 (MTC) of the blue crab Callinectes sapidus with 21 Cys residues, of which six are organized in two uncommon Cys-Cys-Cys sequences, represents an exception. However, its metal-binding properties are unknown. By spectroscopic and spectrometric techniques we show that all 21 Cys residues of recombinant MTC participate in the binding of Cu(I), Zn(II), and Cd(II) ions, indicating that both Cys triplets act as ligands. The fully metallated M8 II–MTC (M is Zn, Cd) form possesses high- and low-affinity metal binding sites, as evidenced by the formation of Zn6–MTC and Cd7–MTC species from M8 II–MTC after treatment with Chelex 100. The NMR characterization of Cd7–MTC suggests the presence of a two-domain structure, each domain containing one Cys triplet and encompassing either the three-metal or the four-metal thiolate cluster. Whereas the metal–Cys connectivities in the three-metal cluster located in the N-terminal domain (residues 1–31) reveal a Cd3Cys9 cyclohexane-like structure, the presence of dynamic processes in the C-terminal domain (residues 32–64) precluded the determination of the organization of the four-metal cluster. Absorption and circular dichroism features accompanying the stepwise binding of Cu(I) to MTC suggest that all 21 Cys are involved in the binding of eight to nine Cu(I) ions (Cu8–9–MTC). The subsequent generation of Cu12–MTC involves structural changes consistent with a decrease in the Cu(I) coordination number. Overall, the metal-binding properties of MTC reported here contribute to a better understanding of the role of Cys triplets in MTs.  相似文献   

19.
Copper (II) complex of formulation [Cu–Phen–Tyr](H2O)](ClO4) (Phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, l-Tyr = l-tyrosine), has been prepared, and their induced DNA oxidative cleavage activity studied. The complex binds to DNA by intercalation, as deduced from the absorption and fluorescence spectral data. Scatchard plots constructed from the absorption titration data gave binding constant 2.44 × 104 M−1 of base pairs. Extensive hypochromism, broadening, and red shifts in the absorption spectra were observed. Upon binding to DNA, the fluorescence from the DNA–ethidium bromide system was efficiently quenched by the copper (II) complex. Stern–Volmer quenching constant 0.61 × 103 M−1 obtained from the linear quenching plots. [Cu–Phen–Tyr] complex efficiently cleave the supercoiled DNA to its nicked circular form with gallic acid as biological reductant at appropriate complex concentration. The gallic acid as reductant could observably improve copper (II) complex to DNA damage. The pseudo-Michaelis–Menten kinetic parameters (k cat, K M) were calculated to be 1.32 h−1 and 5.46 × 10−5 M for [Cu–Phen–Tyr] complex. Mechanistic studies reveal the involvement of superoxide anions and hydroxyl radical (HO·) as the reactive species under an aerobic medium.  相似文献   

20.
Tetrahydropapaveroline (THP), a metabolite of dopamine, has been suspected to be associated with dopaminergic neurotoxicity of L-DOPA. THP induced apoptosis in human leukemia cell line HL-60 cells, but did not in its hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-resistant clone HP100. THP-induced DNA ladder formation in HL-60 cells was inhibited by a metal chelator. THP induced damage to 32P-labeled DNA fragments in the presence of metals. In the presence of Fe(III)EDTA, THP caused DNA damage at every nucleotide. The DNA damage was inhibited by free hydroxy radical (·OH) scavengers and catalase, suggesting that the Fe(III)EDTA-mediated DNA damage is mainly due to ·OH generation. In the presence of Cu(II), THP caused DNA damage mainly at T and G of 5′-TG-3′ sequence. The inhibitive effect of catalase and bathocuproine on Cu(II)-mediated DNA damage suggested that H2O2 and Cu(I) participate in the DNA damage. This study demonstrated that THP-induced apoptosis via reactive oxygen species generated from reaction of H2O2 and metals plays an important role in cytotoxicity of L-DOPA.  相似文献   

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