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 15 毫秒
1.
Rat liver was perfused by Hank's solution, containing desferal (deferoxamine). It was shown that in perfusion of the liver spectrum EPR a signal (g = 4.3; H = 63 G) appears. This signal belongs to desferal complexes, containing intracellular Fe/3/. Desferal transfer to the liver tissue and further formation of desferal complexes there takes place within first 5-10 min of liver perfusion by solution, containing 0.5 mM of desferal.  相似文献   

2.
At neutral pH values 1,10-phenanthroline forms a colored complex with Fe(II), but it does not form such a complex with Fe(III). On the contrary, only Fe(III) forms with desferal a yellow complex with a g = 4.3 electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal, but Fe(II) is rapidly oxidized by desferal to Fe(III), which gives then a yellow complex. On the basis of these facts, a method for simultaneous determination of both Fe(II) and Fe(III) ions was elaborated using a desferal-phenanthroline mixture. Two ways of detecting Fe(II) and Fe(III) have been suggested: (1) the spectrophotometric method for transparent water solutions, and (2) the EPR-spectrometric method for turbid solutions and tissue homogenates. The latter method was applied for determination of free and weakly bound iron in rat liver. The Fe(II) amount in intact liver was 22.2 ± 7.6 nmol/g of wet tissue; free Fe(III) was not found.  相似文献   

3.
EPR spectra of the water-insoluble iron fraction, hemosiderin of human and rat liver are described. The homogenate of freshly prepared perfused rat liver shows a non-heme iron signal at g=4.3 and a high-spin heme-iron signal around g=6, whereas the washed and sonicated sample of the insoluble iron fraction shows solely a non-heme iron signal at g=4.3. This indicates that hemosiderin from rat liver does not contain heme iron. Human-liver preparations from post mortem obtained material show in the homogenates as well as in the washed and sonicated samples an intense high-spin heme iron signal at g=6.0 and a non-heme iron signal at g=4.3. A comparative experiment, carried out with "aged" rat liver preparations, reveals the same spectra as with the human preparations. It is concluded that that the heme present in the insoluble iron fraction is caused by degradation of hemoglobin in the obduction material, and that heme is not a constituent of the insoluble depot iron.  相似文献   

4.
Changes of paramagnetic centres concentration characterized by g-factors values of 1.94, 2.2, and 2.03 in the rat liver were studied by ESR method under acute intoxication by diethylnitrosamine (DENA) and at preliminary threefold treatment of animals with butylhydroxytoluene (BHT). A protective effect of BHT can be explained by its stabilizing action of the membrane structures. A comparison has been carried out with a similar study of paramagnetic centres in the experiment of chronic intoxication by DENA. A simulation was performed of the liver tissue ESR spectra by means of special computer program. The parameters of simulated ESR spectra of the liver tissue with due regard for ESR signal g 2.03 corresponded to the parameters of the experimental spectra. Confirmations were obtained for the nature and number of paramagnetic centres in the liver tissue.  相似文献   

5.
Low-temperature photodissociation of oxygen from oxy-cobalt myoglobin was studied by single-crystal electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 5 K. The photolyzed oxy-cobalt myoglobin exhibited an EPR spectrum consisting of two nonequivalent sets (species I and II) of the principal values and eigenvectors of the g tensors: g1I = 3.55, g2I = 3.47, and g3I = 2.26 for species I, and g1II = 2.04, g2II = 1.93, and g3II = 1.86 for species II, which resembled neither the deoxy nor the oxy form. Possible models of the photodissociated state of oxy-cobalt myoglobin are proposed by comparison with cobalt porphyrin complexes. The photolyzed product of nitric oxide-cobalt myoglobin exhibited new EPR signals at g = 4.3 and a very broad signal at around g = 2. The principal g values have been determined from the single-crystal EPR measurements: g1 = 4.39, g2 = 4.27, and g3 = 4.00. Analysis of another EPR signal around g = 2 was difficult due to its broadness. Magnetic interactions were observed. An isotropic EPR signal at g = 4.3 suggested a weakly spin-coupled system between cobaltous spin (S = 1/2 or 3/2) and nitric oxide spin (S = 1/2).  相似文献   

6.
Hydroxyurea is an approved treatment for sickle cell disease. Oxidation of hydroxyurea results in the formation of nitric oxide (NO), which also has drawn considerable interest as a sickle cell disease therapy. Although patients on hydroxyurea demonstrate elevated levels of nitric oxide-derived metabolites, little information regarding the site or mechanism of the in vivo conversion of hydroxyurea to nitric oxide exists. Chemiluminescence detection experiments show the ability of crude rat liver homogenate to convert hydroxyurea to nitrite/nitrate, evidence for NO production. Nitrite/nitrate form at therapeutic concentrations of hydroxyurea in a clinically relevant time frame. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies show the formation of iron nitrosyl complexes during this incubation and experiments with labeled hydroxyurea show the NO derives from the drug. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry measurements indicate the hydrolysis of hydroxyurea to hydroxylamine in this system. Incubation of hydroxylamine with crude rat liver homogenate also generates nitrite/nitrate and iron nitrosyl complexes. A line of evidence including inhibitor studies, EPR spectroscopy, and nitrite/nitrate detection identifies catalase as a possible oxidant for the conversion of hydroxyurea to NO. These results reveal the ability of liver tissue to convert hydroxyurea to nitric oxide and provide insight into the metabolism of this drug.  相似文献   

7.
EPR spectra of the water-insoluble iron fraction, hemosiderin of human and rat liver are described. The homogenate of freshly prepared perfused rat liver shows a non-heme iron signal at g = 4.3 and a high-spin heme-iron signal around g = 6, whereas the washed and sonicated sample of the insoluble iron fraction shows solely a non-heme iron signal at g = 4.3. This indicates that hemosiderin from rat liver does not contain heme iron.Human-liver preparations from post mortem obtained material show in the homogenates as well as in the washed and sonicated samples an intense high-spin heme iron signal at g = 6.0 and a non-heme iron signal at g = 4.3. A comparative experiment, carried out with “aged” rat liver preparations, reveals the same spectra as with the human preparations. It is concluded that the heme present in the insoluble iron fraction is caused by degradation of hemoglobin in the obduction material, and that heme is not a constituent of the insoluble depot iron.  相似文献   

8.
Mikoyan  V. D.  Burgova  E. N.  Borodulin  R. R.  Vanin  A. F. 《Biophysics》2020,65(6):972-980

The levels of the mononitrosyl iron complex with diethyldithiocarbamate that form in the liver of mice in vivo and in vitro after intraperitoneal injection of binuclear dinitrosyl iron complexes with N-acetyl-L-cysteine or glutathione, S-nitrosoglutathione, sodium nitrite, or the vasodilating drug isosorbide dinitrate (Isoket®) have been assessed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). The levels of the complex in mice that received binuclear dinitrosyl iron complexes with thiol-containing ligands or S-nitrosoglutathione do not change after the treatment of liver preparations with the strong reducing agent dithionite, in contrast to those formed after nitrite or isosorbide dinitrate administration, whose levels sharply increase after the same treatment. It is inferred that in the latter case an EPR-active mononitrosyl iron complex with diethyldithiocarbamate is produced with the absence or presence of dithionite in the reaction of NO formed from nitrite with Fe2+-diethyldithiocarbamate and Fe3+-diethyldithiocarbamate complexes, respectively. In the former case, the mononitrosyl iron complex with diethyldithiocarbamate is produced by transition of iron-mononitrosyl fragments from already present iron-dinitrosyl groups of binuclear dinitrosyl complexes, whose content is three to four times higher than the content of the mononuclear form of these complexes in the tissue. The results we obtained indicate that when dinitrosyl iron complexes with thiol-containing ligands, either introduced into the body or produced with the participation of endogenous NO, appear in animal tissues in vivo, these complexes are presented in these tissues mainly in their diamagnetic, EPR-silent binuclear form.

  相似文献   

9.
A method for the detection of the nitric oxide radical (NO) in oxygen-containing aqueous solution by means of electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) is described. NO evolving from the spontaneous decomposition of 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1) was trapped by Fe(2+)-diethyldithiocarbamate (DETC) complex dissolved in yeast cell membranes. The resulting mononitrosyl-Fe(2+)-(DETC)2 complex was stable and exhibited a characteristic EPR signal at g perpendicular = 2.04 and g parallel = 2.02 with an unresolved triplet hyperfine structure at g perpendicular in frozen solution and an isotropic triplet signal at gav = 2.03 at 37 degrees C. The amount of NO trapped was calculated from the amplitude of one of the triplet lines calibrated by means of a dinitrosyl-Fe(2+)-thiosulfate standard. The lower detection limit of NO was 0.5 nmol/(ml x h) due to a low background NO signal. The upper detection limit was about 10 nmol NO/40 mg traps (DETC-loaded yeast cells), because of saturation of traps. The trapping efficiency approached 60% under anaerobic conditions and with low concentrations of SIN-1, but decreased progressively with higher concentrations and in the presence of oxygen. Nitrite (up to 0.1 mM) did not increase the background NO level. The sensitivity was sufficient to follow the rate of NO release from SIN-1 on-line at 37 degrees C in a flat quartz cuvette. The time course of NO release detected by EPR spectrometry correlated with the time course of nitrite accumulation measured by diazotation. In conclusion, this method will permit the on-line detection of NO formation from endogenous and pharmacological sources in oxygen-containing aqueous media.  相似文献   

10.
Electron paramagnetic resonance and optical spectrophotometric studies have demonstrated that low-molecular dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNICs) with cysteine or glutathione exist in aqueous solutions in the form of paramagnetic mononuclear (М-DNICs) and diamagnetic binuclear complexes (B-DNICs). The latter represent Roussin’s red salt esters and can be prepared by treatment of aqueous solutions of Fe2+ and thiols (рН 7.4) with gaseous nitric oxide (NO) at the thiol:Fe2+ ratio 1:1. М-DNICs are synthesized under identical conditions at the thiol:Fe2+ ratios above 20 and produce an EPR signal with an electronic configuration {Fe(NO)2}7 at gaver. = 2.03. At neutral pH, aqueous solutions contain both M-DNICs and B-DNICs (the content of the latter makes up to 50% of the total DNIC pool). The concentration of B-DNICs decreases with a rise in pH; at рН 9–10, the solutions contain predominantly M-DNICs. The addition of thiol excess to aqueous solutions of B-DNICs synthesized at the thiol:Fe2+ ratio 1:2 results in their conversion into М-DNICs, the total amount of iron incorporated into M-DNICs not exceeding 50% of the total iron pool in B-DNICs. Air bubbling of cys-М-DNIC solutions results in cysteine oxidation-controlled conversion of М-DNICs first into cys-B-DNICs and then into the EPR-silent compound Х able to generate a strong absorption band at 278 nm. In the presence of glutathione or cysteine excess, compound Х is converted into B-DNIC/M-DNIC and is completely decomposed under effect of the Fe2+ chelator о-phenanthroline or N-methyl-d-glucamine dithiocarbamate (MGD). Moreover, MGD initiates the synthesis of paramagnetic mononitrosyl iron complexes with MGD. It is hypothesized that compound Х represents a polynuclear DNIC with cysteine, most probably, an appropriate Roussin’s black salt thioesters and cannot be prepared by simple substitution of М-DNIC cysteine for glutathione. Treatment of М-DNIC with sodium dithionite attenuates the EPR signal at gaver. = 2.03 and stimulates the appearance of an EPR signal at gaver. = 2.0 with a hypothetical electronic configuration {Fe(NO)2}9. These changes can be reversed by storage of DNIC solutions in atmospheric air. The EPR signal at gaver. = 2.0 generated upon treatment of B-DNICs with dithionite also disappears after incubation of B-DNIC solutions in air. In all probability, the center responsible for this EPR signal represents М-DNIC formed in a small amount during dithionite-induced decomposition of B-DNIC.  相似文献   

11.
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) was used to study free radicals and transition metal complexes in liver tissue taken from patients with liver disease. Samples were frozen to 77K directly following biopsy to prevent deterioration. Our major aim was to compare signals from patients suffering from alcohol abuse with those from patients having liver damage not induced by alcohol. Samples were obtained from 19 chronic alcohol abusers and 7 non-alcoholic liver disease patients. Of the 19 alcoholic patients, 18 had an increased fat content, 6 had Mallory's hyaline, 12 had an acute inflammatory response, 9 had increased stainable iron and 4 had evidence of fibrosis. A signal derived from free radicals with a spectroscopic splitting factor of g = 2.0045 was found in all samples. This signal in the alcoholic patients had a mean amplitude of 2.96 cm (± 1.42 SD), and in patients with non-alcoholic liver disease 2.12cm (±0.82) (p = 0.10NS), measured under identical instrument settings.

The molar proportion of diene conjugated linoleic acid (DCLA), a free radical marker, in the sera of alcoholic patients was 2.68% (±1.93), but did not correlate with the free radical signals obtained by EPR spectroscopy. Also, there was no correlation between the free radical derived EPR signal and fat content, Mallory's hyaline, inflammatory infiltrate, iron or fibrosis in the liver biopsy specimens. Similarly the concentrations of aspartate transaminase, albumin, and gamma-glutamyl transferase in serum samples showed no correlations with free radical concentrations.

The absence of any significant increase in the stable free radical signal in the presence of alcohol induced liver disease and the lack of correlation between the signal and either histological or serological evidence of liver damage, suggests that alcohol derived free radicals may not be involved in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease.

Unusually large sextet features characteristic of MN(II) complexes were observed for all liver samples. Such signals are very rare in human tissue, showing that there is a strong accumulation of Mn (II) in the liver. However, no systematic trends were observed. In some samples signals characteristic of iron-sulphur cluster units were detected, but again no correlations could be discovered.  相似文献   

12.
Paramagnetic transition metal centers and organic radicals in liver from wild-type carp (Cyprinus carpio) were characterized by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Approximately twelve EPR signals were observed at 77 K with resonance positions between g=1.8 and g=2.5. Identification was facilitated by a study of the variation in signal intensity with microwave power (microwave power saturation) for each signal. Many were organic radical or iron signals from typical liver enzymes, including cytochrome P450, coenzyme Q10, NADH dehydrogenase, and succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase and/or catalase. Of special interest were two signals that are not normally found in mammalian liver. The first was a six-line signal from divalent manganese, which was evident in the spectra in quantities suggestive of a functional role. The second was probably a signal from nitrosylated non-heme iron and may be related to the presence of nitrogen-containing compounds produced by nitrifying bacteria in the aquatic environment. These notable differences between the EPR spectra of fish and mammalian liver suggest major metabolic differences between the two systems.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidative stress, caused by free radicals within the body, has been associated with the process of aging and many human diseases. Because free radicals, in particular superoxide, are difficult to measure, an alternative indirect method for measuring oxidative stress levels has been used successfully in Escherichia coli and yeast. This method is based on a proposed connection between elevated superoxide levels and release of iron from solvent-exposed [4Fe-4S] enzyme clusters that eventually leads to an increase in hydroxyl radical production. In past studies using bacteria and yeast, a positive correlation was found between superoxide production or oxidative stress due to superoxide within the organism and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) detectable "free" iron levels. In the current study, we have developed a reliable and efficient method for measuring "free" iron levels in Caenorhabditis elegans using low-temperature Fe(III) EPR at g=4.3. This method uses synchronized worm cultures grown on plates that are homogenized and treated with desferrioxamine, an Fe(III) chelator, prior to packing the EPR tube. Homogenization was found not to alter "free" iron levels, whereas desferrioxamine treatment significantly raised these levels, indicating the presence of both Fe(II) and Fe(III) in the "free" iron pool. The correlation between free radical levels and the observed "free" iron levels was examined by using heat stress and paraquat treatment. The intensity of the Fe(III) EPR signal, and thus the concentration of the "free" iron pool, varied with the treatments that altered radical levels without changing the total iron levels. This study provides the groundwork needed to uncover the correlation among oxidative stress, "free" iron levels, and longevity in C. elegans.  相似文献   

14.
The electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of chloroperoxidase Compound I and native enzyme are compared. Upon the formation of Compound I, the g = 2.62, 2.26, and 1.82 signals associated with native enzyme disappear and are replaced by two new EPR signals, a sharp signal at g = 2.008 and a broad signal at g = 1.73. The g = 2.008 signal accounts for only 2% of the theoretical spins while the broad signal at g = 1.73 accounts for 60 to 70% of the theoretical spins in Compound I. The g = 1.73 broad signal is reminiscent of the broad EPR signal associated with horseradish peroxidase Compound I. however, the chloroperoxidase Compound I signal has a significantly different g value. The results suggest that the g = 1.73 signal represents a porphyrin pi cation radical which has a stronger coupling to the heme ferryl iron than is the case with horseradish peroxidase Compound I.  相似文献   

15.
Parameters of the EPR signals of monomeric dinitrosyl-iron complexes with 1H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thiol (DNIC-MT), obtained by treating MT+ferrous iron in DMSO solution with gaseous NO, have been compared with those of the crystalline monomeric DNIC-MT with tetrahedral structure. Dissolved DNIC-MT were characterized by the isotropic EPR signal centered at g=2.03 with half-width of 0.7 mT and quintet hyperfine structure when recorded at ambient temperature or the anisotropic EPR signal with g( perpendicular)=2.045, g( parallel)=2.014 from frozen solution at 77 kappa, Cyrillic. DNIC-MT in crystalline state showed the structure-less symmetrical singlet EPR signal centered at g=2.03 and half-width of 1.7 mT at both room and liquid nitrogen temperature. The Lorentz shape of this signal indicates the strong exchange interaction between these complexes in the DNIC-MT crystal. Being dissolved in DMSO the crystalline sample of DNIC-MT demonstrated the EPR signal typical for DNIC-MT, obtained by treating MT+ferrous iron in DMSO solution with gaseous NO. Low spin (S=1/2) d(9) electron configuration of DNIC-MT with tetrahedral structure (formula [(MT-S(.))(2)Fe(-1)(NO(+))(2)](+)) was suggested to be responsible for the signal of DNIC-MT in crystalline state. Dissolving of the crystals of DNIC-MT may result in the change of their spatial and electronic structure, namely, tetrahedral structure of the complexes characterized by low spin d(9) electronic configuration transforms into a plane-square structure with d(7) electronic configuration and low spin S=1/2 state (formula [(MT- S(-))(2)Fe(+)(NO(+))(2)](+)). The latter was suggested to be characteristic of other DNICs with various thiol-containing ligands in the solutions. The proposed mechanism of these DNICs formation from ferrous iron, thiol and NO shows that the process could be accompanied by the ionization of NO molecules to NO(+) and NO(-) ions in the complexes. Detailed analysis of the shape of the EPR signals of these complexes provided additional information about the exchange interaction typical for DNIC-MT in crystals.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of NO trapping by iron-diethylthiocarbamate complexes was investigated in cultured cells and animal and plant tissues. Contrary to common belief, the NO radicals are trapped by iron-diethylthiocarbamates not only in ferrous but in ferric state also in the biosystems. When DETC was excess over endogenous iron ligands like citrate, ferric DETC complexes were directly observed with EPR spectroscopy at g=4.3. This was the case when isolated spinach leaves, endothelial cultured cells were incubated in the medium with 2.5mM DETC or mouse liver was perfused with 100mM DETC solution. After trapping NO, the nitrosylated Fe-DETC adducts are mostly in diamagnetic ferric state, with only a minor fraction having been reduced to paramagnetic ferrous state by endogenous biological reductants. In actual in vivo trapping experiments with mice, the condition of excess DETC was not met. The substantial quantities of iron in animal tissues were bound to ligands other than DETC, in particular citrate. These non-DETC complexes appear as roughly equal mixtures of ferric and ferrous iron. The presence of NO favors the replacement of non-DETC ligands by DETC. In all biological systems considered here, the nitrosylated Fe-DETC adducts appear as mixture of diamagnetic and paramagnetic states. The diamagnetic ferric nitrosyl complexes may be reduced ex vivo to paramagnetic form by exogenous reductants like dithionite. The trapping yields are significantly enhanced upon exogenous reduction, as proven by NO trapping experiments in plants, cell cultures and mice.  相似文献   

17.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) characteristics of the iron-sulfur clusters of potato tuber mitochondria have been examined in various subfractions of the mitochondria. We confirm that EPR signals comparable to those of the iron-sulfur proteins of mammalian mitochondria respiratory complexes are also present in plant mitochondria. Two distinct iron-sulfur centers paramagnetic in the oxidized state exhibit signals which differ in their detailed line shape and field position. One of these which is present in the inner membrane corresponds to center S.3. The EPR spectrum of the soluble fraction revealed the presence of another center with a low field maximum at g = 2.03 and is associated with aconitase. The EPR signal observed in the mitochondrial matrix from potato tuber and characteristic of 3Fe cluster is significantly changed in shape after addition of citrate and differs clearly from the spectrum of pig heart mitochondrial aconitase. The aconitase in plant mitochondria differs from that of mammalian mitochondria by several features.  相似文献   

18.
The recent development of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) permits its application for in vivo studies of nitric oxide (NO). In this study, we tried to obtain 3D EPR images of endogenous NO in the abdominal organs of lipopolysuccaride (LPS) treated mice. Male ICR mice, each weighing about 30 g, received 10 mg/kg of LPS intraperitoneally. Six hours later, a spin trapping reagent comprised of iron and an N-dithiocarboxy sarcosine complex (Fe(DTCS)2, Fe 200 mM, DTCS/Fe = 3) were injected subcutaneously. Two hours after this treatment, the mice were fixed in a plastic holder and set in the EPR system, equipped with a loop-gap resonator and a 1 GHz microwave. NO was detected as an NO-Fe(DTCS)2 complex, which had a characteristic 3-line EPR spectrum. NO-Fe(DTCS)2 complexes in organ homogenates were also measured using a conventional X-band EPR system. NO-Fe(DTCS)2 spectra were obtained in the upper abdominal area of LPS treated mice at 8 h after the LPS injection. 3D EPR tiled and stereoscopic images of the NO distribution in the hepatic and renal areas were obtained at the same time. The NO-Fe(DTCS)2 distribution in abdominal organs was confirmed in each organ homogenate using conventional X-band EPR. This is the first known EPR image of NO in live mice kidneys.  相似文献   

19.
We have quantitatively measured nitric oxide production in the leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana and Vicia faba by adapting ferrous dithiocarbamate spin tapping methods previously used in animal systems. Hydrophobic diethyldithiocarbamate complexes were used to measure NO interacting with membranes, and hydrophilic N-methyl-d-glucamine dithiocarbamate was used to measure NO released into the external solution. Both complexes were able to trap levels of NO, readily detectable by EPR spectroscopy. Basal rates of NO production (in the order of 1 nmol g(-) (1) h(-1)) agreed with previous studies. However, use of methodologies that corrected for the removal of free NO by endogenously produced superoxide resulted in a significant increase in trapped NO (up to 18 nmol g(-) (1) h(-1)). Basal NO production in leaves is therefore much higher than previously thought, but this is masked by significant superoxide production. The effects of nitrite (increased rate) and nitrate (decreased rate) are consistent with a role for nitrate reductase as the source of this basal NO production. However, rates under physiologically achievable nitrite concentrations never approach that reported following pathogen induction of plant nitric-oxide synthase. In Hibiscus rosa sinensis, the addition of exogenous nitrite generated sufficient NO such that EPR could be used to detect its production using endogenous spin traps (forming paramagnetic dinitrosyl iron complexes). Indeed the levels of this nitrosylated iron pool are sufficiently high that they may represent a method of maintaining bioavailable iron levels under conditions of iron starvation, thus explaining the previously observed role of NO in preventing chlorosis under these conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum was examined by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Although oxidized enzyme yielded no EPR signals over the temperature range 8-200 K, dithionite reduction resulted in generation of two paramagnetic components. The first, a nearly isotropic signal visible at temperatures below 200 K with g1 = 2.018, g2 = 2.003, and g3 = 1.994, exhibited nuclear hyperfine interaction with two equivalent protons (A1 = 0.45, A2 = 0.6, and A3 = 0.55 milliTeslas). EPR spectra of partially reduced 95Mo-enriched formate dehydrogenase exhibited additional 3-4 milliTeslas splittings, due to spin interaction with the 95Mo nucleus. Thus, this signal is due to a Mo center. This is the first reported example of a Mo center with gav greater than 2.0 in a biological system. The second species, a rhombic signal visible below 40 K with g values of g1 = 2.0465, g2 = 1.9482, and g3 = 1.9111 showed no hyperfine coupling and was assigned to reduced Fe/S. Both paramagnetic species could be detected in samples of M. formicicum whole cells anaerobically reduced with sodium formate. The Mo(V) signal was altered following addition of cyanide (g1 = 1.996, g2 = 1.988, and g3 = 1.980). Growth of bacteria in the presence of 1 mM WO4(2-) resulted in abolition of the Mo(V) EPR signal and formate dehydrogenase activity. Em, 7.7 was -330 mV for Mo(VI)/Mo(V) and -470 mV for Mo(V)/Mo(IV).  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