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1.
Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) is a potent hepatocarcinogen. We have recently detected [via electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy] free radicals in vivo in rat bile following AFB1 metabolism using the spin trapping [alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butyl nitrone (4-POBN)] technique. The aim of the present study was to identify the trapped free radical intermediates from the in vivo hepatic metabolism of AFB1. Rats were treated simultaneously with AFB1 (3 mg/kg i.p.) and the spin trapping agent 4-POBN (1 g/kg i.p.), and bile was collected over a period of 1 h at 20 min intervals. On-line high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to ESR was used to identify an arachidonic acid-derived radical adduct of 4-POBN in rat bile, and a methyl adduct of 4-POBN from the reaction of hydroxyl radicals with carbon-13-labeled dimethyl sulfoxide ((13)C-DMSO). The effect of metabolic inhibitors, such as desferoxamine mesylate (DFO), an iron chelator, 2-dimethylaminoethyl-2,2-diphenylvalerate hydrochloride (SKF) 525A, a cytochrome P-450 inhibitor, and gadolinium chloride (GdCl(3)), a Kupffer cell inactivator, on in vivo aflatoxin-induced free radical formation were also studied. It was found that there was a significant decrease in radical formation as a result of DFO, SKF525A and GdCl(3) inhibition. Trapped 4-POBN radical adducts were also detected in rat bile following the in vivo metabolism of aflatoxin-M1, one of the hydroxylated metabolites of AFB1.  相似文献   

2.
Polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) peroxyl radicals play a crucial role in lipid oxidation. ESR spectroscopy with the spin-trapping technique is one of the most direct methods for radical detection. There are many reports of the detection of PUFA peroxyl radical adducts; however, it has recently been reported that attempted spin trapping of organic peroxyl radicals at room temperature formed only alkoxyl radical adducts in detectable amounts. Therefore, we have reinvestigated spin trapping of the linoleic, arachidonic, and linolenic acid-derived PUFA peroxyl radicals. The slow-flow technique allowed us to obtain well-resolved ESR spectra of PUFA-derived radical adducts in a mixture of soybean lipoxygenase, PUFA, and the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). However, interpretation of the ESR spectra was complicated by the overlapping of the PUFA-derived alkoxyl radical adduct spectra. In order to understand these spectra, PUFA-derived alkoxyl radical adducts were modeled by various alkoxyl radical adducts. For the first time, we synthesized a wide range of DMPO adducts with primary and secondary alkoxyl radicals. It was found that many ESR spectra previously assigned as DMPO/peroxyl radical adducts based on their close similarity to the ESR spectrum of the DMPO/superoxide radical adduct, in conjunction with their insensitivity to superoxide dismutase, are indeed alkoxyl radical adducts. We have reassigned the PUFA alkylperoxyl radical adducts to their corresponding alkoxyl radical adducts. Using hyperfine coupling constants of model DMPO/alkoxyl radical adducts, the computer simulation of DMPO/PUFA alkoxyl radical adducts was performed. It was found that the trapped, oxygen-centered PUFA-derived radical is a secondary, chiral alkoxyl radical. The presence of a chiral carbon atom leads to the formation of two diastereomers of the DMPO/PUFA alkoxyl radical adduct. Therefore, attempted spin trapping of the PUFA peroxyl radical by DMPO at room temperature leads to the formation of the PUFA alkoxyl radical adduct.  相似文献   

3.
Although free radical formation due to the reaction between red blood cells and organic hydroperoxides in vitro has been well documented, the analogous in vivo ESR spectroscopic evidence for free radical formation has yet to be reported. We successfully employed ESR to detect the formation of the 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO)/hemoglobin thiyl free radical adduct in the blood of rats dosed with DMPO and tert-butyl hydroperoxide, cumene hydroperoxide, ethyl hydrogen peroxide, 2-butanone hydroperoxide, 15(S)-hydroperoxy-5,8,11,13-eicosatetraenoic acid, or hydrogen peroxide. We found that pretreating the rats with either buthionine sulfoximine or diethylmaleate prior to dosing with tert-butyl hydroperoxide decreased the concentration of nonprotein thiols within the red blood cells and significantly enhanced the DMPO/hemoglobin thiyl radical adduct concentration. Finally, we found that pretreating rats with the glutathione reductase inhibitor 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea prior to dosing with tert-butyl hydroperoxide enhanced the DMPO/hemoglobin thiyl radical adduct concentration and induced the greatest decrease in nonprotein thiol concentration within the red blood cells.  相似文献   

4.
When dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is oxidized via hydroxyl radical (HO(.-)), it forms methyl radicals ((.-)CH(3)) that can be spin trapped and detected by electron spin resonance (ESR). This ESR spin trapping technique has been widely used in many biological systems to indicate in vivo HO(.-) formation. However, we recently reported that (.-)CH(3) might not be the only carbon-centered radical that was trapped and detected by ESR from in vivo DMSO oxidation. In the present study, newly developed combination techniques consisting of dual spin trapping (free radicals trapped by both regular and deuterated alpha-[4-pyridyl 1]-N-tert-butyl nitrone, d(0)/d(9)-POBN) followed by LC/ESR and LC/MS were used to characterize and quantify all POBN-trapped free radicals from the interaction of HO(.-) and DMSO. In addition to identifying the two well-known free radicals, (.-)CH(3) and (.-)OCH(3), from this interaction, we also characterized two additional free radicals, (.-)CH(2)OH and (.-)CH(2)S(O)CH(3). Unlike ESR, which can measure POBN adducts only in their radical forms, LC/MS identified and quantified all three redox forms, including the ESR-active radical adduct and two ESR-silent forms, the nitrone adduct (oxidized adduct) and the hydroxylamine (reduced adduct). In the bile of rats treated with DMSO and POBN, the ESR-active form of POBN/(.-)CH(3) was not detected. However, with the addition of the LC/MS technique, we found approximately 0.75 microM POBN/(.-)CH(3) hydroxylamine, which represents a great improvement in radical detection sensitivity and reliability. This novel protocol provides a comprehensive way to characterize and quantify in vitro and in vivo free radical formation and will have many applications in biological research.  相似文献   

5.
Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy has been used to investigate free radical generation in rats with acute methanol poisoning. The spin trapping technique was used where a spin trapping agent, alpha-(4-pyridyl 1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone (POBN), reacted with the corresponding alcohol-derived or alcohol-dependent radical to form radical adducts. One radical adduct was detected in both bile and urine samples 2 h after acute methanol poisoning in male Sprague Dawley rats. The hyperfine coupling constants for the radical adduct from [(13)C]-labeled methanol detected in the bile were a(N) = 15.58, a(beta)(H) = 2.81 G, and a(beta)(13C) = 4.53 G, which unambiguously identified this species as POBN/*CH@OH. The same radical adduct was detected in urine. The identification of a methanol-derived radical adduct in samples from bile and urine provided strong direct evidence for the generation of the alcohol-derived radicals during acute intoxication by methanol. Simultaneous administration of the alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor 4-methylpyrazole and methanol resulted in an increase in the generation of the free radical metabolite detected in the bile. This is the first ESR evidence of methanol-derived free radical generation in an animal model of acute methanol intoxication.  相似文献   

6.
Metal-catalysed radical oxidation of diacyl-glycerophosphatidylcholines (GPC) with ω-6 acyl polyunsaturated fatty acids (PAPC, palmitoyl-arachidonoyl-glycerophosphatidylcholine and PLPC, palmitoyl-lineloyl-glycerophosphatidylcholine) was studied. Free radical oxidation products were trapped by spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrrolidine-N-oxide (DMPO) and identified by electrospray mass spectrometry (ES-MS). The spin adducts of oxidised GPC containing one and two oxygen atoms and one and two DMPO molecules were observed as doubly charged ions. Structural characterisation by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) of these ions revealed product ions corresponding to loss of the acyl chains (sn-1-palmitoyl and sn-2-oxidised spin adduct of lineloyl or arachidonoyl), loss of the spin trap (DMPO) and product ions attributed to oxidised sn-2 fatty acid spin adduct (lineloyl and arachidonoyl). Product ions formed by homolytic cleavages near the spin trap and also from 1,4 hydrogen elimination cleavages involving the hydroxy group in the sn-2 fatty acid spin adduct allowed to infer the nature of the radical. Altogether, the presence of GPC hydroxy-alkyl/DMPO and hydroxy-alkoxyl/DMPO spin adducts was proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Oxidative stress-related damage to the DNA macromolecule produces lesions that are implicated in various diseases. To understand damage to DNA, it is important to study the free radical reactions causing the damage. Measurement of DNA damage has been a matter of debate as most of the available methods measure the end product of a sequence of events and provide limited information on the initial free radical formation. We report a measurement of free radical damage in DNA induced by a Cu(II)-H(2)O(2) oxidizing system using immuno-spin trapping supplemented with electron paramagnetic resonance. In this investigation, the short-lived radical generated is trapped by the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) immediately upon formation. The DMPO adduct formed is initially electron paramagnetic resonance active, but is subsequently oxidized to the stable nitrone adduct, which can be detected and visualized by immuno-spin trapping and has the potential to be further characterized by other analytical techniques. The radical was found to be located on the 2'-deoxyadenosine (dAdo) moiety of DNA. The nitrone adduct was repaired on a time scale consistent with DNA repair. In vivo experiments for the purpose of detecting DMPO-DNA nitrone adducts should be conducted over a range of time in order to avoid missing adducts due to the repair processes.  相似文献   

8.
Aerobic incubations of the Tritrichomonas foetus hydrogenosomal fraction containing pyruvate, CoA, and the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) gave spectra of two radical adducts. One was a carbon-centered radical adduct of DMPO. This radical was centered at C-3 of pyruvate as determined in experiments using [13C]pyruvate. The other radical detected was identified as the CoA radical adduct of DMPO by comparison with an adduct obtained by incubating CoA with DMPO, H2O2 and horseradish peroxidase. Deletion of CoA led to an increased stability of the carbon-centered radical adduct of DMPO, disappearance of the thiyl radical adduct of DMPO, and appearance of a hydroxyl radical adduct of DMPO. Superoxide dismutase suppressed the appearance of the DMPO-hydroxyl radical adduct but did not have any inhibitory effect on the appearance of the other adducts. Catalase had no significant effect on any of the adducts. Addition of pyruvate to these hydrogenosomal preparations stimulated oxygen consumption. Addition of CoA led to a further increase in the rate of O2 uptake but had no effect in the absence of pyruvate. The formation of two substrate free radicals as intermediates in the generation of acetyl-CoA represents a novel mechanism for this enzymatic reaction and indicates that the pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase from T. foetus differs significantly from the pyridine nucleotide-dependent pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of other eukaryotic cells in its catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
alpha-(4-Pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone (4-POBN) radical adducts, which are formed in the reactions of soybean lipoxygenase with linoleic acid, arachidonic acid, and linolenic acid, were isolated using HPLC-ESR spectroscopy. Both linoleic acid and arachidonic acid gave one radical adduct, whereas in the case of linolenic acid, two radical adducts were isolated. These radical adducts all showed virtually identical uv spectra with lambda max at 292 and 220 nm in hexane. The absence of absorbance with lambda max at 234 nm indicates that a conjugated diene structure is not contained in these radical adducts. The mass spectra of the radical adducts formed from linoleic and arachidonic acids were identical and contained a molecular ion of m/z 264, consistent with the trapping of the pentyl radical by 4-POBN. Indeed, authentic 4-POBN pentyl radical adduct obtained from the reaction between pentylhydrazine and 4-POBN gave the same mass spectrum as the product obtained from the reaction of linoleic acid and arachidonic acid with 4-POBN. The two 4-POBN radical adducts formed in the linolenic acid reaction were shown by mass spectrometry to be isomers of pentenyl radicals. The 4-POBN-pentyl radical adduct was also detected in the reaction mixture of 13-hydroperoxy-linoleic acid, soybean lipoxygenase, and 4-POBN, indicating that the pentyl radical and pentenyl radical are formed by the decomposition of the hydroperoxides.  相似文献   

10.
Metal-catalysed radical oxidation of diacyl-glycerophosphatidylcholines (GPC) with ω-6 acyl polyunsaturated fatty acids (PAPC, palmitoyl-arachidonoyl-glycerophosphatidylcholine and PLPC, palmitoyl-lineloyl-glycerophosphatidylcholine) was studied. Free radical oxidation products were trapped by spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrrolidine-N-oxide (DMPO) and identified by electrospray mass spectrometry (ES-MS). The spin adducts of oxidised GPC containing one and two oxygen atoms and one and two DMPO molecules were observed as doubly charged ions. Structural characterisation by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) of these ions revealed product ions corresponding to loss of the acyl chains (sn-1-palmitoyl and sn-2-oxidised spin adduct of lineloyl or arachidonoyl), loss of the spin trap (DMPO) and product ions attributed to oxidised sn-2 fatty acid spin adduct (lineloyl and arachidonoyl). Product ions formed by homolytic cleavages near the spin trap and also from 1,4 hydrogen elimination cleavages involving the hydroxy group in the sn-2 fatty acid spin adduct allowed to infer the nature of the radical. Altogether, the presence of GPC hydroxy-alkyl/DMPO and hydroxy-alkoxyl/DMPO spin adducts was proposed.  相似文献   

11.
The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of immune cells of the small intestine to produce highly reactive free radicals from the food additive sulfites. These free radicals were characterized with a spin-trapping technique using the spin traps 5-diethoxyphosphoryl-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DEPMPO) and 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). In the presence of glucose, purified lymphocytes from intestinal Peyer's patches (PP) and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) were stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) to produce superoxide and hydroxyl DEPMPO radical adducts. The formation of these adducts was inhibited by superoxide dismutase or diphenyleneiodonium chloride, indicating that these cells produced superoxide radical during reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase activation. With the treatment of sodium sulfite, PMA-stimulated PP lymphocytes produced a DEPMPO-sulfite radical adduct and an unknown radical adduct. When DEPMPO was replaced with DMPO, DMPO-sulfite and hydroxyl radical adducts were detected. The latter adduct resulted from DMPO oxidation by sulfate radical, which was capable of oxidizing formate or ethanol. Oxygen consumption rates were further increased after the addition of sulfite to PMA-stimulated lymphocytes, suggesting the presence of sulfiteperoxyl radical. Taken together, oxidants generated by stimulated lymphocytes oxidized sulfite to sulfite radical, which subsequently formed sulfiteperoxyl and sulfate radicals. The latter two radicals are highly reactive, contributing to increased oxidative stress, which may lead to sulfite toxicity, altered functions in intestinal lymphocytes, or both.  相似文献   

12.
The study of the important role of peroxyl radicals in biological systems is limited by their difficult detection with direct electron spin resonance (ESR). Many ESR spectra were assigned to 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO)/peroxyl radical adducts based only on the close similarity of their ESR spectra to that of DMPO/superoxide radical adduct in conjunction with their insensitivity to superoxide dismutase, which distinguishes the radical adduct from DMPO/superoxide radical adduct. Later, the spin-trapping literature reported that DMPO/peroxyl radical adducts have virtually the same hyperfine coupling constants as synthesized alkoxyl radical adducts, raising the issue of the correct assignment of peroxyl radical adducts. However, using 17O-isotope labelling, the methylperoxyl and methoxyl radical adducts should be distinguishable. We have reinvestigated the spin trapping of the methylperoxyl radical. The methylperoxyl radical was generated in aerobic solution with 17O-molecular oxygen either in a Fenton system with dimethylsulfoxide or in a chloroperoxidase system with tert-butyl hydroperoxide. Two different spin traps, DMPO and 2,2,4-trimethyl-2H-imidazole-1-oxide (TMIO), were used to trap methylperoxyl radical. 17O-labelled methanol was used to synthesize methoxyl radical adducts by nucleophylic addition. It was shown that the 17O hyperfine coupling constants of radical adducts formed in methylperoxyl radical-generating systems are identical to that of the methoxyl radical adduct. Therefore, methylperoxyl radical-producing systems form detectable methoxyl radical adduct, but not detectable methylperoxyl radical adducts at room temperature. One of the possible mechanisms is the decomposition of peroxyl radical adduct with the formation of secondary alkoxyl radical adduct. These results allow us to reinterpret previously published data reporting detection of peroxyl radical adducts. We suggest that detection of 17O-alkoxyl radical adduct from 17O-labelled molecular oxygen can be used as indirect evidence for peroxyl radical generation.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo spin trapping of radical metabolites has become a promising tool in understanding and predicting toxicities caused by different xenobiotics. However, in biological systems radical adducts can be reduced to electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-silent hydroxylamines. To overcome this difficulty, different procedures for reoxidation of the reduced radical adducts were systematically investigated and some metabolic inhibitors of nitroxide reduction were tested. As a test system, carbon tetrachloride (CCl4), a known hepatotoxic substance, was used. CCl4 is metabolized by liver to .CCl3 and, in the presence of the spin trap phenyl N-t-butylnitrone (PBN), forms the PBN/.CCl3 and PBN/.CO2- radical adducts. These radical adducts were measured in the bile using electron paramagnetic resonance after administration of CCl4 and PBN to the rat. We have shown that these radical adducts were reduced to the corresponding hydroxylamines in vivo, since immediately after the collection of bile only traces of the radical adducts could be detected, but after oxidation by different procedures such as bubbling with oxygen, addition of mild oxidant potassium ferricyanide or autoxidation the EPR spectra intensity increases, indicating that the hydroxylamines had been re-oxidized back to nitroxides. The collection of bile into plastic Eppendorf tubes containing the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) or the enzyme ascorbate oxidase did not increase the intensity of the spectra significantly, demonstrating that neither reduction by reduced glutathione (GSH) nor ascorbic acid occurred ex vivo. However in the presence of NEM faster re-oxidation was observed. A new radical adduct that was not observed previously in any in vivo experiment and which exhibited 13C hyperfine coupling was detected when the rats were injected with 13CCl4. We have proven that this is the same adduct detected previously in vitro in microsomal incubations of CCl4, PBN, GSH, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH). As a general rule, we have shown that a variety of oxidation procedures should be tried to detect the different radical adducts which are otherwise not observable due to the in vivo reduction of radical adducts.  相似文献   

14.
Cadmium (Cd) is a known industrial and environmental pollutant. In the present work, an in vivo spin-trapping technique was used in conjunction with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy to investigate free radical generation in rats following administration of cadmium chloride (CdCl2, 40 micromol/kg) and the spin trapping agent alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone (POBN, 1 g/kg). In Cd-treated rats, POBN radical adducts were formed in the liver, were excreted into the bile, and exhibited an ESR spectrum consistent with a carbon-centered radical species probably derived from endogenous lipids. Isotope substitution of dimethyl sulfoxide [(CH3)2SO] with 13C demonstrated methyl radical formation (POBN/*13CH3). This adduct indicated the production of hydroxyl radical, which reacted with [(13CH3)2SO] to form *13CH3, which then reacted with POBN to form POBN/*13CH3. Depletion of hepatic glutathione by diethyl maleate significantly increased free radical production, whereas inactivation of Kupffer cells by gadolinium chloride and chelation of iron by desferal inhibited it. Treatment with the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol, the catalase inhibitor aminobenzotriazole, or the cytochrome P450 inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole had no effect. This is the first study to show Cd generation of reactive oxygen- and carbon-centered radical species by involvement of both iron mediation through iron-catalyzed reactions and activation of Kupffer cells, the resident liver macrophages.  相似文献   

15.
Acetaldehyde oxidation by enzymes and cellular fractions has been previously shown to produce radicals that have been characterized as superoxide anion, hydroxyl, and acetyl radicals. Here, we report that acetaldehyde metabolism by xanthine oxidase, submitochondrial particles and whole rats produces both the acetyl and the methyl radical, although only the latter was unambiguously identified in vivo. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) characterization of both radicals was possible by the use of two spin traps, 5,5-dimethyl 1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) and alpha-(4-pyridyl 1-oxide)-N-t-butylnitrone (POBN), and of acetaldehyde labeled with (13)C. The POBN-acetyl radical adduct proved to be unstable, but POBN was employed to monitor acetaldehyde metabolism by Sprague-Dawley rats because previous studies have shown its usefulness for in vivo spin trapping. EPR analysis of the bile collected from treated and control rats showed the presence of the POBN-methyl and of an unidentified, biomolecule-derived, POBN adduct. Because decarbonylation of the acetyl radical is one of the routes for methyl radical formation from acetaldehyde, detection of the latter in bile provides strong evidence for the production of both radicals in vivo. The results may be relevant to understanding the toxic effects of acetaldehyde itself and of its more relevant biological precursor, ethanol.  相似文献   

16.
Short-lived free radicals formed in the reaction of 11 substrates and radiolytically produced hydroxyl radicals were trapped successfully with 5, 5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) in dilute aqueous solution. The in situ radiolysis steady-state ESR spectra of the spin adducts were analyzed to determine accurate ESR parameters for these spin adducts in a uniform environment. Parent alkyl radicals include methyl, ethyl, 1-propyl and 2-propyl (1-methylethyl). Hydroxyalkyl parent radicals were hydroxymethyl, hydroxyethyl, 2-hydroxy-2-propyl (1-methyl-1-hydroxyethyl), 1-hydroxypropyl and 2-hydroxy-2-methylpropyl. Carboxyl radical (carbon dioxide anion, formate radical) and sulfite anion radical were the sigma radicals studied. The DMPO spin adduct of 1-propyl was identified for the first time. For most spin adducts, g factors were also determined for the first time. In DMPO spin adducts of hydroxyalkyl radicals, nitrogen and C(2)-proton hyperfine coupling constants are smaller than those of alkyl radical adducts; the hydroxyalkyl spin adducts possess larger g values than their unsubstituted counterparts. These changes are ascribed to the spread of pi conjugation to include the hydroxyl group. Strong evidence of spin addend-aminoxyl group interaction can be seen in the asymmetrical line shapes in the hydroxyethyl and the hydroxypropyl spin adducts.  相似文献   

17.
We have used the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-pyrroline-1-oxide (DMPO) and EPR to detect lipid-derived radicals (Ld*) during peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), and cells (K-562 and MCF-7). All oxygen-centered radical adducts of DMPO from our oxidizable targets have short lifetimes (<20 min). We hypothesized that the short lifetimes of these spin adducts are due in part to their reaction with radicals formed during lipid peroxidation. We proposed that stopping the lipid peroxidation processes by separating oxidation-mediator from oxidation-substrate with an appropriate extraction would stabilize the spin adducts. To test this hypothesis we used ethyl acetate to extract the lipid-derived radical adducts of DMPO (DMPO/Ld*) from an oxidizing docosahexaenioc acid (DHA) solution; Folch extraction was used for LDL and cell experiments. The lifetimes of DMPO spin adducts post-extraction are much longer (>10 h) than the spin adducts detected without extraction. In iron-mediated DHA oxidation we observed three DMPO adducts in the aqueous phase and two in the organic phase. The aqueous phase contains DMPO/HO* aN approximately aH approximately 14.8 G) and two carbon-centered radical adducts (aN1 approximately 15.8 G, aH1 approximately 22.6 G; aN2 approximately 15.2 G, aH2 approximately 18.9 G). The organic phase contains two long-chain lipid radical adducts (aN approximately 13.5 G, aH approximately 10.2 G; and aN approximately 12.8 G; aH approximately 6.85 G, 1.9 G). We conclude that extraction significantly increases the lifetimes of the spin adducts, allowing detection of a variety of lipid-derived radicals by EPR.  相似文献   

18.
Liver microsomes incubated with a NADPH regenerating system, ethanol and the spin trapping agent 4-pyridyl-1-oxide-t-butyl nitrone (4-POBN) produced an electron spin resonance (ESR) signal which has been assigned to the hydroxyethyl free radical adduct of 4-POBN by using 13C-labelled ethanol. The free radical formation was dependent upon the activity of the microsomal monoxygenase system and increased following chronic feeding of the rats with ethanol. The production of hydroxyethyl free radicals was stimulated by the addition of azide, while catalase and OH. scavengers decreased it. This suggested that hydroxyl radicals (OH.) produced in a Fenton-type reaction from endogenously formed hydrogen peroxide were involved in the free radical activation of ethanol. Consistently, the supplementation of iron, under various forms, also increased the intensity of the ESR signal which, on the contrary, was inhibited by the iron-chelating agent desferrioxamine. Microsomes washed with a solution containing desferrioxamine and incubated in a medium treated with Chelex X-100 in order to remove contaminating iron still produced hydroxyethyl radicals, although at a reduced rate. Under these conditions the free radical formation was apparently independent from the generation of OH. radicals, whereas addition of cytochrome P-450 inhibitors decreased the hydroxyethyl radical formation, suggesting that a cytochrome P-450-mediated process might also be involved in the activation of ethanol. Reduced glutathione (GSH) was found to effectively scavenge the hydroxyethyl radical, preventing its trapping by 4-POBN. The data presented suggest that ethanol-derived radicals could be generated during the microsomal metabolism of alcohol probably through two different pathways. The detection of ethanol free radicals might be relevant in understanding the pathogenesis of the liver lesions which are a consequence of alcohol abuse.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetic parameters of the redox transitions subsequent to the two-electron transfer implied in the glutathione (GSH) reductive addition to 2- and 6-hydroxymethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone bioalkylating agents were examined in terms of autoxidation, GSH consumption in the arylation reaction, oxidation of the thiol to glutathione disulfide (GSSG), and free radical formation detected by the spin-trapping electron spin resonance method. The position of the hydroxymethyl substituent in either the benzenoid or the quinonoid ring differentially influenced the initial rates of hydroquinone autoxidation as well as thiol oxidation. Thus, GSSG- and hydrogen peroxide formation during the GSH reductive addition to 6-hydroxymethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone proceeded at rates substantially higher than those observed with the 2-hydroxymethyl derivative. The distribution and concentration of molecular end products, however, was the same for both quinones, regardless of the position of the hydroxymethyl substituent. The [O2]consumed/[GSSG]formed ratio was above unity in both cases, thus indicating the occurrence of autoxidation reactions other than those involved during GSSG formation. EPR studies using the spin probe 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) suggested that the oxidation of GSH coupled to the above redox transitions involved the formation of radicals of differing structure, such as hydroxyl and thiyl radicals. These were identified as the corresponding DMPO adducts. The detection of either DMPO adduct depended on the concentration of GSH in the reaction mixture: the hydroxyl radical adduct of DMPO prevailed at low GSH concentrations, whereas the thiyl radical adduct of DMPO prevailed at high GSH concentrations. The production of the former adduct was sensitive to catalase, whereas that of the latter was sensitive to superoxide dismutase as well as to catalase. The relevance of free radical formation coupled to thiol oxidation is discussed in terms of the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the reactions involved as well as in terms of potential implications in quinone cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

20.
Soybean lipoxygenase is shown to catalyze the breakdown of polyunsaturated fatty acid hydroperoxides to produce superoxide radical anion as detected by spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO). In addition to the DMPO/superoxide radical adduct, the adducts of peroxyl, acyl, carbon-centered, and hydroxyl radicals were identified in incubations containing linoleic acid and lipoxygenase. These DMPO radical adducts were observed just prior to the system becoming anaerobic. Only a carbon-centered radical adduct was observed under anaerobic conditions. The superoxide radical production required the presence of fatty acid substrates, fatty acid hydroperoxides, active lipoxygenase, and molecular oxygen. Superoxide radical production was inhibited when nordihydroguaiaretic acid, butylated hydroxytoluene, or butylated hydroxyanisole was added to the incubation mixtures. We propose that polyunsaturated fatty acid hydroperoxides are reduced to form alkoxyl radicals and that after an intramolecular rearrangement, the resulting hydroxyalkyl radical reacts with oxygen, forming a peroxyl radical which subsequently eliminates superoxide radical anion.  相似文献   

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