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1.
Doxorubicin has a high affinity for inorganic iron, Fe(III), and has potential to form doxorubicin-Fe(III) complexes in biological systems. Indirect involvement of iron has been substantiated in the oxidative mutagenicity of doxorubicin. In this study, however, direct involvement of Fe(III) was evaluated in mutagenicity studies with the doxorubicin-Fe(III) complex. The Salmonella mutagenicity assay with strain TA102 was used with a pre-incubation step. The highest mutagenicity of doxorubicin-Fe(III) complex was observed at the dose of 2.5 nmol/plate of the complex. The S9-mix decreased this highest mutagenicity but increased the number of revertants at a higher dose of 10 nmol/plate of the complex. On the other hand, the mutagenicity of the doxorubicin-Fe(III) complex at the doses of 0.25, 0.5, 1 and 2 nmol/plate was enhanced about twice by the addition of glutathione plus H2O2. This enhanced mutagenicity as well as of the complex itself, the complex plus glutathione, and the complex plus H2O2 were reduced by the addition of ADR-529, an Fe(III) chelator, and potassium iodide, a hydroxyl radical scavenger. These results indicate that doxorubicin-Fe(III) complex exert the mutagenicity through oxidative DNA damage and that Fe(III) is a required element in the mutagenesis of doxorubicin.  相似文献   

2.
5-Iminodaunomycin forms a 3:1 complex with Fe(III) at pH 7.4. Drug-metal complex formation is associated with a marked decline in absorbance at 548 and 593 nm and the appearance of a broad band above 625 nm. The 5-iminodaunomycin-Fe(III) complex reacts with hydrogen peroxide to yield .OH radicals. This reaction is at a maximum at a drug/iron ratio of 2:1, and the yield is far less than that obtained with the doxorubicin-iron complex. In contrast to the results with doxorubicin, the production of .OH declines markedly at high 5-iminodaunomycin/iron ratios. There is a close parallel between the formation of hydroxyl radicals and the ability of the 5-iminodaunomycin complex to nick supercoiled SV40 DNA. The suppression of both .OH and DNA damage at high 5-iminodaunomycin:iron ratios is the result of several factors. 1) The presence of DNA stimulates .OH production from the doxorubicin complex, but not 5-iminodaunomycin; 2) doxorubicin reduces its chelated Fe(III) to Fe(II), but 5-iminodaunomycin does not; 3) 5-iminodaunomycin forms such a stable drug-metal complex that solvent water and, therefore, presumably H2O2, has diminished access to the chelated iron. The affinity of 5-iminodaunomycin is such that it can quantitatively abstract iron from doxorubicin. As a result, 5-iminodaunomycin is an effective competitive inhibitor of .OH radical formation by the doxorubicin-iron complex.  相似文献   

3.
Tannic acid (TA), a plant polyphenol, has been described as having antimutagenic, anticarcinogenic and antioxidant activities. Since it is a potent chelator of iron ions, we decided to examine if the antioxidant activity of TA is related to its ability to chelate iron ions. The degradation of 2-deoxyribose induced by 6 microM Fe(II) plus 100 microM H2O2 was inhibited by TA, with an I50 value of 13 microM. Tannic acid was over three orders of magnitude more efficient in protecting against 2-deoxyribose degradation than classical *OH scavengers. The antioxidant potency of TA was inversely proportional to Fe(II) concentration, demonstrating a competition between H2O2 and AT for reaction with Fe(II). On the other hand, the efficiency of TA was nearly unchanged with increasing concentrations of the *OH detector molecule, 2-deoxyribose. These results indicate that the antioxidant activity of TA is mainly due to iron chelation rather than *OH scavenging. TA also inhibited 2-deoxyribose degradation mediated by Fe(III)-EDTA (iron = 50 microM) plus ascorbate. The protective action of TA was significantly higher with 50 microM EDTA than with 500 microM EDTA, suggesting that TA removes Fe(III) from EDTA and forms a complex with iron that cannot induce *OH formation. We also provided evidence that TA forms a stable complex with Fe(II), since excess ferrozine (14 mM) recovered 95-96% of the Fe(II) from 10 microM TA even after a 30-min exposure to 100-500 microM H2O2. Addition of Fe(III) to samples containing TA caused the formation of Fe(II)n-TA, complexes, as determined by ferrozine assays, indicating that TA is also capable of reducing Fe(III) ions. We propose that when Fe(II) is complexed to TA, it is unable to participate in Fenton reactions and mediate *OH formation. The antimutagenic and anticarcinogenic activity of TA, described elsewhere, may be explained (at least in part) by its capacity to prevent Fenton reactions.  相似文献   

4.
This study was designed to investigate the direction of redox reactions of spermine and spermidine in the presence of iron and copper. The redox activity of spermine and spermidine was assessed using a variety of methods, including their ability to: (1) reduce Fe(3+) to Fe(2+) ions; (2) protect deoxyribose from oxidation by Fe(2+)-ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid, Fe(3+)-ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid systems with and without H(2)O(2); (3) protect DNA from damage caused by Cu(2+)-H(2)O(2), and Fe(2+)-H(2)O(2) with and without ascorbic acid; (4) inhibit H(2)O(2)-peroxidase-induced luminol dependent chemiluminescence; (5) scavenge diphenyl-picryl-hydrazyl radical. Spermine and spermidine at concentration 1mM reduced 1.8+/-0.3 and 2.5+/-0.1 nmol of Fe(3+) ions during 20 min incubation. Both polyamines enhanced deoxyribose oxidation. The highest enhancement of 7.6-fold in deoxyribose degradation was found for combination of spermine with Fe(3+)-ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid. An 10mM spermine and spermidine decreased CuSO(4)-H(2)O(2)-ascorbic acid- and FeSO(4)-H(2)O(2)-ascorbic-induced DNA damage by 73+/-6, 69+/-4% and 90+/-5, 53+/-4%, respectively. They did not protect DNA from CuSO(4)-H(2)O(2) and FeSO(4)-H(2)O(2). Spermine apparently increased the CuSO(4)-H(2)O(2)-dependent injury to DNA. Polyamines attenuated H(2)O(2)-peroxidase-induced luminol dependent chemiluminescence. Total light emission from specimens containing 10mM spermine or spermidine was attenuated by 85.3+/-1.5 and 87+/-3.6%. During 20 min incubation 1mM spermine or spermidine decomposed 8.1+/-1.4 and 9.2+/-1.8% of diphenyl-picryl-hydrazyl radical. These results demonstrate that polyamines of well known anti-oxidant properties may act as pro-oxidants and enhance oxidative damage to DNA components in the presence of free iron ions and H(2)O(2).  相似文献   

5.
The present study reports the protective effects of kolaviron, a Garcinia biflavonoid from the seeds of Garcinia kola widely consumed in some West African countries against oxidative damage to molecular targets ex-vivo and in vitro. Treatment with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) at a concentration of 100 micromol/L increased the levels of DNA strand breaks and oxidized purine (formamidopyrimidine glycosylase (FPG) and pyrimidine (endonuclease III (ENDO III) sites) bases in both human lymphocytes and rat liver cells using alkaline single cell gel electrophoresis (the comet assay). Kolaviron was protective at concentrations between 30-90 micromol/L and decreased H2O2-induced DNA strand breaks and oxidized bases. Neither alpha-tocopherol nor curcumin decreased H2O2-induced DNA damage in this assay. In lymphocytes incubated with Fe3+/GSH, Fe3+ was reduced to Fe2+ by GSH initiating a free radical generating reaction which induced 11.7, 6.3, and 4.9 fold increase respectively in strand breaks, ENDO III and FPG sensitive sites compared with control levels. Deferoxamine (2 mmol/L), an established iron chelator significantly inhibited GSH/Fe3+-induced strand breaks and oxidized base damage. Similarly, kolaviron at 30 and 90 micromol/L significantly attenuated GSH/Fe3+-induced strand breaks as well as base oxidation. Kolaviron (100 mg/kg bw) administered to rats for one week protected rat liver cells against H2O2-induced formation of strand breaks, ENDO III, and FPG sensitive sites, Fe3+/EDTA/ascorbate-induced malondialdehyde formation and protein oxidation using gamma-glutamyl semialdehyde (GGS) and 2-amino-adipic semialdehyde (AAS) as biomarkers of oxidative damage to proteins. We suggest that kolaviron exhibits protective effects against oxidative damage to molecular targets via scavenging of free radicals and iron binding. Kolaviron may therefore be relevant in the chemoprevention of oxidant-induced genotoxicity and possibly human carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
Tachpyr (N,N'N"-tris(2-pyridylmethyl)-cis,cis-1,3,5-triaminocyclohexane), a novel metal chelator, was previously shown to deplete intracellular iron and exert a cytotoxic effect on cultured bladder cancer cells. Tachpyr binds Fe(II) and readily reduces Fe(III). The iron(II)-Tachpyr chelate undergoes intramolecular oxidative dehydrogenation resulting in mono- and diimino Fe(II) complexes. The present study investigates the redox-activity of the Tachpyr-iron complex to better define the mechanism of Tachpyr's cytotoxicity. Tachpyr's mechanism of cytotoxicity was studied using cell-free solutions, isolated DNA, and cultured mammalian cells by employing UV-VIS spectrophotometry, oximetry, spin-trapping technique, and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry. The results show that: (1) Tachpyr by itself after 24 h of incubation had a cytotoxic effect on cultured cells; (2) fully oxidized Tachpyr had no cytotoxic effects on cultured cells even after 24 h of incubation; (3) Tachpyr protected isolated DNA against H(2)O(2)-induced damage, but not against HX/XO-induced damage; and (4) Tachpyr-Fe(II) chelate slows down but does not block oxidation of Fe(II), allows O*(-)(2)-induced or Tachpyr-induced reduction of Fe(III), and consequently promotes production of *OH through the Haber-Weiss reaction cycle. The results indicate that Tachpyr can protect cells against short-term, metal-mediated damage. However, upon prolonged incubation, Tachpyr exerts cytotoxic effects. Therefore, in addition to iron depletion, low-level oxidative stress, which in part occurs because of redox cycling of the coordinated iron ion, may contribute to the cytotoxic effects of Tachpyr.  相似文献   

7.
The DNA-binding proteins from starved cells (Dps) are a family of proteins induced in microorganisms by oxidative or nutritional stress. Escherichia coli Dps, a structural analog of the 12-subunit Listeria innocua ferritin, binds and protects DNA against oxidative damage mediated by H(2)O(2). Dps is shown to be a Fe-binding and storage protein where Fe(II) oxidation is most effectively accomplished by H(2)O(2) rather than by O(2) as in ferritins. Two Fe(2+) ions bind at each of the 12 putative dinuclear ferroxidase sites (P(Z)) in the protein according to the equation, 2Fe(2+) + P(Z) --> [(Fe(II)(2)-P](FS)(Z+2) + 2H(+). The ferroxidase site (FS) bound iron is then oxidized according to the equation, [(Fe(II)(2)-P](FS)(Z+2) + H(2)O(2) + H(2)O --> [Fe(III)(2)O(2)(OH)-P](FS)(Z-1) + 3H(+), where two Fe(II) are oxidized per H(2)O(2) reduced, thus avoiding hydroxyl radical production through Fenton chemistry. Dps acquires a ferric core of approximately 500 Fe(III) according to the mineralization equation, 2Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) + 2H(2)O --> 2Fe(III)OOH((core)) + 4H(+), again with a 2 Fe(II)/H(2)O(2) stoichiometry. The protein forms a similar ferric core with O(2) as the oxidant, albeit at a slower rate. In the absence of H(2)O(2) and O(2), Dps forms a ferrous core of approximately 400 Fe(II) by the reaction Fe(2+) + H(2)O + Cl(-) --> Fe(II)OHCl((core)) + H(+). The ferrous core also undergoes oxidation with a stoichiometry of 2 Fe(II)/H(2)O(2). Spin trapping experiments demonstrate that Dps greatly attenuates hydroxyl radical production during Fe(II) oxidation by H(2)O(2). These results and in vitro DNA damage assays indicate that the protective effect of Dps on DNA most likely is exerted through a dual action, the physical association with DNA and the ability to nullify the toxic combination of Fe(II) and H(2)O(2). In the latter process a hydrous ferric oxide mineral core is produced within the protein, thus avoiding oxidative damage mediated by Fenton chemistry.  相似文献   

8.
Endogenous antioxidant defense systems are enhanced by various physiological stimuli including sublethal oxidative challenges, which induce tolerance to subsequent lethal oxidative injuries. We sought to evaluate the contributions of catalase and the glutathione system to the adaptive tolerance to H2O2. For this purpose, H9c2 cells were stimulated with 100 microM H2O2, which was the maximal dose at which no significant acute cell damage was observed. Twenty-four hours after stimulation, control and pretreated cells were challenged with a lethal concentration of H2O2 (300 microM). Compared with the control cells, pretreated cells were significantly tolerant of H2O2, with reduced cell lysis and improved survival rate. In pretreated cells, glutathione content increased to 48.20 +/- 6.38 nmol/mg protein versus 27.59 +/- 2.55 nmol/mg protein in control cells, and catalase activity also increased to 30.82 +/- 2.64 versus 15.46 +/- 1.29 units/mg protein in control cells, whereas glutathione peroxidase activity was not affected. Increased glutathione content was attributed to increased gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity, which is known as the rate-limiting enzyme of glutathione synthesis. To elucidate the relative contribution of the glutathione system and catalase to tolerance of H2O2, control and pretreated cells were incubated with specific inhibitors of gamma-glutamyl cysteine synthetase (L-buthionine sulfoximine) or catalase (3-amino-1,2,4-triazole), and challenged with H2O2. Cytoprotection by the low-dose H2O2 pretreatment was almost completely abolished by L-buthionine sulfoximine, while it was preserved after 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole treatment. From these results, it is concluded that both the glutathione system and catalase can be enhanced by H2O2 stimulation, but increased glutathione content rather than catalase activity was operative in the tolerance of lethal oxidative stress.  相似文献   

9.
Deferriferrioxamine B (H3DFB) is a linear trihydroxamic acid siderophore with molecular formula NH2(CH2)5[N(OH)C(O)(CH2)2C(O)NH(CH2)5]2N(OH)C(O)CH3 that forms a kinetically and thermodynamically stable complex with iron(III), ferrioxamine B. Under the conditions of our study (pH = 4.30, 25 degrees C), ferrioxamine B, Fe(HDFB)+, is hexacoordinated and the terminal amine group is protonated. Addition of simple hydroxamic acids, R1C(O)N(OH)R2 (R1 = CH3, R2 = H; R1 = C6H5, R2 = H; R1 = R2 = CH3), to an aqueous solution of ferrioxamine B at pH = 4.30, 25.0 degrees C, I = 2.0, results in the formation of ternary complexes Fe(H2DFB)A+ and Fe(H3DFB)A2+, and tris complexes FeA3, where A- represents the bidendate hydroxamate anion R1C(O)N(O)R2-. The addition of a molar excess of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) to an aqueous solution of ferrioxamine B at pH 4.30 results in a slow exchange of iron(III) to eventually completely form Fe(EDTA)- and H4DFB+. The addition of a hydroxamic acid, HA, catalyzes the rate of this iron exchange reaction: (formula; see text) A four parallel path mechanism is proposed for reaction (1) in which catalysis occurs via transient formation of the ternary and tris complexes Fe(H2DFB) A+, Fe(H3DFB)A2+, and FeA3. Rate and equilibrium constants for the various reaction paths to products were obtained and the influence of hydroxamic acid structure on catalytic efficiency is discussed. The importance of a low energy pathway for iron dissociation from a siderophore complex in influencing microbial iron bio-availability is discussed. The system represented by reaction (1) is proposed as a possible model for in vivo catalyzed release of iron from its siderophore complex at the cell wall or interior, where EDTA represents the intracellular storage depot or membrane-bound carrier and HA represents a low molecular weight hydroxamate-based metabolite capable of catalyzing interligand iron exchange.  相似文献   

10.
The search for effective iron chelating agents was primarily driven by the need to treat iron-loading refractory anemias such as beta-thalassemia major. However, there is a potential for therapeutic use of iron chelators in non-iron overload conditions. Iron can, under appropriate conditions, catalyze the production of toxic oxygen radicals which have been implicated in numerous pathologies and, hence, iron chelators may be useful as inhibitors of free radical-mediated tissue damage. We have developed the orally effective iron chelator pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH) and demonstrated that it inhibits iron-mediated oxyradical formation and their effects (e.g. 2-deoxyribose oxidative degradation, lipid peroxidation and plasmid DNA breaks). In this study we further characterized the mechanism of the antioxidant action of PIH and some of its analogs against *OH formation from the Fenton reaction. Using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) with 5, 5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) as a spin trap for *OH we showed that PIH and salicylaldehyde isonicotinoyl hydrazone (SIH) inhibited Fe(II)-dependent production of *OH from H2O2. Moreover, PIH protected 2-deoxyribose against oxidative degradation induced by Fe(II) and H2O2. The protective effect of PIH against both DMPO hydroxylation and 2-deoxyribose degradation was inversely proportional to Fe(II) concentration. However, PIH did not change the primary products of the Fenton reaction as indicated by EPR experiments on *OH-mediated ethanol radical formation. Furthermore, PIH dramatically enhanced the rate of Fe(II) oxidation to Fe(III) in the presence of oxygen, suggesting that PIH decreases the concentration of Fe(II) available for the Fenton reaction. These results suggest that PIH and SIH deserve further investigation as inhibitors of free-radical mediated tissue damage.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of a recently developed intracellular superoxide dismutase analogue, Fe(II)-N,N,N',N'-tetrakis(2- pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (Fe(II)-TPEN), with reactive oxygen species was investigated under in vitro conditions. The complex catalyzed the dismutation of enzyme- or radiolysis-generated superoxide with the production of H2O2; under steady-state conditions the equilibrium was strongly shifted toward Fe(III)-TPEN. Fe(II)-TPEN reacted with H2O2 to generate hydroxyl radicals in a Fenton reaction. The oxidized Fe(III)-TPEN was readily reduced by ascorbate or glutathione. Given the capacity to produce hydroxyl radicals and the reaction with cellular reductants it seems unlikely that Fe-TPEN may find widespread use as an intracellular superoxide dismutase substitute.  相似文献   

12.
Oxidative DNA damage is involved in mutagenesis, carcinogenesis, aging, radiation effects, and the action of several anticancer drugs. Accumulated evidence indicates that iron may play an important role in those processes. We studied the in vitro effect of low concentrations of Fe(II) alone or Fe(III) in the presence of reducing agents on supercoiled plasmid DNA. The assay, based on the relaxation and linearization of supercoiled DNA, is simple yet sensitive and quantitative. Iron mediated the production of single and double strand breaks in supercoiled DNA. Iron chelators, free radical scavengers, and enzymes of the oxygen reduction pathways modulated the DNA damage. Fe(III)-nitrilotriacetate (NTA) plus either H2O2, L-ascorbate, or L-cysteine produced single and double strand breaks as a function of reductant concentration. A combination of 0.1 microM Fe(III)-NTA and 100 microM L-ascorbate induced detectable DNA strand breaks after 30 min at 24 degrees C. Whereas superoxide dismutase was inhibitory only in systems containing H2O2 as reductant, catalase inhibited DNA breakage in all the iron-mediated systems studied. The effect of scavengers and enzymes indicates that H2O2 and .OH are involved in the DNA damaging process. These reactions may account for the toxicity and carcinogenicity associated with iron overload.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction of chelators and reducing agents is of particular importance in understanding iron-associated pathology since catalytic iron undergoes cyclic reduction and oxidation in vivo. Therefore, we treated plasmid DNA with free or chelated Fe(III) in the presence of biological reductants, and simultaneously measured the number of single strand breaks (SSBs) and oxidative base modification (8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine; 8-OHdG) by quantitative gel electrophoresis and HPLC with electrochemical detection, respectively. Production of SSBs and 8-OHdG was linearly correlated suggesting that these two different lesions share a common chemical mechanism. The levels of both lesions were enhanced when Fe(III) was chelated to citrate or nitrilotriacetic acid. Reducing agents showed different potency in inducing DNA damage catalyzed by chelated iron (L-ascorbate > L-cysteine > H2O2). Chelation increased SSB formation by approximately 8-fold and 8-OHdG production by approximately 4-fold. The ratio of SSB/8-OHdG catalyzed by chelated iron, which is twice as high as by unchelated iron, indicates that chelation affects iron-catalyzed oxidative DNA damage in a specific way favoring strand breakage over base modification. Since iron is mostly chelated in biological systems, the production of genomic and mitochondrial DNA damage, particularly strand breaks, in diseases involving iron overload is likely to be higher than previously predicted from studies using unchelated iron.  相似文献   

14.
Glutathione deficiency has been associated with a number of neurodegenerative diseases including Lou Gehrig's disease, Parkinson's disease, and HIV. A crucial role for glutathione is as a free radical scavenger. Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain is characterized by oxidative stress, manifested by protein oxidation, lipid oxidation, oxidized glutathione, and decreased activity of glutathione S-transferase, among others. Reasoning that elevated levels of endogenous glutathione would offer protection against free radical-induced oxidative stress, rodents were given in vivo injections of N-acetylcysteine (NAC), a known precursor of glutathione, to study the vulnerability of isolated synaptosomal membranes treated with Fe2+/H2O2, a known hydroxyl free radical producer. Protein carbonyls, a marker of protein oxidation, were measured. NAC significantly increased endogenous glutathione levels in cortical synaptosome cytosol (P < 0.01). As reported previously, protein carbonyl levels of the Fe2+/H2O2-treated synaptosomes were significantly higher compared to that of non-treated controls (P < 0.01), consistent with increased oxidative stress. In contrast, protein carbonyl levels in Fe2+/H2O2-treated synaptosomes isolated from NAC-injected animals were not significantly different from saline-injected non-treated controls, demonstrating protection against hydroxyl radical induced oxidative stress. These results are consistent with the notion that methods to increase endogenous glutathione levels in neurodegenerative diseases associated with oxidative stress, including AD, may be promising.  相似文献   

15.
Bacterioferritin (EcBFR) of Escherichia coli is an iron-mineralizing hemoprotein composed of 24 identical subunits, each containing a dinuclear metal-binding site known as the "ferroxidase center." The chemistry of Fe(II) binding and oxidation and Fe(III) hydrolysis using H(2)O(2) as oxidant was studied by electrode oximetry, pH-stat, UV-visible spectrophotometry, and electron paramagnetic resonance spin trapping experiments. Absorption spectroscopy data demonstrate the oxidation of two Fe(II) per H(2)O(2) at the ferroxidase center, thus avoiding hydroxyl radical production via Fenton chemistry. The oxidation reaction with H(2)O(2) corresponds to [Fe(II)(2)-P](Z) + H(2)O(2) --> [Fe(III)(2)O-P](Z) + H(2)O, where [Fe(II)(2)-P](Z) represents a diferrous ferroxidase center complex of the protein P with net charge Z and [Fe(III)(2)O-P](Z) a micro-oxo-bridged diferric ferroxidase complex. The mineralization reaction is given by 2Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) + 2H(2)O --> 2FeOOH((core)) + 4H(+), where two Fe(II) are again oxidized by one H(2)O(2). Hydrogen peroxide is shown to be an intermediate product of dioxygen reduction when O(2) is used as the oxidant in both the ferroxidation and mineralization reactions. Most of the H(2)O(2) produced from O(2) is rapidly consumed in a subsequent ferroxidase reaction with Fe(II) to produce H(2)O. EPR spin trapping experiments show that the presence of EcBFR greatly attenuates the production of hydroxyl radical during Fe(II) oxidation by H(2)O(2), consistent with the ability of the bacterioferritin to facilitate the pairwise oxidation of Fe(II) by H(2)O(2), thus avoiding odd electron reduction products of oxygen and therefore oxidative damage to the protein and cellular components through oxygen radical chemistry.  相似文献   

16.
Iron chelating agents are essential for treating iron overload in diseases such as beta-thalassemia and are potentially useful for therapy in non-iron overload conditions, including free radical mediated tissue injury. Deferoxamine (DFO), the only drug available for iron chelation therapy, has a number of disadvantages (e.g., lack of intestinal absorption and high cost). The tridentate chelator pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH) has high iron chelation efficacy in vitro and in vivo with high selectivity and affinity for iron. It is relatively non-toxic, economical to synthesize and orally effective. We previously demonstrated that submillimolar levels of PIH and some of its analogues inhibit lipid peroxidation, ascorbate oxidation, 2-deoxyribose degradation, plasmid DNA strand breaks and 5,5-dimethylpyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) hydroxylation mediated by either Fe(II) plus H(2)O(2) or Fe(III)-EDTA plus ascorbate. To further characterize the mechanism of PIH action, we studied the effects of PIH and some of its analogues on the degradation of 2-deoxyribose induced by Fe(III)-EDTA plus ascorbate. Compared with hydroxyl radical scavengers (DMSO, salicylate and mannitol), PIH was about two orders of magnitude more active in protecting 2-deoxyribose from degradation, which was comparable with some of its analogues and DFO. Competition experiments using two different concentrations of 2-deoxyribose (15 vs. 1.5 mM) revealed that hydroxyl radical scavengers (at 20 or 60 mM) were significantly less effective in preventing degradation of 2-deoxyribose at 15 mM than 2-deoxyribose at 1.5 mM. In contrast, 400 microM PIH was equally effective in preventing degradation of both 15 mM and 1.5 mM 2-deoxyribose. At a fixed Fe(III) concentration, increasing the concentration of ligands (either EDTA or NTA) caused a significant reduction in the protective effect of PIH towards 2-deoxyribose degradation. We also observed that PIH and DFO prevent 2-deoxyribose degradation induced by hypoxanthine, xanthine oxidase and Fe(III)-EDTA. The efficacy of PIH or DFO was inversely related to the EDTA concentration. Taken together, these results indicate that PIH (and its analogues) works by a mechanism different than the hydroxyl radical scavengers. It is likely that PIH removes Fe(III) from the chelates (either Fe(III)-EDTA or Fe(III)-NTA) and forms a Fe(III)-PIH(2) complex that does not catalyze oxyradical formation.  相似文献   

17.
Kang JH 《BMB reports》2010,43(10):683-687
Previous studies have shown that one of the primary causes of increased iron content in the brain may be the release of excess iron from intracellular iron storage molecules such as ferritin. Free iron generates ROS that cause oxidative cell damage. Carnosine and related compounds such as endogenous histidine dipetides have antioxidant activities. We have investigated the protective effects of carnosine and homocarnosine against oxidative damage of DNA induced by reaction of ferritin with H(2)O(2). The results show that carnosine and homocarnosine prevented ferritin/H(2)O(2)-mediated DNA strand breakage. These compounds effectively inhibited ferritin/H(2)O(2)-mediated hydroxyl radical generation and decreased the mutagenicity of DNA induced by the ferritin÷H(2)O(2) reaction. Our results suggest that carnosine and related compounds might have antioxidant effects on DNA under pathophysiological conditions leading to degenerative damage such as neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

18.
Zhao G  Arosio P  Chasteen ND 《Biochemistry》2006,45(10):3429-3436
Overexpression of human H-chain ferritin (HuHF) is known to impart a degree of protection to cells against oxidative stress and the associated damage to DNA and other cellular components. However, whether this protective activity resides in the protein's ability to inhibit Fenton chemistry as found for Dps proteins has never been established. Such inhibition does not occur with the related mitochondrial ferritin which displays much of the same iron chemistry as HuHF, including an Fe(II)/H(2)O(2) oxidation stoichiometry of approximately 2:1. In the present study, the ability of HuHF to attenuate hydroxyl radical production by the Fenton reaction (Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) --> Fe(3+) + OH(-) + *OH) was examined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping methods. The data demonstrate that the presence of wild-type HuHF during Fe(2+) oxidation by H(2)O(2) greatly decreases the amount of .OH radical produced from Fenton chemistry whereas the ferroxidase site mutant 222 (H62K + H65G) and human L-chain ferritin (HuLF) lack this activity. HuHF catalyzes the pairwise oxidation of Fe(2+) by the detoxification reaction [2Fe(2+) + H(2)O(2) + 2H(2)O --> 2Fe(O)OH(core) + 4H(+)] that occurs at the ferroxidase site of the protein, thereby preventing the production of hydroxyl radical. The small amount of *OH radical that is produced in the presence of ferritin (相似文献   

19.
The reduction of dioxygen by cellobiose oxidase leads to accumulation of H2O2, with either cellobiose or microcrystalline cellulose as electron donor. Cellobiose oxidase will also reduce many Fe(III) complexes, including Fe(III) acetate. Many Fe(II) complexes react with H2O2 to produce hydroxyl radicals or a similarly reactive species in the Fenton reaction as shown: H2O2 + Fe2+----HO. + HO- + Fe3+. The hydroxylation of salicylic acid to 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid and 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid is a standard test for hydroxyl radicals. Hydroxylation was observed in acetate buffer (pH 4.0), both with Fe(II) plus H2O2 and with cellobiose oxidase plus cellobiose, O2 and Fe(III). The hydroxylation was suppressed by addition of catalase or the absence of iron [Fe(II) or Fe(III) as appropriate]. Another test for hydroxyl radicals is the conversion of deoxyribose to malondialdehyde; this gave positive results under similar conditions. Further experiments used an O2 electrode. Addition of H2O2 to Fe(II) acetate (pH 4.0) or Fe(II) phosphate (pH 2.8) in the absence of enzyme led to a pulse of O2 uptake, as expected from production of hydroxyl radicals as shown: RH+HO.----R. + H2O; R. + O2----RO2.----products. With phosphate (pH 2.8) or 10 mM acetate (pH 4.0), the O2 uptake pulse was increased by Avicel, suggesting that the Avicel was being damaged. Oxygen uptake was monitored for mixtures of Avicel (5 g.1-1), cellobiose oxidase, O2 and Fe(III) (30 microM). An addition of catalase after 20-30 min indicated very little accumulation of H2O2, but caused a 70% inhibition of the O2 uptake rate. This was observed with either phosphate (pH 2.8) or 10 mM acetate (pH 4.0) as buffer, and is further evidence that oxidative damage had been taking place, until the Fenton reaction was suppressed by catalase. A separate binding study established that with 10 mM acetate as buffer, almost all (98%) of the Fe(III) would have been bound to the Avicel. In the presence of Fe(III), cellobiose oxidase could provide a biological method for disrupting the crystalline structure of cellulose.  相似文献   

20.
"Activated bleomycin" is an oxygenated iron drug complex which embodies the drug's DNA-cleaving activity. This activity is exercised on DNA, if present, but if DNA is absent, the drug itself is inactivated. Hyperfine interactions in the EPR spectra of activated bleomycin prepared with 57Fe(II) and 17O2 demonstrate the presence of iron as Fe(III) and of bound oxygen originating in dioxygen. Bleomycin can also be activated with Fe(III) and either H2O2 or ethyl hydroperoxide. These latter reactions do not produce a ferrous intermediate nor do they require O2. But O2 is required for the reaction of activated bleomycin with DNA to yield the malondialdehyde-like chromogens used to monitor DNA degradation. The attack on DNA is quantitatively concurrent with the decay of activated bleomycin, however generated.  相似文献   

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