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1.
Ergothioneine is a product of plant origin that accumulates in animal tissues. Its suggested ability to act as an antioxidant has been evaluated. Ergothioneine is a powerful scavenger of hydroxyl radicals (.OH) and an inhibitor of iron or copper ion-dependent generation of .OH from hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). It is also an inhibitor of copper ion-dependent oxidation of oxyhaemoglobin, and of arachidonic acid peroxidation promoted by mixtures of myoglobin (or haemoglobin) and H2O2. Ergothioneine is a powerful scavenger of hypochlorous acid, being able to protect alpha 1-antiproteinase against inactivation by this molecule. By contrast, it does not react rapidly with superoxide (O2-) or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and it does not inhibit microsomal lipid peroxidation in the presence of iron ions. Overall, our results show that ergothioneine at the concentrations present in vivo could act as an antioxidant.  相似文献   

2.
The reaction of human myeloperoxidase with its product, hypochlorous acid was investigated using both rapid-scan spectrophotometry and the stopped-flow technique. In the reaction of myeloperoxidase with hypochlorous acid a primary compound is found with properties similar to that of compound I and which is converted into compound II. The primary reaction is strongly pH-dependent. At pH 7.2 the reaction is too fast to be measured but at higher pH values it is possible to determine the apparent second-order rate constant. Its value decreases to about 2 x 10(7) M-1.s-1 at pH 8.3 and to 2.3 (+/- 0.4) x 10(6) M-1.s-1 at pH 9.2, respectively. The dissociation constant for the formation of the primary compound is 25.7 (+/- 15.3) microM at pH 9.2 and about 2.5 microM at pH 8.3. The apparent second-order rate constant for the formation of compound II is hardly affected by pH and varies between 2 to 5 x 10(4) M-1.s-1 at pH 10.2 and pH 8.3, respectively. Reaction of myeloperoxidase with hypochlorous acid also resulted in irreversible partial bleaching of the chromophore. Chloride, which is a substrate of the enzyme not only protects myeloperoxidase against bleaching by hypochlorous acid but also competitively inhibits the binding of hypochlorous acid to myeloperoxidase, a process which also has been observed in the reaction with hydrogen peroxide. It is concluded that hypochlorous acid binds at the heme iron to form compound I.  相似文献   

3.
Carnosine, homocarnosine and anserine have been proposed to act as antioxidants in vivo. Our studies show that all three compounds are good scavengers of the hydroxyl radical (.OH) but that none of them can react with superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide or hypochlorous acid at biologically significant rates. None of them can bind iron ions in ways that interfere with 'site-specific' iron-dependent radical damage to the sugar deoxyribose, nor can they restrict the availability of Cu2+ to phenanthroline. Homocarnosine has no effect on iron ion-dependent lipid peroxidation; carnosine and anserine have weak inhibitory effects when used at high concentrations in some (but not all) assay systems. However, the ability of these compounds to interfere with a commonly used version of the thiobarbituric acid (TBA) test may have led to an overestimate of their ability to inhibit lipid peroxidation in some previous studies. By contrast, histidine stimulated iron ion-dependent lipid peroxidation. It is concluded that, because of the high concentrations present in vivo, carnosine and anserine could conceivably act as physiological antioxidants by scavenging .OH, but that they do not have a broad spectrum of antioxidant activity, and their ability to inhibit lipid peroxidation is not well established. It may be that they have a function other than antioxidant protection (e.g. buffering), but that they are safer to accumulate than histidine, which has a marked pro-oxidant action upon iron ion-dependent lipid peroxidation. The inability of homocarnosine to react with HOCl, interfere with the TBA test or affect lipid peroxidation systems in the same way as carnosine is surprising in view of the apparent structural similarity between these two molecules.  相似文献   

4.
The reactions between hydrogen peroxide and hemeproteins have been coupled to the oxidation of dihydroriboflavin so as to provide a simple method for measuring the rate constant of hemeprotein peroxidation. Dihydroriboflavin rapidly reduces the higher oxidation states of iron and the hydroxy radicals which are the products of the hemeprotein/hydrogen peroxide reaction. The rapid reduction of these highly reactive compounds prevents the hemeproteins from undergoing irreversible chemical modifications and thus allows the kinetics of peroxidation to be studied. The rate constants at pH 7.2 and 23 degrees C for the peroxidation of horseradish peroxidase, myoglobin, and ferrocytochrome c are found to be 6.2 x 10(6), 7.5 x 10(4), and 8 x 10(3)M-1s-1, respectively. These studies suggest that reduced riboflavin might efficiently protect cells from oxidative damage such as that occurring in inflammation and reperfusion injury.  相似文献   

5.
Hypochlorous acid reacts with the model iron(II) complex, ferrocyanide (Fe(CN)64-) in aqueous solution with the rate constant 220 ± 15 dm3 mol-1 s-1. Free hydroxyl radicals are formed in this reaction in 27% yield as shown by the hydroxylation of benzoate to give a product distribution identical to that of free (radiolytically generated) hydroxyl radicals. This reaction is three orders of magnitude faster than the analogous reaction involving hydrogen peroxide (the Fenton reaction), suggesting that the hypochlorous acid generated by activated neutrophils may be a source of hydroxyl radicals.  相似文献   

6.
N-substituted dehydroalanines react with and scavenge oxygen radicals. One of those compounds, the para-methoxyphenylacetyl dehydroalanine derivative, indexed as AD-5, inhibits the reduction of ferricytochrome c by superoxide anion (O2-.). It can also inhibit the oxidation of linolenic acid, another chemical process, which is mediated by hydroxyl radical (HO.). Furthermore, microsomal lipid peroxidation induced by iron salts was also inhibited by AD 5, but with a different degree of efficacy. In fact, lipid peroxidation initiated by a ferrous-oxygen complex (as in iron/NADPH-dependent peroxidation) was inhibited by AD 5 in a range of concentration of 2-4 mM. On the contrary, iron/NADPH-independent lipid peroxidation, where alkoxy radicals (RO.) have principally been involved, was inhibited in a range of concentration of 6-10 mM. The ESR studies by using the spin trapping agent DMPO, show that AD-5 reacts with HO. with a second order constant of 2.8 X 10(9)-4.5 X 10(9) M-1 s-1.  相似文献   

7.
Peroxynitrite anion (ONOO-) is a potent oxidant that mediates oxidation of both nonprotein and protein sulfhydryls. Endothelial cells, macrophages, and neutrophils can generate superoxide as well as nitric oxide, leading to the production of peroxynitrite anion in vivo. Apparent second order rate constants were 5,900 M-1.s-1 and 2,600-2,800 M-1.s-1 for the reaction of peroxynitrite anion with free cysteine and the single thiol of albumin, respectively, at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. These rate constants are 3 orders of magnitude greater than the corresponding rate constants for the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with sulfhydryls at pH 7.4. Unlike hydrogen peroxide, which oxidizes thiolate anion, peroxynitrite anion reacts preferentially with the undissociated form of the thiol group. Peroxynitrite oxidizes cysteine to cystine and the bovine serum albumin thiol group to an arsenite nonreducible product, suggesting oxidation beyond sulfenic acid. Peroxynitrous acid was a less effective thiol-oxidizing agent than its anion, with oxidation presumably mediated by the decomposition products, hydroxyl radical and nitrogen dioxide. The reactive peroxynitrite anion may exert cytotoxic effects in part by oxidizing tissue sulfhydryls.  相似文献   

8.
When neutrophils ingest bacteria, they discharge superoxide and myeloperoxidase into phagosomes. Both are essential for killing of the phagocytosed micro-organisms. It is generally accepted that superoxide is a precursor of hydrogen peroxide which myeloperoxidase uses to oxidize chloride to hypochlorous acid. Previously, we demonstrated that superoxide modulates the chlorination activity of myeloperoxidase by reacting with its ferric and compound II redox states. In this investigation we used pulse radiolysis to determine kinetic parameters of superoxide reacting with redox forms of myeloperoxidase and used these data in a steady-state kinetic analysis. We provide evidence that superoxide reacts with compound I and compound III. Our estimates of the rate constants for the reaction of superoxide with compound I, compound II, and compound III are 5 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, 5.5 +/- 0.4 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, and 1.3 +/- 0.2 x 10(5) M-1 s-1, respectively. These reactions define new activities for myeloperoxidase. It will act as a superoxide dismutase when superoxide reacts consecutively with ferric myeloperoxidase and compound III. It will also act as a superoxidase by using hydrogen peroxide to oxidize superoxide via compound I and compound II. The favorable kinetics of these reactions indicate that, within the confines of a phagosome, superoxide will react with myeloperoxidase and affect the reactions it will catalyze. These interactions of superoxide and myeloperoxidase will have a major influence on the way neutrophils use oxygen to kill bacteria. Consequently, superoxide should be viewed as a cosubstrate that myeloperoxidase uses to elicit bacterial killing.  相似文献   

9.
K Yusa  K Shikama 《Biochemistry》1987,26(21):6684-6688
Hydrogen peroxide, one of the potent oxidants in muscle tissues, can induce very rapid oxidation of oxymyoglobin (MbO2) to metmyoglobin (metMb) with an apparent rate constant of 7.5 X 10(4) h-1 M-1 (i.e., 20.8 s-1 M-1) over the wide pH range of 5.5-10.2 in 0.1 M buffer at 25 degrees C. Its molecular mechanism, however, is quite different from that of the autoxidation of MbO2 to metMb. Kinetic analysis has revealed that the hydrogen peroxide oxidation proceeds through the formation of ferryl-Mb(IV) from deoxy-Mb(II), which is in equilibrium with MbO2, by a two-equivalent oxidation with H2O2. Once the ferryl species is formed, it reacts rapidly with another deoxy-Mb(II) in a bimolecular fashion so as to yield 2 mol of metMb(III). Under physiological conditions, the rate-determining step was the oxidation of the deoxy species by H2O2, its rate constant being estimated to be on the order of 3.6 X 10(3) s-1 M-1 at 25 degrees C. These findings leads us to the view that a good supply of dioxygen provides rather an important defense against the oxidation of myoglobin with hydrogen peroxide in cardiac and skeletal muscle tissues.  相似文献   

10.
To help settle controversy as to whether the chelating agent diethylenetriaminepentaacetate (DTPA) supports or prevents hydroxyl radical production by superoxide/hydrogen peroxide systems, we have reinvestigated the question by spectroscopic, kinetic, and thermodynamic analyses. Potassium superoxide in DMSO was found to reduce Fe(III)DTPA. The rate constant for autoxidation of Fe(II)DTPA was found (by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy) to be 3.10 M-1 s-1, which leads to a predicted rate constant for reduction of Fe(III)DTPA by superoxide of 5.9 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 in aqueous solution. This reduction is a necessary requirement for catalytic production of hydroxyl radicals via the Fenton reaction and is confirmed by spin-trapping experiments using DMPO. In the presence of Fe(III)DTPA, the xanthine/xanthine oxidase system generates hydroxyl radicals. The reaction is inhibited by both superoxide dismutase and catalase (indicating that both superoxide and hydrogen peroxide are required for generation of HO.). The generation of hydroxyl radicals (rather than oxidation side-products of DMPO and DMPO adducts) is attested to by the trapping of alpha-hydroxethyl radicals in the presence of 9% ethanol. Generation of HO. upon reaction of H2O2 with Fe(II)DTPA (the Fenton reaction) can be inhibited by catalase, but not superoxide dismutase. The data strongly indicate that iron-DTPA can catalyze the Haber-Weiss reaction.  相似文献   

11.
The nitroxide tempol (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl piperidine-1-oxyl) reduces tissue injury in animal models of inflammation by mechanisms that are not completely understood. MPO (myeloperoxidase), which plays a fundamental role in oxidant production by neutrophils, is an important target for anti-inflammatory action. By amplifying the oxidative potential of H2O2, MPO produces hypochlorous acid and radicals through the oxidizing intermediates MPO-I [MPO-porphyrin?+-Fe(IV)=O] and MPO-II [MPO-porphyrin-Fe(IV)=O]. Previously, we reported that tempol reacts with MPO-I and MPO-II with second-order rate constants similar to those of tyrosine. However, we noticed that tempol inhibits the chlorinating activity of MPO, in contrast with tyrosine. Thus we studied the inhibition of MPO-mediated taurine chlorination by tempol at pH 7.4 and re-determined the kinetic constants of the reactions of tempol with MPO-I (k=3.5×105 M-1·s-1) and MPO-II, the kinetics of which indicated a binding interaction (K=2.0×10-5 M; k=3.6×10-2 s-1). Also, we showed that tempol reacts extremely slowly with hypochlorous acid (k=0.29 and 0.054 M-1·s-1 at pH 5.4 and 7.4 respectively). The results demonstrated that tempol acts mostly as a reversible inhibitor of MPO by trapping it as MPO-II and the MPO-II-tempol complex, which are not within the chlorinating cycle. After turnover, a minor fraction of MPO is irreversibly inactivated, probably due to its reaction with the oxammonium cation resulting from tempol oxidation. Kinetic modelling indicated that taurine reacts with enzyme-bound hypochlorous acid. Our investigation complements a comprehensive study reported while the present study was underway  相似文献   

12.
It has been suggested that taurine, hypotaurine and their metabolic precursors (cysteic acid, cysteamine and cysteinesulphinic acid) might act as antioxidants in vivo. The rates of their reactions with the biologically important oxidants hydroxyl radical (.OH), superoxide radical (O2.-), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hypochlorous acid (HOCl) were studied. Their ability to inhibit iron-ion-dependent formation of .OH from H2O2 by chelating iron ions was also tested. Taurine does not react rapidly with O2.-, H2O2 or .OH, and the product of its reaction with HOCl is still sufficiently oxidizing to inactivate alpha 1-antiproteinase. Thus it seems unlikely that taurine functions as an antioxidant in vivo. Cysteic acid is also poorly reactive to the above oxidizing species. By contrast, hypotaurine is an excellent scavenger of .OH and HOCl and can interfere with iron-ion-dependent formation of .OH, although no reaction with O2.- or H2O2 could be detected within the limits of our assay techniques. Cysteamine is an excellent scavenger of .OH and HOCl; it also reacts with H2O2, but no reaction with O2.- could be measured within the limits of our assay techniques. It is concluded that cysteamine and hypotaurine are far more likely to act as antioxidants in vivo than is taurine, provided that they are present in sufficient concentration at sites of oxidant generation.  相似文献   

13.
K L Kim  D S Kang  L B Vitello  J E Erman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(39):9150-9159
The steady-state kinetics of the cytochrome c peroxidase catalyzed oxidation of horse heart ferrocytochrome c by hydrogen peroxide have been studied at both pH 7.0 and pH 7.5 as a function of ionic strength. Plots of the initial velocity versus hydrogen peroxide concentration at fixed cytochrome c are hyperbolic. The limiting slope at low hydrogen peroxide give apparent bimolecular rate constants for the cytochrome c peroxidase-hydrogen peroxide reaction identical with those determined directly by stopped-flow techniques. Plots of the initial velocity versus cytochrome c concentration at saturating hydrogen peroxide (200 microM) are nonhyperbolic. The rate expression requires squared terms in cytochrome c concentration. The maximum turnover rate of the enzyme is independent of ionic strength, with values of 470 +/- 50 s-1 and 290 +/- 30 s-1 at pH 7.0 and 7.5, respectively. The limiting slope of velocity versus cytochrome c concentration plots provides a lower limit for the association rate constant between cytochrome c and the oxidized intermediates of cytochrome c peroxidase. The limiting slope varies from 10(6) M-1 s-1 at 300 mM ionic strength to 10(8) M-1 s-1 at 20 mM ionic strength and extrapolates to 5 x 10(8) M-1 s-1 at zero ionic strength. The data are discussed in terms of both a two-binding-site mechanism and a single-binding-site, multiple-pathway mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Streptokinase reacts very rapidly with human plasmin (rate constant 5.4 S 10(7) M-1 s-1) forming a 1:1 stoichiometric complex which has a dissociation constant of 5 X 10(-11) M. This plasmin-streptokinase complex is 10(5) times less reactive towards alpha 2-antiplasmin than plasmin, the inhibition rate constant being 1.4 X 10(2) M-1 s-1. The loss of reactivity of the streptokinase-plasmin complex towards alpha 2-antiplasmin is independent of the lysine binding sites in plasmin since low-Mr plasmin, which lacks these sites, and plasmin in which the sites have been blocked by 6-aminohexanoic acid, are both equally unreactive towards alpha 2-antiplasmin on reaction with streptokinase. The plasmin-streptokinase complex binds to Sepharose-lysine and Sepharose-fibrin monomer in the same fashion as free plasmin, showing that the lysine binding sites are fully exposed in the complex. Bovine plasmin is rapidly inhibited by human alpha 2-antiplasmin (k1 = 1.6 X 10(6) M-1 s-1) and similarly loses reactivity towards the inhibitor on complex formation with streptokinase (50% binding at 0.4 microM streptokinase).  相似文献   

15.
Kettle AJ  Winterbourn CC 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10204-10212
The predominant physiological activity of myeloperoxidase is to convert hydrogen peroxide and chloride to hypochlorous acid. However, this neutrophil enzyme also degrades hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water. We have undertaken a kinetic analysis of this reaction to clarify its mechanism. When myeloperoxidase was added to hydrogen peroxide in the absence of reducing substrates, there was an initial burst phase of hydrogen peroxide consumption followed by a slow steady state loss. The kinetics of hydrogen peroxide loss were precisely mirrored by the kinetics of oxygen production. Two mols of hydrogen peroxide gave rise to 1 mol of oxygen. With 100 microM hydrogen peroxide and 6 mM chloride, half of the hydrogen peroxide was converted to hypochlorous acid and the remainder to oxygen. Superoxide and tyrosine enhanced the steady-state loss of hydrogen peroxide in the absence of chloride. We propose that hydrogen peroxide reacts with the ferric enzyme to form compound I, which in turn reacts with another molecule of hydrogen peroxide to regenerate the native enzyme and liberate oxygen. The rate constant for the two-electron reduction of compound I by hydrogen peroxide was determined to be 2 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1). The burst phase occurs because hydrogen peroxide and endogenous donors are able to slowly reduce compound I to compound II, which accumulates and retards the loss of hydrogen peroxide. Superoxide and tyrosine drive the catalase activity because they reduce compound II back to the native enzyme. The two-electron oxidation of hydrogen peroxide by compound I should be considered when interpreting mechanistic studies of myeloperoxidase and may influence the physiological activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
The angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, captopril and the nucleotide enhancing agent, acadesine, protect myocardial tissue from ischaemia/reperfusion-induced injury. Although both drugs have well established, independent mechanisms of cardiac protection, they may also have antioxidant activity which could contribute to their beneficial action. In this study we have examined the antioxidant activity of captopril and acadesine by examining their ability to scavenge ABTS radicals, formed from the interaction of ferryl metmyoglobin with phenothiazine in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. For comparison, we compared these results to those obtained for a range of other drugs commonly used for the treatment of cardiovascular disorders. These included verapamil (arrhythmia), isosorbide dinitrate (angina), atenolol (hypertension) and enalapril (congestive heart failure). The antioxidant properties of these drugs were then compared to the well characterised antioxidants, Trolox (a water soluble vitamin E analogue), ascorbate and glutathione. Captopril and acadesine were both shown to be efficient scavengers of ABTS radicals, importantly at drug concentrations expected to be found in vivo. These data confirm that the antioxidant potential of captopril and acadesine may be an important component of their mechanism of action, with both drugs probably protecting the myocardium against oxygen derived free radicals during ischaemia/reperfusion.  相似文献   

17.
Thiourea and superoxide dismutase were effective antidotes to paraquat toxicity in an HL60 cell culture system, whereas other hydroxyl scavengers were ineffective. The efficacy of thioureas was not due to blockage of intracellular paraquat uptake, inhibition of NADPH-P-450 reductase, or reaction with the paraquat radical. Thiourea also competitively inhibited the reduction of cytochrome c by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase superoxide-generating system, and the release of iron from ferritin by superoxide radicals. The reaction of superoxide with thiourea produced a sulfhydryl compound distinct from products formed by hydrogen peroxide or hydroxyl radicals. Spectrophotometric and chromatographic studies indicated the carbon-sulfide double bond was converted to a sulfhydryl group which reacted with Ellman's reagent. Additional confirmatory evidence for the sulfhydryl compound was obtained with carbon-13 NMR and mass spectroscopies. Thus, thioureas are direct scavengers of superoxide radicals as well as hydroxyl radicals and hydrogen peroxide. The rate constant for the reduction of thiourea by superoxide was estimated at 1.1 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. The implication of this finding on free radical studies, the mechanism of paraquat toxicity, and the metabolism of thioureas is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Using pulse radiolysis, the rate constant for the reaction of ferric myeloperoxidase with O2- to give compound III was measured at pH 7.8, and values of 2.1.10(6) M-1.s-1 for equine ferric myeloperoxidase and 1.1.10(6) M-1.s-1 for human ferric myeloperoxidase were obtained. Under the same conditions, the rate constant for the reaction of human ferric myeloperoxidase with H2O2 to give compound I was 3.1.10(7) M-1.s-1. Our results indicate that although the reaction of ferric myeloperoxidase with O2- is an order of magnitude slower than with H2O2, the former reaction is sufficiently rapid to influence myeloperoxidase-dependent production of hypochlorous acid by stimulated neutrophils.  相似文献   

19.
The reaction between native myeloperoxidase and hydrogen peroxide, yielding Compound II, was investigated using the stopped-flow technique. The pH dependence of the apparent second-order rate constant showed the existence of a protonatable group on the enzyme with a pKa of 4.9. This group is ascribed to the distal histidine imidazole, which must be deprotonated to enable the reaction of Compound I with hydrogen peroxidase to take place. The rate constant for the formation of Compound II by hydrogen peroxide was 3.5.10(4) M-1.s-1. During the reaction of myeloperoxidase with H2O2, rapid reduction of added cytochrome c was observed. This reduction was inhibitable by superoxide dismutase, and this demonstrates that superoxide anion radicals are generated. When potassium ferrocyanide was used as an electron donor to generate Compound II from Compound I, the pH dependence of the apparent second-order rate constant indicated involvement of a group with a pKa of 4.5. However, with ferrocyanide as an electron donor, protonation of the group was necessary to enable the reaction to take place. The rate constant for the generation of Compound II by ferrocyanide was 1.6.10(7) M-1.s-1. We also investigated the reaction of Compound II with hydrogen peroxide, yielding Compound III. Formation of Compound III (k = 50 M-1.s-1) proceeded via two different pathways, one of which was inhibitable by tetranitromethane. We further investigated the stability of Compound II and Compound III as a function of pH, ionic strength and enzyme concentration. The half-life values of both Compound II and Compound III were independent of the enzyme concentration and ionic strength. The half-life value of Compound III was pH-dependent, showing a decreasing stability with increasing pH, whereas the stability of Compound II was independent of pH over the range 3-11.  相似文献   

20.
Using ESR spin-trapping techniques with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO), we confirmed the 1:1 stoichiometry for the formation of hydroxyl radicals with Fe2+ in the Fenton reaction under experimental conditions wherein [H2O2] is 90 microM and [Fe2+] is very low, 1 microM or less. The stoichiometry decreased markedly as the Fe2+ concentration was increased. The efficiency of hydroxyl radical generation varied with the nature of the iron chelators used and increased in the order of phosphate alone approximately ADP less than EDTA less than diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DETAPAC). The second order rate constant for the Fenton reaction was measured to be 2.0 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 for phosphate alone, 8.2 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 for ADP, 1.4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 for EDTA, and 4.1 x 10(2) M-1 s-1 for DETAPAC. Measuring the radicals formed as spins trapped in the presence of ethanol, we estimated the amount of total oxidizing intermediates formed in the Fenton reaction, which we concluded consists of hydroxyl radicals and an iron species. The oxidizing species of iron which might be assigned as ferryl, FeO2+, or Fe(IV) = O was generated effectively in the presence of ADP even at low Fe2+ concentrations. In general, as the Fe2+ concentration was increased, the ferryl species predominated over the hydroxyl radical except for the case of Fe(II)-DETAPAC, which generated only hydroxyl radicals as the oxidizing species. Three possible pathways are proposed for the Fenton reaction, the dominant ones depending very much on the nature of the iron chelator being used.  相似文献   

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