tempo has been researched along with nitroxyl* in 60 studies
1 review(s) available for tempo and nitroxyl
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Oxidized cellulose--survey of the most recent achievements.
The functionalization and particularly the oxidation of cellulose is an intriguing and challenging topic due to the presence of multiple reactive sites, which can undergo specific reactions. The variety of the oxidizing agents used to improve the selectivity and yields of these transformations is illustrated by the steadily growing of the number of publications and patents reported. This paper is focused on the most selective agents for cellulose oxidations, i.e., sodium periodate and stable or non persistent nitroxyl radicals, emphasizing on the most recent developments reported so far. Topics: Aldehydes; Carbon Dioxide; Cellulose, Oxidized; Cyclic N-Oxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Nitrogen Dioxide; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen; Phthalimides; Polymerization | 2013 |
59 other study(ies) available for tempo and nitroxyl
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Substituent effects of the phenyl ring at different positions from the α-carbon of TEMPO-type nitroxide.
Nitroxides are known to undergo oxidation, reduction, and radical scavenging reactions due to their stable radicals. Nitroxides have a wide range of applications due to their reactivities, including radical detecting probes and catalysts. Because nitroxides are easily reduced by ascorbate, a reducing agent, in biological applications, it is critical to control their reactivity to use them as a probe to trace the target reaction. On the other hand, the phenyl group, which is present in many functional organic molecules, is useful for controlling the electronic and steric effects. However, there has been few systematic studies on the substituent effects of TEMPO-type nitroxides with phenyl rings in the vicinity of a radical (α-position). In this study, we synthesized three nitroxides with a phenyl group at the α-position of a TEMPO-type nitroxide and tested their redox properties. The results showed that the reduction reactivity and redox potential differed depending on the position of the phenyl group, implying that the phenyl group one carbon away from the α-carbon of the N-O moiety increases the degree of steric hindrance. This finding is expected to be the basis for the development of functional nitroxides. Topics: Carbon; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Reducing Agents | 2022 |
Novel neuroprotection using antioxidant nanoparticles in a mouse model of head trauma.
Free radicals and reactive oxygen species are related to deteriorating pathological conditions after head trauma because of their secondary effects. 2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO) scavenges free radicals; however, this molecule is also toxic. Here, we have evaluated the neuroprotective effect of antioxidant nanoparticles, which consisted of a novel core-shell type nanoparticle containing 4-amino-TEMPO, that is, redox-active nitroxide radical-containing nanoparticles (RNPs).. Institute of Cancer Research mice were subjected to a head-impact procedure, randomly divided into four groups and intravenously (3 mg/kg) administered phosphate-buffered saline, TEMPO, micelle (a self-assembling block copolymer micelle without a TEMPO moiety), or RNP through the tail vein immediately thereafter and intraperitoneally at days 1, 3, and 5 after traumatic brain injury (TBI). The RNP distribution was detected by rhodamine labeling. Cognitive behavior was assessed using the neurological severity score and a rotarod test at days 1, 3, and 7 following TBI, and contusion volume was measured at day 7 after TBI. Free radical-scavenging capacity was analyzed by electron paramagnetic resonance on day 1 after TBI, and immunostaining was used to observe mobilization of microglia (Iba-1) and rescued neuronal cells (NeuN).. Redox-active nitroxide radical-containing nanoparticle was detected in the microvessels around the injured area in the brain. Cognitive behavior assessment was significantly better, and contusion volume was significantly smaller in the RNP group compared with the other groups. Superoxide anion scavenging capacity was significantly higher in the RNP group, and neuronal loss was significantly suppressed around the injured area at day 7 after TBI. Furthermore, in the RNP group, neurodegenerative microglia production was suppressed at days 3 and 7 after TBI, whereas neuroprotective microglia production was higher at day 7 after TBI.. The RNP administration after TBI improved cognitive behavior and reduced contusion volume by improving reactive oxygen species scavenging capacity. Therefore, RNP may have a neuroprotective effect after TBI.. Therapeutic test. Topics: Administration, Intravenous; Animals; Behavior, Animal; Brain Injuries, Traumatic; Cognition; Cyclic N-Oxides; Disease Models, Animal; Free Radical Scavengers; Humans; Male; Mice; Nanoparticles; Neuroprotective Agents; Nitrogen Oxides; Reactive Oxygen Species | 2020 |
To be a radical or not to be one? The fate of the stable nitroxide radical TEMPO [(2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidin-1-yl)oxyl] undergoing plasma polymerization into thin-film coatings.
The stable nitroxide radical TEMPO [(2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidin-1-yl)oxyl] has a multitude of applications in fields ranging from energy storage to biomedical applications and many more. However, to date, the processes of incorporating nitroxide radicals into thin-film coatings are laborious and not cost-effective, which hinders their wider use in many applications. In contrast, the authors have recently demonstrated the facile method of plasma polymerization of TEMPO into thin-film coatings that retain the stable nitroxide radicals. In this work, we are using three types of mass spectroscopic methods (plasma-mass spectrometry, time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, and high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry) and electron spin resonance to track the fate of the TEMPO molecule from monomer flask through the plasma and inside the resulting coatings. The results of this study demonstrate that TEMPO is a versatile monomer that can be used across different plasma reactors and reliably retain the stable nitroxide radical in the resulting thin-film coatings if certain process conditions are observed, namely, higher process pressures and lower powers. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Ions; Nitrogen Oxides; Plasma Gases; Polymerization; Principal Component Analysis | 2020 |
Plasma polymerization of (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-yl)oxyl in a collisional, capacitively coupled radio frequency discharge.
Plasma polymerization of (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-yl)oxyl (TEMPO) yields thin films containing stable nitroxide radicals that have properties analogous to that of nitric oxide (NO) without short lifetimes. This property gives TEMPO films a wide variety of potential applications. Typically, control of the final film chemistry is difficult and the plasma discharge conditions must be tailored to in order to maximize the retention of these nitroxide groups during the polymerization and deposition process. In this study, plasma diagnostics and surface analysis of the deposited films were carried out to determine the optimal plasma conditions for the retention of nitroxide groups. These techniques included energy-resolved mass spectrometry, heated planar probe ion current measurements, deposition rate measurements, and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Results show that operating the plasma with a combination of low input powers and high pressures produces a collisional discharge in which fragmentation of the TEMPO molecule is suppressed, leading to good retention of nitroxide groups. Ion energy distribution functions and quartz crystal microbalance measurements support the soft landing theory of ion deposition on the substrate within this γ-mode, in which the flux of low energy, soft landed ions form the primary contribution to film growth. XPS analysis of deposited polymers shows 75.7% retention of N-O groups in the polymer films deposited in a 25 Pa 5 W discharge. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Mass Spectrometry; Nitrogen Oxides; Photoelectron Spectroscopy; Plasma Gases; Polymerization; Polymers; Quartz Crystal Microbalance Techniques; Surface Properties | 2020 |
Molecular and Supramolecular Interactions in Systems with Nitroxide-Based Radicals.
Nitroxide-based radicals, having the advantage of firm chemical stability, are usable as probes in the detection of nanoscale details in the chemical environment of various multi-component systems, based on subtle variations in their electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. We propose a systematic walk through the vast area of problems and inquires that are implied by the rationalization of solvent effects on the spectral parameters, by first-principle methods of structural chemistry. Our approach consists of using state-of-the-art procedures, like Density Functional Theory (DFT), on properly designed systems, kept at the border of idealization and chemical realism. Thus, we investigate the case of real solvent molecules intervening in different configurations between two radical molecules, in comparison with radicals taken in vacuum or having the solvent that is treated by surrogate models, such as polarization continuum approximation. In this work, we selected the dichloromethane as solvent and the prototype radicals abbreviated TEMPO ((2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidin-1-yl) oxyl). In another branch of the work, we check the interaction of radicals with large toroidal molecules, β-cyclodextrin, and cucurbit[6]uril, modeling the interaction energy profile at encapsulation. The drawn synoptic view offers valuable rationales for understanding spectroscopy and energetics of nitroxide radicals in various environments, which are specific to soft chemistry. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Density Functional Theory; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Models, Molecular; Molecular Conformation; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Solvents | 2019 |
"Redox Imaging" to Distinguish Cells with Different Proliferative Indexes: Superoxide, Hydroperoxides, and Their Ratio as Potential Biomarkers.
The present study was directed to the development of EPR methodology for distinguishing cells with different proliferative activities, using "redox imaging." Three nitroxide radicals were used as redox sensors: (a) mito-TEMPO-cell-penetrating and localized mainly in the mitochondria; (b) methoxy-TEMPO-cell-penetrating and randomly distributed between the cytoplasm and the intracellular organelles; and (c) carboxy-PROXYL-nonpenetrating in living cells and evenly distributed in the extracellular environment. The experiments were conducted on eleven cell lines with different proliferative activities and oxidative capacities, confirmed by conventional analytical tests. The data suggest that cancer cells and noncancer cells are characterized by a completely different redox status. This can be analyzed by EPR spectroscopy using mito-TEMPO and methoxy-TEMPO, but not carboxy-PROXYL. The correlation analysis shows that the EPR signal intensity of mito-TEMPO in cell suspensions is closely related to the superoxide level. The described methodology allows the detection of overproduction of superoxide in living cells and their identification based on the intracellular redox status. The experimental data provide evidences about the role of superoxide and hydroperoxides in cell proliferation and malignancy. Topics: Antioxidants; Biomarkers; Cell Line; Cell Proliferation; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Humans; Hydrogen Peroxide; Leukemia; Lymphocytes; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Superoxides | 2019 |
Assessment of novel maleic anhydride copolymers prepared via nitroxide-mediated radical polymerization as CaSO
Calcium sulfate is one of the dominant scales which, unlike carbonate scale, are not easily removable by acid. To inhibit CaSO Topics: Acrylamide; Calcium; Calcium Sulfate; Crystallization; Cyclic N-Oxides; Free Radicals; Kinetics; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Maleic Anhydrides; Microscopy, Electron, Scanning; Molecular Weight; Nitric Oxide; Nitrogen Oxides; Polymerization; Polymers; Temperature; Water; Xylenes | 2017 |
Core-shell hybrid upconversion nanoparticles carrying stable nitroxide radicals as potential multifunctional nanoprobes for upconversion luminescence and magnetic resonance dual-modality imaging.
Nitroxide radicals, such as 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine 1-oxyl (TEMPO) and its derivatives, have recently been used as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and electron paramagnetic resonance imaging (EPRI). However, their rapid one-electron bioreduction to diamagnetic N-hydroxy species when administered intravenously has limited their use in in vivo applications. In this article, a new approach of silica coating for carrying stable radicals was proposed. A 4-carboxyl-TEMPO nitroxide radical was covalently linked with 3-aminopropyl-trimethoxysilane to produce a silanizing TEMPO radical. Utilizing a facile reaction based on the copolymerization of silanizing TEMPO radicals with tetraethyl orthosilicate in reverse microemulsion, a TEMPO radicals doped SiO2 nanostructure was synthesized and coated on the surface of NaYF4:Yb,Er/NaYF4 upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) to generate a novel multifunctional nanoprobe, PEGylated UCNP@TEMPO@SiO2 for upconversion luminescence (UCL) and magnetic resonance dual-modality imaging. The electron spin resonance (ESR) signals generated by the TEMPO@SiO2 show an enhanced reduction resistance property for a period of time of up to 1 h, even in the presence of 5 mM ascorbic acid. The longitudinal relaxivity of PEGylated UCNPs@TEMPO@SiO2 nanocomposites is about 10 times stronger than that for free TEMPO radicals. The core-shell NaYF4:Yb,Er/NaYF4 UCNPs synthesized by this modified user-friendly one-pot solvothermal strategy show a significant enhancement of UCL emission of up to 60 times more than the core NaYF4:Yb,Er. Furthermore, the PEGylated UCNP@TEMPO@SiO2 nanocomposites were further used as multifunctional nanoprobes to explore their performance in the UCL imaging of living cells and T1-weighted MRI in vitro and in vivo. Topics: Coated Materials, Biocompatible; Contrast Media; Cyclic N-Oxides; Diffusion; Drug Stability; HeLa Cells; Humans; Luminescent Measurements; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Multimodal Imaging; Nanocapsules; Nanopores; Nitrogen Oxides; Silicon Dioxide; Subcellular Fractions | 2015 |
Electron spin-lattice relaxation mechanisms of nitroxyl radicals in ionic liquids and conventional organic liquids: temperature dependence of a thermally activated process.
During the past two decades, several studies have established a significant role played by a thermally activated process in the electron spin relaxation of nitroxyl free radicals in liquid solutions. Its role has been used to explain the spin relaxation behavior of these radicals in a wide range of viscosities and microwave frequencies. However, no temperature dependence of this process has been reported. In this work, our main aim was to investigate the temperature dependence of this process in neat solvents. Electron spin-lattice relaxation times of 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO) and 4-hydroxy-TEMPO (TEMPOL), in X-band microwave frequency, were measured by the pulse saturation recovery technique in three room-temperature ionic liquids ([bmim][BF4], [emim][BF4], and [bmim][PF6]), di-isononyl phthalate, and sec-butyl benzene. The ionic liquids provided a wide range of viscosity in a modest range of temperature. An auxiliary aim was to examine whether the dynamics of a probe molecule dissolved in ionic liquids was different from that in conventional molecular liquids, as claimed in several reports on fluorescence dynamics in ionic liquids. This was the reason for the inclusion of di-isononyl phthalate, whose viscosities are similar to that of the ionic liquids in similar temperatures, and sec-butyl benzene. Rotational correlation times of the nitroxyl radicals were determined from the hyperfine dependence of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) line widths. Observation of highly well-resolved proton hyperfine lines, riding over the nitrogen hyperfine lines, in the low viscosity regime in all the solvents, gave more accurate values of the rotational correlation times than the values generally measured in the absence of these hyperfine lines and reported in the literature. The measured rotational correlation times obeyed a modified Stokes-Einstein-Debye relation of temperature dependence in all solvents. By separating the contributions of g-anisotropy, A-anisotropy and spin-rotation interactions from the observed electron spin-lattice relaxation rates, the contribution of the thermally activated process was obtained and compared with its expression for the temperature dependence. Consistent values of various fitted parameters, used in the expression of the thermal process, have been found, and the applicability of the expression of the thermally activated process to describe the temperature dependence in liquid solutions has been vindicate Topics: Benzene Derivatives; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Hydroxylamine; Ionic Liquids; Nitrogen; Nitrogen Oxides; Phthalic Acids; Protons; Rotation; Solvents; Temperature; Viscosity | 2015 |
Stable TEMPO and ABNO Catalyst Solutions for User-Friendly (bpy)Cu/Nitroxyl-Catalyzed Aerobic Alcohol Oxidation.
Two solutions, one consisting of bpy/TEMPO/NMI and the other bpy/ABNO/NMI (bpy =2,2'-bipyridyl; TEMPO = 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine N-oxyl, ABNO = 9-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane N-oxyl; NMI = N-methylimidazole), in acetonitrile are shown to have good long-term stability (≥1 year) under air at 5 °C. The solutions may be combined in appropriate quantities with commercially available [Cu(MeCN)4]OTf to provide a convenient catalyst system for the aerobic oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols. Topics: 2,2'-Dipyridyl; Alcohols; Catalysis; Copper; Cyclic N-Oxides; Ligands; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Organometallic Compounds; Oxidation-Reduction; Solutions | 2015 |
Electrocatalytic Alcohol Oxidation with TEMPO and Bicyclic Nitroxyl Derivatives: Driving Force Trumps Steric Effects.
Bicyclic nitroxyl derivatives, such as 2-azaadamantane N-oxyl (AZADO) and 9-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane N-oxyl (ABNO), have emerged as highly effective alternatives to TEMPO-based catalysts for selective oxidation reactions (TEMPO = 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidine N-oxyl). Their efficacy is widely attributed to their smaller steric profile; however, electrocatalysis studies described herein show that the catalytic activity of nitroxyls is more strongly affected by the nitroxyl/oxoammonium redox potential than by steric effects. The inexpensive, high-potential TEMPO derivative, 4-acetamido-TEMPO (ACT), exhibits higher electrocatalytic activity than AZADO and ABNO for the oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols. Mechanistic studies provide insights into the origin of these unexpected reactivity trends. The superior activity of ACT is especially noteworthy at high pH, where bicyclic nitroxyls are inhibited by formation of an oxoammonium hydroxide adduct. Topics: Alcohols; Catalysis; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electrochemistry; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction | 2015 |
Ionic liquid with a dual-redox couple for efficient dye-sensitized solar cells.
A new type of ionic liquid that contains a nitroxide radical (N-O(.)) and iodide as two redox couples, JC-IL, has been successfully synthesized for high-performance dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). Both of the redox couples exhibit distinct redox potentials and attractive electrochemical characteristics. The UV/Vis absorption spectra of JC-IL shows a low-intensity peak compared to the strong absorption of I2 in the wavelength region of 350-500 nm. The high open-circuit voltage of DSSCs with JC-IL is over 850 mV, which is approximately 150 mV higher than that of the DSSCs with a standard iodide electrolyte. The dramatic increase in the standard heterogeneous electron-transfer rate constant leads to an increase in the short-circuit current for JC-IL compared to that of 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-N-oxyl (TEMPO). DSSCs with the JC-IL electrolyte show promising cell efficiencies if coupled with dyes CR147 (8.12%) or D149 (6.76%). The efficiencies of the DSSCs based on the JC-IL electrolyte are higher than those of DSSCs based on either TEMPO electrolyte or standard iodide electrolyte alone. Topics: Coloring Agents; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electric Power Supplies; Iodides; Ionic Liquids; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Solar Energy | 2014 |
Evaluation of glucose-linked nitroxide radicals for use as an in vivo spin-label probe.
In vivo incorporation and reduction abilities of 4-carboxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (4-carboxy-TEMPO) (1), 3-carboxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrroline-1-oxyl (3-carboxy-dehydro-PROXYL, 3-carboxy-DPRO) (2), 4-hydroxy-TEMPO and 3-hydroxymethyl-DPRO O-β-D-glucosides (3 and 5), and newly designed forms of 6-O-(TEMPO-4-carbonyl and DPRO-3-carbonyl)-D-glucose (4 and 6) were evaluated using white radish sprouts. For each of these compounds, electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrometry was used to measure two effects: the rate of in vitro reduction via the addition of ascorbic acid; and, the rate of successful incorporation into radish sprouts for a reduction to the corresponding hydroxyl amine. DPRO-radicals 2, 5, and 6 were detected significantly more than TEMPO-radicals 1, 3, and 4 in vitro and in vivo for both experiments. Four glucose-linked nitroxide radicals were reduced faster than the glucose-non-linked ones in the in vitro experiment, but were nonetheless detected more each time in radish sprouts due to the absorbability. Glucose ester-linked radicals 4 and 6 were detected more than glycosides 3 and 5, which suggests that glucose ester-linked DPRO-radical 6 is the best for use as a spin-label probe that a plant will incorporate. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Germination; Glucose; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Plant Leaves; Raphanus; Solutions; Spin Labels; Time Factors | 2014 |
Effect of electron spin dynamics on solid-state dynamic nuclear polarization performance.
For the broadest dissemination of solid-state dynamic nuclear polarization (ssDNP) enhanced NMR as a material characterization tool, the ability to employ generic mono-nitroxide radicals as spin probes is critical. A better understanding of the factors contributing to ssDNP efficiency is needed to rationally optimize the experimental condition for the practically accessible spin probes at hand. This study seeks to advance the mechanistic understanding of ssDNP by examining the effect of electron spin dynamics on ssDNP performance at liquid helium temperatures (4-40 K). The key observation is that bi-radicals and mono-radicals can generate comparable nuclear spin polarization at 4 K and 7 T, which is in contrast to the observation for ssDNP at liquid nitrogen temperatures (80-150 K) that finds bi-radicals to clearly outperform mono-radicals. To rationalize this observation, we analyze the change in the DNP-induced nuclear spin polarization (Pn) and the characteristic ssDNP signal buildup time as a function of electron spin relaxation rates that are modulated by the mono- and bi-radical spin concentration. Changes in Pn are consistent with a systematic variation in the product of the electron spin-lattice relaxation time and the electron spin flip-flop rate that constitutes an integral saturation factor of an inhomogeneously broadened EPR spectrum. We show that the comparable Pn achieved with both radical species can be reconciled with a comparable integral EPR saturation factor. Surprisingly, the largest Pn is observed at an intermediate spin concentration for both mono- and bi-radicals. At the highest radical concentration, the stronger inter-electron spin dipolar coupling favors ssDNP, while oversaturation diminishes Pn, as experimentally verified by the observation of a maximum Pn at an intermediate, not the maximum, microwave (μw) power. At the maximum μw power, oversaturation reduces the electron spin population differential that must be upheld between electron spins that span a frequency difference matching the (1)H NMR frequency-characteristic of the cross effect DNP. This new mechanistic insight allows us to rationalize experimental conditions where generic mono-nitroxide probes can offer competitive ssDNP performance to that of custom designed bi-radicals, and thus helps to vastly expand the application scope of ssDNP for the study of functional materials and solids. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Electrons; Glycerol; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Nitrogen Oxides; Temperature; Water | 2014 |
Quenching of the perylene fluorophore by stable nitroxide radical-containing macromolecules.
Stable nitroxide radical bearing organic polymer materials are attracting much attention for their application as next generation energy storage materials. A greater understanding of the inherent charge transfer mechanisms in such systems will ultimately be paramount to further advancements in the understanding of both intrafilm and interfacial ion- and electron-transfer reactions. This work is focused on advancing the fundamental understanding of these dynamic charge transfer properties by exploiting the fact that these species are efficient fluorescence quenchers. We systematically incorporated fluorescent perylene dyes into solutions containing the 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) radical and controlled their interaction by binding the TEMPO moiety into macromolecules with varying morphologies (e.g., chain length, density of radical pendant groups). In the case of the model compound, 4-oxo-TEMPO, quenching of the perylene excited state was found to be dominated by a dynamic (collisional) process, with a contribution from an apparent static process that is described by an ∼2 nm quenching sphere of action. When we incorporated the TEMPO unit into a macromolecule, the quenching behavior was altered significantly. The results can be described by using two models: (A) a collisional quenching process that becomes less efficient, presumably due to a reduction in the diffusion constant of the quenching entity, with a quenching sphere of action similar to 4-oxo-TEMPO or (B) a collisional quenching process that becomes more efficient as the radius of interaction grows larger with increasing oligomer length. This is the first study that definitively illustrates that fluorophore quenching by a polymer system cannot be explained using merely a classical Stern-Volmer approach but rather necessitates a more complex model. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Fluorescent Dyes; Molecular Conformation; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Nitrogen Oxides; Perylene; Piperidines; Polymers; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 2014 |
A novel paramagnetic relaxation enhancement tag for nucleic acids: a tool to study structure and dynamics of RNA.
In this work, we present a novel 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine 1-oxyl (TEMPO) radical phosphoramidite building block, which can be attached to the 5'-terminus of nucleic acids. To investigate the paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) emanating from this radical center, we incorporated the TEMPO label into various types of RNAs. We measured proton PREs for selectively (13)C-isotope labeled nucleotides to derive long-range distance restraints in a short 15 nucleotide stem-loop model system, underscoring the potential of the 5'-TEMPO tag to determine long-range distance restraints for solution structure determination. We subsequently applied the distance-dependent relaxation enhancement induced by the nitroxide radical to discern two folding states in a bistable RNA. Finally, we investigated the fast conformational sampling of the HIV-1 TAR RNA, a paradigm for structural flexibility in nucleic acids. With PRE NMR in combination with molecular dynamics simulations, the structural plasticity of this RNA was analyzed in the absence and presence of the ligand L-argininamide. Topics: Arginine; Carbon Isotopes; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; HIV Long Terminal Repeat; Inverted Repeat Sequences; Ligands; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Nitrogen Oxides; Nucleic Acid Conformation; Organophosphorus Compounds; Protons; RNA; Spin Labels; Staining and Labeling | 2013 |
The use of cyclic nitroxide radicals as HNO scavengers.
Reduction of cyclic stable nitroxides (RNO) by HNO to the respective hydroxylamines (RNO-H) has been demonstrated using EPR spectrometry. HNO shows low reactivity toward piperidine, pyrrolidine and nitronyl nitroxides with rate constants below 1.4 × 10(5)M(-1)s(-1) at pH 7.0, despite the high driving force for these reactions. The rate constants can be predicted assuming that the reactions take place via a concerted proton-electron transfer pathway and significantly low self-exchange rate constants for HNO/NO and RNO-H/RNO. NO does not react with piperidine and pyrrolidine nitroxides, but does add to HNO forming the highly oxidizing and moderately reducing hyponitrite radicals. In this work, the radicals are produced by pulse radiolysis and the rate constants of their reactions with 2,2,6,6,-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO), 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl piperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPOL) and 3-carbamoyl-PROXYL have been determined at pH 6.8 to be (2.4 ± 0.2)× 10(6), (9.8 ± 0.2)× 10(5), (5.9 ± 0.5)× 10(5)M(-1)s(-1), respectively. This low reactivity implies that NO competes efficiently with these nitroxides for the hyponitrite radical. The ability of TEMPOL and 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5,-tetramethyl-imidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (C-PTIO) to oxidize HNO and their different reactivity toward NO are used to quantify HNO formed via acetohydroxamic acid oxidation. The extent of TEMPOL or C-PTIO reduction was similar to the yield of HNO formed upon oxidation by ()OH under anoxia, but not by the metmyoglobin and H(2)O(2) reaction system where both nitroxides catalytically facilitate H(2)O(2) depletion and nitrite accumulation. In this system the conversion of C-PTIO into 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl (C-PTI) is a minor reaction, which does not provide any mechanistic insight. Topics: Benzoates; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydroxamic Acids; Hydroxylamine; Hydroxylamines; Imidazoles; Kinetics; Metmyoglobin; Models, Chemical; Nitrites; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidants; Oxidation-Reduction; Pulse Radiolysis | 2013 |
Tandem arrays of TEMPO and nitronyl nitroxide radicals with designed arrangements on DNA.
Herein we describe one-dimensional electron-spin arrays consisting of two different organic radicals with the designed arrangement based on the DNA sequence. Two mismatch-binding ligands carrying 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine N-oxide (TEMPO) and nitronyl nitroxide selectively bind to the predetermined sites on double stranded DNA. By using the two mismatch-binding ligands carrying the organic radicals as the glue for DNA, electron-spin assembly could be successfully synchronized with the hybridization. Periodically and tandemly arranged, two kinds of organic radical molecules at designed positions might be useful for an approach to build up scalable qubits of electron-spin-based quantum computing. The approach using DNA nanostructures as a scaffold to assembly functional small molecules can afford one of the promising ways for the future application of DNA nanostructures and nanotechnology. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; DNA; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Molecular Structure; Nanostructures; Nitrogen Oxides | 2012 |
The nitroxide TEMPO is an efficient scavenger of protein radicals: cellular and kinetic studies.
Protein oxidation occurs during multiple human pathologies, and protein radicals are known to induce damage to other cell components. Such damage may be modulated by agents that scavenge protein radicals. In this study, the potential protective reactions of the nitroxide TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidinyloxyl radical) against Tyr- and Trp-derived radicals (TyrO./TrpN.) have been investigated. Pretreatment of macrophage cells with TEMPO provided protection against photo-oxidation-induced loss of cell viability and Tyr oxidation, with the nitroxide more effective than the hydroxylamine or parent amine. Pulse radiolysis was employed to determine rate constants, k, for the reaction of TEMPO with TyrO. and TrpN. generated on N-Ac-Tyr-amide and N-Ac-Trp-amide, with values of k~10(8) and 7×10(6)M(-1)s(-1), respectively, determined. Analogous studies with lysozyme, chymotrypsin, and pepsin yielded k for TEMPO reacting with TrpN. ranging from 1.5×10(7) (lysozyme) to 1.1×10(8) (pepsin)M(-1)s(-1). Pepsin-derived TyrO. reacted with TEMPO with k~4×10(7)M(-1)s(-1); analogous reactions for lysozyme and chymotrypsin TyrO. were much slower. These data indicate that TEMPO can inhibit secondary reactions of both TyrO. and TrpN., though this is protein dependent. Such protein radical scavenging may contribute to the positive biological effects of nitroxides. Topics: Animals; Azides; Cell Line; Cell Survival; Chymotrypsin; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Hydroxylamine; Kinetics; Macrophages; Mice; Muramidase; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidants, Photochemical; Oxidation-Reduction; Pepsin A; Pulse Radiolysis; Tryptophan; Tyrosine | 2012 |
Pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy powered by a free-electron laser.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy interrogates unpaired electron spins in solids and liquids to reveal local structure and dynamics; for example, EPR has elucidated parts of the structure of protein complexes that other techniques in structural biology have not been able to reveal. EPR can also probe the interplay of light and electricity in organic solar cells and light-emitting diodes, and the origin of decoherence in condensed matter, which is of fundamental importance to the development of quantum information processors. Like nuclear magnetic resonance, EPR spectroscopy becomes more powerful at high magnetic fields and frequencies, and with excitation by coherent pulses rather than continuous waves. However, the difficulty of generating sequences of powerful pulses at frequencies above 100 gigahertz has, until now, confined high-power pulsed EPR to magnetic fields of 3.5 teslas and below. Here we demonstrate that one-kilowatt pulses from a free-electron laser can power a pulsed EPR spectrometer at 240 gigahertz (8.5 teslas), providing transformative enhancements over the alternative, a state-of-the-art ∼30-milliwatt solid-state source. Our spectrometer can rotate spin-1/2 electrons through π/2 in only 6 nanoseconds (compared to 300 nanoseconds with the solid-state source). Fourier-transform EPR on nitrogen impurities in diamond demonstrates excitation and detection of EPR lines separated by about 200 megahertz. We measured decoherence times as short as 63 nanoseconds, in a frozen solution of nitroxide free-radicals at temperatures as high as 190 kelvin. Both free-electron lasers and the quasi-optical technology developed for the spectrometer are scalable to frequencies well in excess of one terahertz, opening the way to high-power pulsed EPR spectroscopy up to the highest static magnetic fields currently available. Topics: Allyl Compounds; Benzene; Cyclic N-Oxides; Diamond; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Electrons; Fourier Analysis; Free Radicals; Lasers; Nitrogen Oxides; Temperature; Time Factors | 2012 |
Sorption selectivity in natural organic matter studied with nitroxyl paramagnetic relaxation probes.
Sorption site selectivity and mechanism in natural organic matter (NOM) were addressed spectroscopically by the sorption of paramagnetic nitroxyl compounds (spin probes) of different polarity, TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl) and HTEMPO (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl). The sorbents were Pahokee peat, Beulah-Zap lignite, and a polystyrene-poly(vinyl methyl ether) (PS-PVME) polymer blend representing the mixed aliphatic-aromatic, polar-nonpolar character of NOM. Nuclear-electron spin interaction serves as an efficient relaxation pathway, resulting in attenuation of the (13)C-CP/TOSS NMR signal for (13)C nuclei in proximity to the N-O· group (r(-6) dependence). In the natural solids the spin probes sorbed more specifically (greater isotherm nonlinearity) and had lower rotational mobility (broader electron paramagnetic resonance signals) than in PS-PVME. Titration with spin probe indicated almost no selectivity for the different carbon functional groups of PS-PVME, and little to no selectivity for the different carbon moieties of Pahokee and Beulah, including aromatic, alkyl, O-alkyl, di-O-alkyl, and O-methyl. In any case, sorption site selectivity of spin probes to NOM was always weaker than partition selectivity found in model solvent-water (toluene, hexadecane, anisole, octanol) and cellulose-water systems. The results indicate little or no preferential sorption in NOM based on functional group chemistry or putative microdomain character, but rather are consistent with the filling of pores whose walls have an average chemical environment reflecting the bulk chemical composition of the solid. This work demonstrates for the first time the use of paramagnetic probes to study sorption specificity. Topics: Adsorption; Coal; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Nitrogen Oxides; Polystyrenes; Polyvinyls; Soil; Spin Labels | 2012 |
Determination of the antioxidative capacity of the skin in vivo using resonance Raman and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Non-invasive measurements are of major interest for investigating the effects of stress, nutrition, diseases or pharmaceuticals on the antioxidative capacity of the human skin. However, only a few non-invasive methods are available.. The resonance Raman spectroscopy is well established to monitor carotenoids in the skin, but correlations with other antioxidants have not yet been described. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy used for measurements of free radicals has already been used elsewhere to investigate the reduction of applied long-living nitroxide radicals, caused by skin antioxidants and UV irradiation, but only a single or up to four volunteers were included in these studies. Therefore, in this study, the two methods were applied in parallel on 17 volunteers, and the rate constant of the nitroxide decrease was correlated with the cutaneous carotenoid concentration.. A correlation with R = 0.65 was found, supporting the thesis that different antioxidants protect each other and build an antioxidative network in the skin. The results also give first indications that the carotenoids serve as marker substances for the antioxidative capacity, if the nutrition is well balanced. Topics: Adult; Antioxidants; beta Carotene; Biomarkers; Carotenoids; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Female; Humans; Lycopene; Male; Middle Aged; Nitrogen Oxides; Skin; Spectrum Analysis, Raman; Young Adult | 2011 |
Distribution profiles of nitroxide spin probes in human skin--a combined study using spatially resolved electron spin resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry.
Electron spin resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry are two analytical methods that are very rarely used in combination. In this paper, we will show that the methods complement one another in the example of the distribution of stable nitroxide radicals in human skin, including the spatial resolution of these distribution processes. There are many ESR investigations dealing with this subject, but unfortunately, they are all limited to the detection of paramagnetic species. The combination with MS allows the successful examination of the distribution profile of the main biotransformation product of the nitroxide radicals, the respective "ESR-silent" hydroxylamines. In order to maintain the biological state of the sample material as far as possible, atmospheric pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization with ion trap detection has been used for the mass spectrometric investigations. The results validate the former findings of the strong reduction of stable free radicals by biological material; moreover, the diamagnetic species formed during these processes have been identified. Topics: Antioxidants; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Female; Humans; Mass Spectrometry; Nitrogen Oxides; Skin; Spin Labels | 2011 |
The ROS scavenging and renal protective effects of pH-responsive nitroxide radical-containing nanoparticles.
The ultimate objective of nanoparticle-based therapy is to functionalize nanomedicines in a micro-disease environment without any side effects. Here, we reveal that our pH-responsive nitroxide radical-containing nanoparticles (RNP(pH)) disintegrate within the renal acidic lesion and act as scavengers of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to a relief of acute kidney injury (AKI). RNP(pH) was prepared using amphiphilic block copolymers possessing 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) moieties via amine linkage as a side chain of the hydrophobic segment. The self-assembled RNP(pH) disintegrated at pH below 7.0 because of a protonation of the amino groups in the hydrophobic core of the nanoparticles, thereby resulting in an improvement in ROS scavenging activity. Using a renal ischemia-reperfusion AKI model in mice, the therapeutic effect of RNP(pH) on ROS damage was evaluated. Unlike the RNP without pH-triggered disintegration (RNP(Non-pH)), the RNP(pH) showed extremely high ROS scavenging activity and renal protective effects. It is interesting to note that the side effect of nitroxide radicals was markedly suppressed due to the compartmentalization of nitroxide radicals in the core of RNP(pH) in untargeted area. The morphology changes in RNP(pH) were confirmed by analyzing electron spin resonance spectra, and these findings provide the evidence of the real therapeutic effect of the environment-sensitive specific disintegration of nanoparticles in vivo. Topics: Acute Kidney Injury; Animals; Blood Pressure; Cyclic N-Oxides; Cytokines; Free Radical Scavengers; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Inflammation; Kidney; Lipid Peroxidation; Mice; Molecular Conformation; Nanoparticles; Nitrogen Oxides; Particle Size; Protective Agents; Reactive Oxygen Species; Superoxides; Time Factors | 2011 |
The solvation of nitroxide radicals in ionic liquids studied by high-field EPR spectroscopy.
Ionic liquids (ILs) feature a variety of properties that make them a unique class of solvents. To gain a better understanding of how ILs solvate compounds of different chemical structure, we used pulsed high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at W-band (approximately 94 GHz) and continuous wave EPR at X-band (approximately 9.4 GHz) on three TEMPO-based spin probes with different substitutions at the 4-position: 4-R-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl, with R = N(CH(3))(3)(+), Cat-1, R = COO(-), TEMPO-4-carboxylate, and R = OH, TEMPOL. The spin probes are dissolved in imidazolium based ILs with different alkyl chain lengths (-C(2)H(5), -C(4)H(9), -C(6)H(13)) and anions (BF(4)(-), PF(6)(-)) and also in molecular solvents (methanol, water-glycerol). X-Band EPR at RT shows that the reorientational motion of the charged spin probes in ILs is about fivefold slower than that of the TEMPOL. Moreover, anion variation from BF(4)(-) to PF(6)(-) in ILs most strongly slows down the rotational motion (as measured by the rotational correlation time tau(r)) of Cat-1, followed by TEMPOL, while tau(r) of TEMPO-4-carboxylate is least affected. The EPR parameters g(xx) and A(zz) (tensor elements of the g- and hyperfine tensor) are sensitive to environmental effects and are only fully resolved at the high field used in this study. Changes of g(xx) and A(zz) values of the Cat-1 in ILs and methanol are very small especially compared to that of TEMPO-4-carboxylate, indicating that Cat-1 is located in a polar region of the ILs resembling the situation in methanol. On the other hand, the g(xx) value of TEMPO-4-carboxylate is sensitive to the length of alkyl group which shows that TEMPO-4-carboxylate is close to the nonpolar region of ILs. The small differences in the chemical substitution of the spin probes used here are sufficient for the molecules to reside in different domains of different dielectric properties in ILs. Our combined results are in good agreement with a picture of a nanophase separation, in which the charged cations and anions form polar regions and the hydrophobic alkyl chains of the IL cations form non-polar regions. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Ionic Liquids; Nanostructures; Nitrogen Oxides; Solvents | 2010 |
Synergistic induction of apoptosis and caspase-independent autophagic cell death by a combination of nitroxide Tempo and heat shock in human leukemia U937 cells.
We have shown that heat stress or a superoxide dismutase mimic nitroxide, Tempo, induces apoptosis, while their combination causes nonapoptotic cell death; however, the underlying mechanism for this switch remains unclear. Here we identified for the first time that 10 mM Tempo present during heating at 44°C for 30 min rapidly induced autophagy in U937 leukemic cells in spite of Bax activation and mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) permeabilization. This co-treatment inhibited the processing of heat-activated procaspases-2, -8, -9 and -3 into active small subunits, leading to the inhibition of caspase-dependent apoptosis, and instead caused the induction of autophagy. The inactivation of caspases, a key event, could result from oxidation of active-site-CysSH of all caspases by a prooxidant oxo-ammonium cation, an intermediate derived Tempo during dismutation of heat-induced superoxide anion. In addition, the co-treatment caused mitochondrial calcium overloads, the mitochondrial inner membrane permeabilization, profound mitochondrial dysfunction, and liberation of Beclin 1 from the Bcl-2/Beclin 1 complex, all of which contributed to induction of autophagy. These autophagic cells underwent propidium iodide-positive necrosis in a delayed fashion, leading to the complete proliferative inhibition. Remarkably, ruthenium red and BAPTA, which interfere with mitochondrial calcium uptake, facilitated autophagic necrotic death. Cyclosporin A, which binds to cyclophilin D, had a similar necrotic effect. 3-Methyladenine facilitated the necrosis of autophagic cells. In contrast, 5 mM Tempo-44°C/10 min or 44°C/30 min induced Bax-mediated MOM permeabilization and caspase-dependent apoptosis more potently than Tempo alone. Thus, Tempo is a unique thermosensitizer to synergistically induce apoptosis and autophagic cell death. Topics: Apoptosis; Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins; Autophagy; bcl-2-Associated X Protein; Caspase 8; Caspase 9; Caspases; Cyclic N-Oxides; Cytochromes c; Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate; Heat-Shock Response; Hot Temperature; Humans; Immunoblotting; Microscopy, Confocal; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial Membranes; Nitrogen Oxides; Signal Transduction; Superoxide Dismutase; U937 Cells | 2010 |
1,2,3-trisubstituted indanes by highly diastereoselective palladium-catalyzed oxyarylation of indenes with arylboronic acids and nitroxides.
Topics: Boronic Acids; Catalysis; Crystallography, X-Ray; Cyclic N-Oxides; Indans; Indenes; Molecular Conformation; Nitrogen Oxides; Palladium; Stereoisomerism | 2010 |
Synthesis and spectral properties of polymethine-cyanine dye-nitroxide radical hybrid compounds for use as fluorescence probes to monitor reducing species and radicals.
Various hybrid compounds comprised of two types of nitroxide radicals and either a pentamethine (Cy5) or trimethine cyanine (Cy3) were synthesized. The nitroxide radicals were linked either via an ester-bond to one or two N-alkyl carboxyl-terminated groups of Cy5, or via two amido-bonds (aminocarbonyl or carbonylamino group) to the 5-position of the indolenine moieties of Cy5 and Cy3. Changes in fluorescence and ESR intensities of the hybrid compounds were measured before and after addition of Na ascorbate in PBS (pH 7.0) to reduce the radicals. Among the hybrid compounds synthesized, those that linked the nitroxide radicals via an aminocarbonyl residue at the 5-position of the indolenine moieties on Cy5 and Cy3 exhibited a 1.8- and 5.1-fold increase in fluorescence intensity with the reduction of the nitroxide segment by the addition of Na ascorbate, respectively. In contrast, fluorescence intensity was not enhanced in the other hybrid compounds. Thus, the hybrid compounds which exhibited an increase in fluorescent intensity with radical reduction can be used in the quantitative measurement of reducing species such as Fe(2+) and ascorbic acid, and hydroxyl radicals. Because these hybrid compounds have the advantage of fluorescing at longer wavelengths-661 (Cy5) or 568 (Cy3)nm, respectively, they can be used to measure radical-reducing species or radicals either in solution or in vivo. Topics: Biosensing Techniques; Carbocyanines; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Fluorescent Dyes; Macromolecular Substances; Models, Biological; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Pyridines; Pyrrolidines | 2009 |
Nitroxyl radicals as low toxic spin-labels for non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging of blood-brain barrier permeability for conventional therapeutics.
The present study describes a novel non-radioactive methodology for in vivo non-invasive, real-time imaging of blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability for conventional drugs, using nitroxyl radicals as spin-labels and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Antioxidants; Autoradiography; Blood-Brain Barrier; Cyclic N-Oxides; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Free Radicals; Indicators and Reagents; Lomustine; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Mice; Nitrogen Compounds; Nitrogen Oxides; Permeability; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Positron-Emission Tomography; Spin Labels | 2009 |
Inclusion complexes of cyclodextrins with nitroxide-based spin probes in aqueous solutions.
Formation of inclusion complexes between several cyclodextrin derivatives and TEMPO and DOXYL-based spin probes was studied by EPR spectroscopy. Competition between alkyl chains and nitroxide functionalities for cyclodextrin cavities leads to different types of complexation. Long alkyl chains in amphiphilic spin probes interact preferentially with cyclodextrins, and TEMPO units in such molecules are unaffected by complexation. DOXYL-type spin probes however form stronger complexes with cyclodextrins; this complexation changes hyperfine splitting and tumbling rate of the nitroxide group. Comparison of EPR spectra of free cyclodextrin and cyclodextrin-based polymeric nanocapsules made it possible to assess the tumbling of the spin probe inside the cyclodextrin units without the contribution of the tumbling of the whole complex. Topics: Air; Cross-Linking Reagents; Cyclic N-Oxides; Cyclodextrins; Disulfides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Nanocapsules; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Solubility; Solutions; Spin Labels; Water | 2009 |
An expeditious entry to 9-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane N-oxyl (ABNO): another highly active organocatalyst for oxidation of alcohols.
A practical, three-step synthetic route to 9-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane N-oxyl (ABNO, 3), an unhindered, stable class of nitroxyl radical, has been developed. ABNO exhibits a highly active nature compared with TEMPO in the catalytic oxidation of alcohols to their corresponding carbonyl compounds. Topics: Alcohols; Azabicyclo Compounds; Catalysis; Cyclic N-Oxides; Cyclization; Free Radicals; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction | 2009 |
Nitroxyl radical plus hydroxylamine pseudo self-exchange reactions: tunneling in hydrogen atom transfer.
Bimolecular rate constants have been measured for reactions that involve hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) from hydroxylamines to nitroxyl radicals, using the stable radicals TEMPO(*) (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl radical), 4-oxo-TEMPO(*) (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-oxo-piperidine-1-oxyl radical), di-tert-butylnitroxyl ((t)Bu(2)NO(*)), and the hydroxylamines TEMPO-H, 4-oxo-TEMPO-H, 4-MeO-TEMPO-H (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-N-hydroxy-4-methoxy-piperidine), and (t)Bu(2)NOH. The reactions have been monitored by UV-vis stopped-flow methods, using the different optical spectra of the nitroxyl radicals. The HAT reactions all have |DeltaG (o)| < or = 1.4 kcal mol(-1) and therefore are close to self-exchange reactions. The reaction of 4-oxo-TEMPO(*) + TEMPO-H --> 4-oxo-TEMPO-H + TEMPO(*) occurs with k(2H,MeCN) = 10 +/- 1 M(-1) s(-1) in MeCN at 298 K (K(2H,MeCN) = 4.5 +/- 1.8). Surprisingly, the rate constant for the analogous deuterium atom transfer reaction is much slower: k(2D,MeCN) = 0.44 +/- 0.05 M(-1) s(-1) with k(2H,MeCN)/k(2D,MeCN) = 23 +/- 3 at 298 K. The same large kinetic isotope effect (KIE) is found in CH(2)Cl(2), 23 +/- 4, suggesting that the large KIE is not caused by solvent dynamics or hydrogen bonding to solvent. The related reaction of 4-oxo-TEMPO(*) with 4-MeO-TEMPO-H(D) also has a large KIE, k(3H)/k(3D) = 21 +/- 3 in MeCN. For these three reactions, the E(aD) - E(aH) values, between 0.3 +/- 0.6 and 1.3 +/- 0.6 kcal mol(-1), and the log(A(H)/A(D)) values, between 0.5 +/- 0.7 and 1.1 +/- 0.6, indicate that hydrogen tunneling plays an important role. The related reaction of (t)Bu(2)NO(*) + TEMPO-H(D) in MeCN has a large KIE, 16 +/- 3 in MeCN, and very unusual isotopic activation parameters, E(aD) - E(aH) = -2.6 +/- 0.4 and log(A(H)/A(D)) = 3.1 +/- 0.6. Computational studies, using POLYRATE, also indicate substantial tunneling in the (CH(3))(2)NO(*) + (CH(3))(2)NOH model reaction for the experimental self-exchange processes. Additional calculations on TEMPO((*)/H), (t)Bu(2)NO((*)/H), and Ph(2)NO((*)/H) self-exchange reactions reveal why the phenyl groups make the last of these reactions several orders of magnitude faster than the first two. By inference, the calculations also suggest why tunneling appears to be more important in the self-exchange reactions of dialkylhydroxylamines than of arylhydroxylamines. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Hydrogen; Hydroxylamine; Kinetics; Models, Molecular; Molecular Conformation; Nitrogen Oxides | 2009 |
Nitric oxide and nitroxides can act as efficient scavengers of protein-derived free radicals.
Nitric oxide ((*)NO) may act as either a pro-oxidant or an antioxidant in biological systems. Although (*)NO and nitroxide radicals react slowly with most molecules, they react at near diffusion-controlled rates with other radicals and may therefore be efficient protective agents. This study assessed the ability of (*)NO and nitroxides to intercept specific protein-derived radicals and compared the efficacy of these species. Three protein radical systems were investigated as follows: BSA-derived radicals generated via radical transfer from H(2)O(2)-activated horseradish peroxidase, radicals formed on myoglobin via reaction with H(2)O(2), and carbon-centered radicals formed from amino acid hydroperoxides on exposure to Fe(2+)-EDTA. In each case, radicals were generated in the absence or presence of (*)NO or nitroxides of different size and charge. Concentration-dependent loss of the protein radicals was detected by electron paramagnetic resonance with both (*)NO and nitroxides and time-dependent consumption of (*)NO using an (*)NO electrode. The protein oxidation product dityrosine was significantly reduced by (*)NO and nitroxides, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine levels were reduced by nitroxides but not (*)NO. Overall, these studies demonstrate that (*)NO and nitroxides are efficient near-stoichiometric scavengers of protein radicals and, hence, are potential protective agents against protein oxidation reactions and resulting damage. These reactions show little dependence on nitroxide structure or charge. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Hydrogen Peroxide; Nitric Oxide; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Proteins | 2008 |
Inclusion complexes of cyclodextrins with biradicals linked by a polyether chain--an EPR study.
Complexation of beta-cyclodextrin with flexible nitroxide biradicals linked by a polyethylene glycol chain was monitored by EPR spectroscopy. The EPR spectra of the uncomplexed biradicals show an exchange interaction due to the flexibility of the polyethylene glycol chain. Complexation with cyclodextrin leads to the disappearance of the exchange interaction in the EPR spectra. The complexation can be reversed by the addition of competing guests (e.g., adamantane derivatives). At high concentration, the inclusion complexes precipitate, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) of the precipitates proved the formation of complexes. Elemental analysis data revealed that the complexes contain several cyclodextrin units per biradical but that the composition was not stoichiometric. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Cyclodextrins; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Ethers; Free Radicals; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Polyethylene Glycols; Spin Labels | 2007 |
Enzymatic reduction-resistant nitroxyl spin probes with spirocyclohexyl rings.
To suppress enzymatic reduction of nitroxyl group of spin probes, this study designed two new nitroxyl probes, 4-hydroxy and 4-oxopiperidine-N-oxyls having 4'-hydroxyspirocyclohexyl groups at the 2- and 6-positions of the piperidine ring (hydroxy-DICPO and oxo-DICPO, respectively). The decay of the EPR signal of these probes in mouse liver homogenates was significantly suppressed compared with that of 4-hydroxy- and 4-oxo-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (hydroxy-TEMPO and oxo-TEMPO, respectively), although hydroxy-DICPO and oxo-DICPO showed no difference in the reactivities with ascorbic acid. While both hydroxy- and oxo-DICPO reacted with hydroxyl radicals, only hydoxy-DICPO lost its EPR signal by the reaction with superoxide anion radical in the presence of cysteine. This feature is similar to that observed for hydroxy- and oxo-TEMPO. These results suggest that the introduction of spirocyclohexyl groups to nitroxyl spin probes is effective for protecting the nitroxyl group against enzymatic reduction without changing the characteristics of the reaction with oxygen radicals. Topics: Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electrochemistry; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Liver; Mice; Models, Chemical; Nitrogen Oxides; Palmitic Acids; Reactive Oxygen Species; Spectrophotometry, Infrared; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet; Spiro Compounds | 2007 |
Micelle formation induced by disproportionation of stable nitroxyl radicals supported on a diblock copolymer.
Micelle formation induced by disproportionation was attained for a diblock copolymer containing 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpyperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO). Poly(4-vinylbenzyloxy-TEMPO)-block-polystyrene (PVTEMPO-b-PSt) showed no self-assembly in 1,4-dioxane, a nonselective solvent. Light scattering studies demonstrated that the copolymer self-assembled into micelles in this solvent with the addition of hydrochloric acid (HCl). The hydrodynamic diameter of the copolymer was estimated to be ca. 55 nm based on the cumulant analysis of the complete micellization. A UV analysis confirmed that the micellizarion proceeded through the disproportionation of the TEMPO into the oxoaminium chloride and the hydroxylamine by the reaction with HCl, because the absorption based on the oxoaminium chloride increased with an increase in the amount of HCl. ESR verified that the radical concentration of the TEMPO decreased with an increase in the HCl. Before the addition of HCl, the PVTEMPO-b-PSt copolymer showed broad signals based on the random orientation. As the amount of HCl increased, the broad signals changed to the typical triplet of TEMPO, accompanied by a decrease in the signal intensity. The g values had a negligible change throughout the micellization. Finally, 40% of the TEMPO remained unreacted when the micellization was completed. The micellization prevented the dispropotionation of the TEMPO, because the PVTEMPO blocks formed the micellar cores which were covered with the micellar coronas of the PSt blocks. TEM observations demonstrated that PVTEMPO-b-PSt formed spherical micelles through the dispropotionation-induced micellization. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Free Radicals; Micelles; Microscopy, Electron, Transmission; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Polymers; Spectrophotometry; Water | 2007 |
Rapid exchange luminescence: nitroxide quenching and implications for sensor applications.
The quenching of terbium emission in the sensitized complex Tb3+-cs124-DTPA by nitroxide radical TEMPO derivatives in aqueous solutions has been studied with time-averaged and time-resolved methods. The time-resolved results show more quenching than the time-averaged values, opposite to the behavior expected for static quenching. A rapid exchange model with a slightly fluorescent fluorophore/quencher complex is proposed. Due to the long time scale of Tb3+ emission, dynamical averaging must be considered in the interpretation of experiments. The rapid exchange limit is shown to be consistent with the present results. The utility of these observations in the design of sensors that are not limited by a background level is noted. Topics: Chelating Agents; Cyclic N-Oxides; Free Radicals; Hydroxyquinolines; Kinetics; Luminescent Measurements; Nitrogen Oxides; Organometallic Compounds; Pentetic Acid; Quinolones; Terbium | 2006 |
Accurate prediction of electron-paramagnetic-resonance tensors for spin probes dissolved in liquid crystals.
High-level ab initio g and A tensor components have been calculated for PD-tempone and tempo-palmitate (TP) radical spin probes dissolved in n-pentyl and n-hexyl cyanobiphenyl liquid crystals. Solvent effects have been included in the proposed approach by means of the polarizable continuum model, allowing for solvent anisotropy. An in-depth analysis of the electronic structure of probes was performed to choose a suitable model for TP and make the calculations more accessible. Computed magnetic tensor components have been compared with corresponding values measured in the rigid limit. The quality of the results suggests the use of quantum-mechanical data to determine the order parameter of the nematic from experimental electron-spin resonance measurements. Topics: Anisotropy; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Electrons; Models, Molecular; Models, Statistical; Models, Theoretical; Molecular Conformation; Nitrogen Oxides; Palmitic Acid; Quantum Theory; Reproducibility of Results; Software; Triacetoneamine-N-Oxyl | 2005 |
Nitroxides scavenge myeloperoxidase-catalyzed thiyl radicals in model systems and in cells.
Nitroxide radicals possess important antioxidant activity in live tissues because of their ability to scavenge reactive radicals. Despite the fact that, in cells, damaging free radicals are primarily quenched by glutathione (GSH) with subsequent formation of harmful glutathionyl radical (GS(*)), interactions of nitroxide radicals with GS(*) and thiols have not been studied in detail. In addition, intracellular metabolic pathways leading to the formation of secondary amines from nitroxides are unknown. Here we report that GS(*) radicals react efficiently and irreversibly with nitroxides to produce secondary amines. We developed a sensitive method for the detection of GS(*) based on their specific interaction with Ac-Tempo, a nonfluorescent conjugate of fluorogenic acridine with paramagnetic nitroxide Tempo, and used it to characterize interactions between nitroxide and thiyl radicals generated through phenoxyl radical recycling by peroxidase. During reaction of Ac-Tempo with GS(*), Tempo EPR signals decayed and acridine fluorescence concurrently increased. DMPO and PBN, spin traps for GS(*), inhibited this interaction. Using combined HPLC and mass spectrometry, we determined that 90% of the Ac-Tempo was converted into fluorescent acridine (Ac)-piperidine; GSH was primarily oxidized into sulfonic acid. In myeloperoxidase-rich HL-60 cells, Ac-piperidine fluorescence was observed upon stimulation of GS(*) generation by H(2)O(2) and phenol. Development of fluorescence was prevented by preincubation of cells with the thiol-blocking reagent N-ethylmaleimide as well as with peroxidase inhibitiors. Furthermore, Ac-Tempo preserved intracellular GSH and protected cells from phenol/GS(*) toxicity, suggesting a new mechanism for the free-radical scavenging activity of nitroxides in live cells. Topics: Acridines; Amines; Catalysis; Cyclic N-Oxides; Cysteine; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Glutathione; HeLa Cells; Horseradish Peroxidase; Humans; Hydrogen Peroxide; Nitrogen Oxides; Peroxidase; Spin Labels | 2004 |
Pro-oxidative effects of Tempo in systems containing oxidants.
2,2,6,6-Tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (Tempo), previously reported by us to augment oxidation of glutathione induced by peroxynitrite (Glebska J, Skolimowski J, Kudzin Z, Gwozdzinski K, Grzelak A, Bartosz G. Pro-oxidative activity of nitroxides in their reactions with glutathione. Free Radic Biol Med 2003; 35: 310-316) was found to increase oxidation of glutathione induced by various oxidants, including persulfate, tert-butyl hydroperoxide and hydrogen peroxide. Tempo augmented also the inactivation and thiol loss of alcohol dehydrogenase induced by 2,2'-azobis(2-amidinopropane) (AAPH) and oxidative degradation of deoxyribose induced by ammonium persulfate and tert-butyl hydroperoxide. These results point to a pro-oxidative effect of nitroxides on a range of biomolecules subjected to the action of various oxidants. Topics: Alcohol Dehydrogenase; Antioxidants; Cyclic N-Oxides; Deoxyribose; Glutathione; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidants; Oxidation-Reduction | 2004 |
Dynamic nuclear polarization with biradicals.
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) experiments in rotating solids have been performed for the first time using biradicals rather than monomeric paramagnetic centers as polarizing agents. Specifically, two TEMPO radicals were tethered with a poly(ethylene glycol) chain of variable length where the number of glycol units was 2, 3, or 4. NMR experiments show that the signal observed in DNP experiments is approximately inversely proportional to the length of the chain. Thus, the shorter chain with larger electron dipolar couplings yields larger enhancements. The size of the enhancement is a factor of 4 larger than obtained with the identical concentration of monomeric nitroxide radicals achieving a value of approximately 175 for the n = 2 chain. Topics: Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radicals; Mass Spectrometry; Nitrogen Oxides; Spin Labels | 2004 |
Nitroxide radicals protect against DNA damage in rat epithelial cells induced by nitric oxide, nitroxyl anion and peroxynitrite.
In order to gain more knowledge on the antioxidant role of nitroxide radicals, in this study we investigate their possible protective action against DNA damage induced by nitric oxide (NO) and reactive nitrogen oxide species deriving from it, namely nitroxyl anion (NO(-)) and peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)). Rat trachea epithelial cells were exposed under aerobic conditions to (1) NO generated by 150 microM S-nitrosoglutathione monoethyl ester (GSNO-MEE), (2) NO(-) generated by 200 microM Angeli's salt (Na(2)N(2)O(3)) (3) ONOO(-) generated by 1mM SIN-1 (3-morpholino-sydnonimine) and (4) 100 microM synthesized ONOO(-), in the absence and presence of 5 microM of two indolinonic nitroxides synthesized by us and the piperidine nitroxide TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl). DNA damage was assessed using the comet assay-a rapid and sensitive, single-cell gel electrophoresis technique used to detect primary DNA damage in individual cells. The parameter tail moment, used as an index of DNA damage, showed that in all cases the nitroxides remarkably inhibited DNA strand breaks induced by the different nitrogen oxide species. All three nitroxides protect to the same extent, except in the case of synthesized peroxynitrite where the aromatic nitroxides 1 and 2 are more efficient than TEMPO. These findings are consistent with the antioxidant character of nitroxide compounds and give additional information on the potential implications for their use as therapeutic agents. Topics: Animals; Comet Assay; Cyclic N-Oxides; DNA Damage; Epithelium; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Nitric Oxide; Nitrogen Oxides; Peroxynitrous Acid; Rats; Trachea | 2003 |
Do stable nitroxide radicals catalyze or inhibit the degradation of hyaluronic acid?
Reactive oxygen-derived species and particularly OH radicals can degrade hyaluronic acid (HA), resulting in a loss of viscosity and a subsequent decrease in its effectiveness as a joint-lubricating agent. The production of OH in the vicinity of HA can be catalyzed by bound redox-active metals, which participate in the Haber-Weiss reaction. Damage to HA can also occur as a result of hypochlorite formed by myeloperoxidase (MPO). The protective reagents commonly used to inhibit oxidative stress-induced degradation of HA include antioxidative enzymes, such as SOD and catalase, chelators that coordinate metal ions rendering them redox-inactive, and scavengers of radicals, such as OH, as well as nonradical reactive species. In recent years, stable cyclic nitroxides have also been widely used as effective antioxidants. In many cases, nitroxide antioxidants operate catalytically and mediate their protective effect through an exchange between their oxidized and reduced forms. It was anticipated, therefore, that nitroxides would protect HA from oxidative degradation as well. On the other hand, nitroxides serve as catalysts in many oxidation reactions of alcohols, sugars and polysaccharides, including hyalouronan. Such opposite effects of nitroxides on oxidative degradation are particularly intriguing and the aim of the present study was to examine their effect on HA when subjected to diverse forms of oxidative stress. The results indicate that nitroxides protect HA from OH radicals generated enzymatically or radiolytically. The protective effect is attributable neither to the scavenging of OH nor to the oxidation of reduced metal, but to the reaction of nitroxides with secondary carbohydrate radicals-most likely peroxyl radicals. Topics: Antioxidants; Catalysis; Cyclic N-Oxides; Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation; Formates; Free Radicals; Hyaluronic Acid; Hydrogen Peroxide; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidative Stress; Superoxides; Viscosity | 2003 |
Cu(II)-nitroxyl radicals as catalytic galactose oxidase mimics.
Results from Hammett correlation studies and primary kinetic isotope effects for the CuCl-TEMPO catalysed aerobic benzyl alcohol oxidations are inconsistent with an oxoammonium based mechanism. We postulate a copper-mediated dehydrogenation mechanism, in which TEMPO regenerates the active Cu(II)-species. This mechanism is analogous to that observed for Galactose Oxidase and mimics thereof. Topics: Alcohols; Antioxidants; Benzyl Alcohols; Catalysis; Chemistry, Organic; Copper; Cyclic N-Oxides; Galactose Oxidase; Hydrogen Peroxide; Kinetics; Models, Chemical; Nitrogen Oxides; Ultraviolet Rays | 2003 |
Kinetics and mechanism of hydroxyl radical and OH-adduct radical reactions with nitroxides and with their hydroxylamines.
Stable nitroxide radicals are potent antioxidants and are among the most effective non-thiol radioprotectants, although they react with hydroxyl radicals more slowly than typical phenolic antioxidants or thiols. Surprisingly, the reduced forms of cyclic nitroxides, cyclic hydroxylamines, are better reductants yet have no radioprotective activity. To clarify the reason for this difference, we studied the kinetics and mechanisms of the reactions of nitroxides and their hydroxylamines with (*)OH radicals and with OH-adducts by using pulse radiolysis, fluorimetric determination of phenolic radiation products, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometric determination of nitroxide concentrations following radiolysis. Competition kinetics with phenylalanine as a reference compound in pulse radiolysis experiments yielded rate constants of (4.5 +/- 0.4) x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) for the reaction of (*)OH radical with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (TPO), 4-hydroxy-TPO (4-OH-TPO), and 4-oxo-TPO (4-O-TPO), (3.0 +/- 0.3) x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) for deuterated 4-O-TPO, and (1.0 +/- 0.1) x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) for the hydroxylamine 4-OH-TPO-H. The kinetic isotope effect suggests the occurrence of both (*)OH addition to the aminoxyl moiety of 4-O-TPO and H-atom abstraction from the 2- or 6-methyl groups or from the 3- and 5-methylene positions. This conclusion was further supported by final product analysis, which demonstrated that (*)OH partially oxidizes 4-O-TPO to the corresponding oxoammonium cation. The rate constants for the reactions of the nitroxides with the OH-adducts of phenylalanine and terephthalate have been determined to be near 4 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1), whereas the hydroxylamine reacted at least 50 times slower, if at all. These findings indicate that the reactivity toward (*)OH does not explain the differences between the radioprotective activities of nitroxides and hydroxylamines. Instead, the radioprotective activity of nitroxides, but not of hydroxylamines, can be partially attributed to their ability to detoxify OH-derived secondary radicals. Topics: Antioxidants; Azides; Cyclic N-Oxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Hydroxylamines; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Spin Labels | 2002 |
Nitroxide radicals as hydrogen bonding acceptors. An infrared and EPR study.
The equilibrium constants for the formation of hydrogen-bonded complexes with phenol, benzyl alcohol and diphenyl amine of a persistent nitroxide radical (TEMPO) have been measured for the first time by IR spectroscopy in solution. By making use of the data obtained with IR measurements it was possible to quantitatively determine the effect of hydrogen bonding on the nitrogen hyperfine-splitting constant. On this basis it is shown that EPR spectroscopy can be used as an alternative to IR spectroscopy for the determination of the thermodynamic parameters of hydrogen bond formation with nitroxides by following the dependence of the experimental EPR nitrogen hyperfine splitting of these radicals upon changing the nature of the solvent. The experimental data obtained from both IR and EPR spectroscopy indicate that nitroxides are versatile hydrogen bond acceptors giving hydrogen bonds of strength similar to that of ethers or esters. The corresponding Abraham's beta 2H values have been determined as 0.46. Topics: Alcohols; Antioxidants; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Hydrogen Bonding; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Spectrophotometry, Infrared; Spin Labels | 2002 |
Effect of oxygen on the electrochemical reduction of nitroxyl radical: interpretation of the mechanism for a redox probe in biological systems.
Topics: Antioxidants; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electrochemistry; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen | 2002 |
Nitroxide radicals. Controlled release from and transport through biomimetic and hollow fibre membranes.
Stable nitroxide radicals have found wide applications in chemistry and biology and they have some potential applications in medicine due to their antioxidant properties. Nitrocellulose filters impregnated with lipid-like substances are used as an imitation of biomembranes and could be used as a controlled drug release vehicle, while experiments with hollow fibres can be useful in the modelling of a drug delivery via blood vessels. This paper describes mechanisms of the nitroxide transport in four different model systems, i.e. a) exit of nitroxide into aqueous solution from porous nitrocellulose filters, impregnated with organic solvents, b) transport of nitroxides through the impregnated membrane from one into another aqueous solution, c) transport of nitroxides from bulk phase of organic solvents through the impregnated membrane into aqueous phase with ascorbic acid, and d) transport of nitroxides from liquid organic phase into aqueous solution through porous hollow fibres. The results are analysed in terms of mass transfer resistance of a membrane, organic and aqueous phase, based on nitroxide diffusion and distribution coefficients. Ascorbic acid reduced nitroxides in water and enhanced the rate of their transfer due to the decrease of transport resistance of unstirred aqueous layers. It is demonstrated that in the case of biomembranes the rate limiting step could be the transport through unstirred aqueous layers and membrane/water interface. Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Cyclic N-Oxides; Membranes, Artificial; Models, Chemical; Nitrogen Oxides; Solutions; Water | 2001 |
Increased oxidative modification of albumin when illuminated in vitro in the presence of a common sunscreen ingredient: protection by nitroxide radicals.
We previously reported on the ability of dibenzoylmethane (DBM) and a relative, Parsol 1789, used as a ultraviolet A (UVA)-absorbing sunscreen, to generate free radicals upon illumination, and as a consequence, to inflict strand breaks in plasmid DNA in vitro. This study has now been extended to determine the effects of Parsol 1789 and DBM on proteins, under UVA illumination, with the sole purpose of gaining more knowledge on the photobiological effects of sunscreen chemicals. Parsol 1789 (100 microM) caused a 2-fold increase in protein carbonyl formation (an index of oxidative damage) in bovine serum albumin (BSA) when exposed to illumination, and this damage was both concentration- and time-dependent. The degree of protein damage was markedly reduced by the presence of free radical scavengers, namely piperidinic and indolinonic nitroxide radicals, in accordance with our previous study. Vitamin E had no effect under the conditions used. The results obtained corroborate the fact that Parsol 1789 generates free radicals upon illumination and that these are, most probably, responsible for the protein damage observed under the conditions used in our system. However, at present, we cannot extrapolate from these results the relevance to human use of sunscreens; therefore, further studies should be necessary to determine the efficacy at the molecular and cellular level of this UVA-absorber in order to ascertain protection against photocarcinogenic risk. Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Benzoates; Chalcones; Cyclic N-Oxides; Free Radicals; Kinetics; Mice; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Propiophenones; Serum Albumin, Bovine; Spin Labels; Sunscreening Agents; Ultraviolet Rays; Vitamin E | 2000 |
Nitroxide radicals protect DNA from damage when illuminated in vitro in the presence of dibenzoylmethane and a common sunscreen ingredient.
Indolinonic nitroxide radicals efficiently scavenge oxygen- and carbon-centered radicals. They protect lipid and protein systems against oxidative stress, but little is known about their capacity to protect DNA against radical-mediated damage. We compare indolinonic nitroxides and the piperidines TEMPO and TEMPOL for their ability to inhibit strand breaks inflicted on DNA when it is illuminated in vitro in the presence of dibenzoylmethane (DBM) and a relative, Parsol 1789, used as a UVA-absorbing sunscreen. We used spin-trapping EPR to examine the formation of radicals and plasmid nicking assays to evaluate DNA strand breakage. The results have a two-fold interest. First, they show that all the nitroxides tested efficiently prevent DNA damage in a dose-dependent fashion. Vitamin E had no effect under the conditions used. Second, they show that carbon-centered radicals are produced on illumination of DBM and its relative and that their formation is probably responsible for the direct strand breaks found when naked DNA is illuminated in vitro in their presence. Additional work on the ability of sunscreens to enter human cells and their response to the light that penetrates sunscreen-protected skin would be necessary before any conclusion could be drawn as to whether the results reported here are relevant to human use of sunscreens. Topics: Antioxidants; Benzoates; Chalcones; Cyclic N-Oxides; DNA; DNA Damage; DNA, Bacterial; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Humans; Indoles; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Spin Labels; Sunscreening Agents; Ultraviolet Rays | 1999 |
NMR studies of electrostatic potential distribution around biologically important molecules.
A new experimental approach has been developed to study the distribution of local electrostatic potential around specific protons in biologically important molecules. The approach is the development of a method denoted as "spin label/spin probe," which was proposed by one of us (. Mol. Biol. 6:498-507). The proposed method is based upon the quantitative measurement of the contribution of differently charged nitroxide probes to the spin lattice relaxation rate (1/T1) of protons in the molecule of interest, followed by calculation of local electrostatic potential using the classical Debye equation. In parallel, the theoretical calculation of potential distribution with the use of the MacSpartan Plus 1.0 program has been performed. Application of the method to solutions of simple organic molecules (aliphatic and aromatic alcohols, aliphatic carboxylates (propionate anion), and protonated ethyl amine and imidazole) allowed us to estimate the effective potential around the molecules under investigation. These were found to be in good agreement with theoretically expected values. This technique was then applied to zwitterionic amino acids bearing neutral and charged side chains (glycine, lysine, histidine, and aspartic acid). The reliability of the general approach is proved by the data presented in this paper. Application of this new methodology can afford insight into the biochemical significance of electrostatic effects in biological systems. Topics: Alcohols; Amines; Amino Acids; Carboxylic Acids; Cyclic N-Oxides; Imidazoles; Kinetics; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Protons; Software; Spin Labels; Static Electricity | 1999 |
Cutaneous tolerance to nitroxide free radicals in human skin.
No data are available on the irritant effect of nitroxide free radicals in human skin. Nitroxides are important biomedical skin probes used in Electron Paramagnetic Resonance spectroscopy and imaging. Our purpose was to study the skin irritation potential of different nitroxide free radical structures in skin of healthy human subjects. We investigated the following nitroxides: Tempo (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidinoxy), Doxo (2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-oxazolidinoxy), Proxo (2,2,5,5-tetramethyl- -dihydro-pyrrolinoxy), and Imidazo (2,2,3,4,5,5-hexamethyl-imidazoline-1-yloxyl). Cutaneous irritation was determined in human skin following a single application and after repetitive applications in comparison to the standardized irritant sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS). The response was evaluated clinically as well as by a bioengineering method analyzing transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and skin hydration (capacitance). The nitroxides were classified clinically from nonirritant (Imidazo, Proxo), to slightly irritant (Doxo, 100 mM), or moderately irritant (Tempo 100 mM) after a single application. The TEWL values were significantly increased by Doxo and Tempo, but capacitance values were not changed significantly. In the cumulative irritation test Tempo was scored as a slight irritant (10 mM). TOLH (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-hydroxypiperidin), the hydroxylamine of Tempo, which is the major skin metabolite, did not cause skin irritation after a single or repetitive applications. This may indicate that a loss of cellular reducing equivalents may be involved in the inflammation process caused by Tempo. The order of nitroxide irritation potency (Tempo > Doxo >> Imidazo = Proxo) is inverse to the order of nitroxide biostability in human skin (Imidazo = Proxo >> Doxo > Tempo). In conclusion, nitroxide free radicals are classified as nonirritant to moderately irritant in human skin. Particularly, the pyrrolidine and imidazoline type nitroxides have a low potential to cause acute or subacute skin toxicity. Topics: Adult; Cyclic N-Oxides; Edema; Erythema; Free Radicals; Humans; Middle Aged; Nitrogen Oxides; Skin Diseases; Spin Labels | 1998 |
Double (fluorescent and spin) sensors for detection of reactive oxygen species in the thylakoid membrane.
A series of dansylated sterically hindered amines designed to trapping reactive oxygen species, were synthesized. Compounds were tested in isolated thylakoid membranes subjected to photoinhibition by excess photosynthetically active radiation (400-700 nm). DanePy showed good selectivity for singlet oxygen and the formation of nitroxide was detected by appearance of ESR signal and quenching fluorescence. Topics: Chloroplasts; Cyclic N-Oxides; Dansyl Compounds; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Intracellular Membranes; Light; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxygen; Piperidines; Reactive Oxygen Species; Singlet Oxygen; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Spin Labels; Spinacia oleracea | 1998 |
Stable nitroxide radicals protect lipid acyl chains from radiation damage.
The present study focused on protective activity of two six-membered-ring nitroxide radicals, 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (Tempo) and 4-hydroxy-Tempo (Tempol), against radiation damage to acyl chain residues of egg phosphatidylcholine (EPC) of small unilamellar vesicles (SUV). SUV were gamma-irradiated (10-12 kGy) under air at ambient temperature in the absence and presence of nitroxides. Acyl chain composition of the phospholipids before and after irradiation was determined by gas chromatography. Both Tempo and Tempol effectively and similarly protected the acyl chains of EPC SUV, including the highly sensitive polyunsaturated acyl chains, C20:4, C22:5, and C22:6. The conclusions of the study are: (a) The higher the degree of unsaturation in the acyl chain, the greater is the degradation caused by irradiation. (b) The fully saturated fatty acids palmitic acid (C16) and stearic acid (C18) showed no significant change in their levels. (c) Both Tempo and Tempol provided similar protection to acyl chain residues. (d) Nitroxides' lipid-bilayer/aqueous distribution is not validly represented by their n-octanol/saline partition coefficient. (e) The lipid-bilayer/aqueous partition coefficient of Tempo and Tempol cannot be correlated with their protective effect. (f) The nitroxides appear to protect via a catalytic mode. Unlike common antioxidants, such as alpha-tocopherol, which are consumed under irradiation and are, therefore, less effective against high radiation dose, nitroxide radicals are restored and terminate radical chain reactions in a catalytic manner. Furthermore, nitroxides neither yield secondary radicals upon their reaction with radicals nor act as prooxidants. Not only are nitroxides self-replenished, but also their reduction products are effective antioxidants. Therefore, the use of nitroxides offers a powerful strategy to protect liposomes, membranes, and other lipid-based assemblies from radiation damage. Topics: Antioxidants; Arachidonic Acid; Cell Membrane; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Fatty Acids, Unsaturated; Free Radicals; Gamma Rays; Lipid Bilayers; Lipid Peroxidation; Liposomes; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Phosphatidylcholines; Reactive Oxygen Species; Spin Labels | 1997 |
Cerebroprotective effect of stable nitroxide radicals in closed head injury in the rat.
Nitroxide stable radicals are unreactive toward most diamagnetic molecules, but readily undergo one-electron redox reactions with paramagnetic species such as free radicals and transition metals, thus serving as cell permeable antioxidants. The involvement of reactive oxygen species in the pathophysiology of neurotrauma has been well established. The neuroprotective properties of three nitroxides: 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-N-oxyl (TPO), the hydrophilic analog: TPL, and its reduced form: TPH, were tested in a rat model of closed head injury (CHI). CHI was induced in ether anesthetized rats by a weight drop device and recovery was followed for up to 24 h. The "clinical status' was evaluated according to a "Neurological Severity Score' (NSS), at 1 h and 24 h, the difference between these scores, delta NSS, reflecting the extent of recovery. Edema was assessed by measurement of water content at 24 h. The integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was investigated using Evans Blue extravasation. TPL, TPH and TPO facilitated clinical recovery, the latter causing a more pronounced effect (delta NSS = 7.63 +/- 0.26 in treated rats vs 4.94 +/- 0.48 in control rats, P < 0.001). TPL was found to significantly reduce edema formation (80.13% +/- 0.26 vs 83.65% +/- 0.49, P < 0.001) and to ameliorate BBB disruption (P < 0.001). The therapeutic window of TPL was found to be in the range of 4 h after CHI. The mechanisms underlying the nitroxide neuroprotective activity presumably involve: (a) reoxidation of reduced transition metal ions; (b) a selective radical-radical reaction; and (c) catalytic removal of intracellular and extracellular .O2-. The results indicate that nitroxides could be used in neuroprotective treatment of CHI. Topics: Animals; Blood-Brain Barrier; Cyclic N-Oxides; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Edema; Evans Blue; Free Radicals; Head Injuries, Closed; Male; Neuroprotective Agents; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Spin Labels; Time Factors | 1996 |
Molecular diffusion into horse spleen ferritin: a nitroxide radical spin probe study.
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and gel permeation chromatography were employed to study the molecular diffusion of a number of small nitroxide spin probes (approximately 7-9 A diameter) into the central cavity of the iron-storage protein ferritin. Charge and polarity of these radicals play a critical role in the diffusion process. The negatively charged radical 4-carboxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (4-carboxy-TEMPO) does not penetrate the cavity whereas the positively charged 4-amino-TEMPO and 3-(aminomethyl)-proxyl radical and polar 4-hydroxy-TEMPO radical do. Unlike the others, the apolar TEMPO radical does not enter the cavity but instead binds to ferritin, presumably at a hydrophobic region of the protein. The kinetic data indicate that diffusion is not purely passive, the driving force coming not only from the concentration gradient between the inside and outside of the protein but also from charge interactions between the diffusant and the protein. A model for diffusion is derived that describes the observed kinetics. First-order half-lives for diffusion into the protein of 21-26 min are observed, suggesting that reductant molecules with diameters considerably larger than approximately 9 A would probably enter the protein cavity too slowly to mobilize iron efficiently by direct interaction with the mineral core. Topics: Animals; Binding Sites; Biophysical Phenomena; Biophysics; Cyclic N-Oxides; Diffusion; Electrochemistry; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Ferritins; Free Radicals; Horses; Kinetics; Nitrogen Oxides; Spin Labels; Spleen | 1996 |
Use of paramagnetic chelated metal derivatives of polysaccharides and spin-labeled polysaccharides as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging.
Soluble and insoluble polysaccharides were derivatized with diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) and/or spin-labeled with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO). Polysaccharides derivatized with DTPA were prepared via cyanogen bromide activation, coupling to a diamine linker, and to DTPA anhydride. Spin-labeled polysaccharides were also prepared via cyanogen bromide activation. The extent of derivatization for dextran (18 kDa) was about 120 glucose units per DTPA, and for cellulose and starch about 15-30 units per DTPA. For spin-labeled polysaccharides, the average loading ranged from 1 nitroxide per 16 glucose units for starch to 181 for dextran (82 kDa). These derivatized paramagnetic polysaccharides were shown to be more effective relaxants than the small paramagnetic molecules alone. Both soluble and insoluble polysaccharide-linker-DTPA-Gd(III) complexes were effectively cleared from the body (rats) after oral administration. After intravenous administration, the biodistribution of dextran-linker-DTPA-Gd(III) complexes differed significantly from that of GdDTPA. Reduction of the nitroxide by ascorbic acid was retarded in the polysaccharide derivatives, particularly in starch derivatized with both nitroxide and linker-DTPA-Cu(II). These agents showed contrast enhancement in the gastrointestinal tract of rabbits. Topics: Animals; Cellulose; Chelating Agents; Contrast Media; Cyclic N-Oxides; Dextrans; Diamines; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radicals; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Male; Metals; Nitrogen Oxides; Pentetic Acid; Polysaccharides; Rabbits; Spin Labels; Starch | 1991 |
In vitro synthesis of nitroxide free radicals by hog liver microsomes.
The in vitro biooxidation of 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine (TEMP), 4-hydroxy-2,2,4,4-tetramethyl-1,3-oxazolidine (TEMO) and diphenylamine (DPA) by hog liver microsomes to their respective nitroxide free radicals, 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO), 2,2,4,4-tetramethyl-1,3-oxazolidine-1-oxyl (TEMOO), and diphenylnitroxide (DPNO) has been investigated. For extending the life span of the liver microsomes, a calcium alginate immobilization procedure was used. The biooxidation rates of the above amines to their respective nitroxide metabolites were measured by means of oxygen uptake at 37 degrees C and pH 7.4. N-octylamine was found to be an activator in the biooxidation of the amines. The formation of the nitroxide radicals was identified by E.S.R. spectroscopy. Topics: Alginates; Amines; Animals; Cyclic N-Oxides; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Free Radicals; Glucuronic Acid; Hexuronic Acids; In Vitro Techniques; Microsomes, Liver; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen; Swine | 1990 |
Inhibition of lipid peroxidation by spin labels. Relationships between structure and function.
Inhibition of lipid peroxidation by nitroxide radicals and their corresponding hydroxylamines was investigated. The nitroxides were either oxazolidines or piperidines, differing in substitution of the backbone of the molecule (a five or six-membered ring structure, respectively). Concentration requirements for 50% inhibition of microsomal lipid peroxidation varied from 340 to 6 microM for the nitroxides, and from 120 to 3 microM for the hydroxylamines, correlating with lipophilicity and chemical structure. Intramembrane concentrations required for 50% inhibition was independent of lipophilicity when peroxidation was initiated with ADP-Fe2+ but increased with lipophilicity when peroxidation was initiated with t-butylhydroperoxide. During studies of the kinetics of the inhibition, two modes were seen: a delay or a decreased rate of the process. The former mode was seen with the more lipophilic inhibitors. The mechanism of inhibition was similar for all nitroxides and consisted of the following three major components: blocking of primary initiation, prevention of secondary (peroxide-dependent) initiation, and scavenging of various lipoid radicals in the membrane, the major mode of action of the hydroxylamines. Inhibitory efficiency was interpreted in terms of steric hindrance, diffusibility, regeneration of inhibitor, and ability to interact with hydrophilic sites in a hydrophobic environment. Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate; Animals; Cyclic N-Oxides; Free Radicals; Kinetics; Lipid Peroxidation; Microsomes, Liver; Molecular Structure; Nitrogen Oxides; Oxazoles; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Spin Labels; Structure-Activity Relationship | 1989 |