hexacyanoferrate-iii has been researched along with Nerve-Degeneration* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for hexacyanoferrate-iii and Nerve-Degeneration
Article | Year |
---|---|
One-electron oxidation of catecholamines generates free radicals with an in vitro toxicity correlating with their lifetime.
One-electron oxidation of dopamine by ferricyanide generates a highly reactive free radical intermediate that inactivates the V-type H(+)-ATPase proton pump in catecholamine storage vesicles, i.e., the driving force in both the vesicular uptake and the storage of catecholamines, in a cell-free in vitro model system at pH 7.0. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed that a radical with g=2.0045, formed by this oxidation, was relatively long-lived (t(1/2) obs=79 s at pH 6.5 and 25 degrees C). Experimental evidence is presented that the observed radical most likely represents dopamine semiquinone free radical, although an o-quinone free radical cannot be ruled out. Oxidation of noradrenaline and adrenaline by ferricyanide generated similar isotropic radicals, but of shorter half-lives (i.e., 43 and 5.3 s, respectively), and the efficacy of inactivation of the H(+)-ATPase correlated with the half-life of the respective catecholamine free radical (i.e., dopamine >noradrenaline>>adrenaline). Thus, the generation of relatively long-lived semiquinone free radicals, although at low concentrations, in dopaminergic and noradrenergic neurons may represent a common mechanism of cytotoxicity linked to neurodegeneration of the respective neurons related to Parkinson disease. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; Animals; Catecholamines; Cattle; Chromaffin Granules; Dopamine; Electrons; Epinephrine; Ferricyanides; Free Radicals; In Vitro Techniques; Models, Neurological; Nerve Degeneration; Norepinephrine; Oxidation-Reduction | 2006 |