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Query: HUMANGGP:001372 (
ESR
)
7,313
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nitroxide stable free radicals (nitroxides) have potential utility as MRI contrast-enhancing agents with the additional capability of reflecting redox metabolism. In order to gain a better understanding of their potential interactions in vivo, we have studied the longitudinal NMRD profiles (1/T1 as a function of field strength) and
ESR
spectra for lipophilic and aqueous-soluble nitroxides in blood, plasma, and plasma components. Typical
water
-soluble nitroxides do not interact appreciably with blood, plasma, or plasma proteins. Fatty acid nitroxides do interact physically with blood, predominantly by intercalation within red blood cell membranes and binding to albumin. The latter interaction results in significantly enhanced relaxivity for the nitroxide/HSA complex. Relaxation of
water
protons in this case is dominated by inner sphere processes, ostensibly due to
water
molecules hydrogen bonded to nitroxide moieties. The rotational reorientation time for the complex, the electronic relaxation time, and the exchange time for the
water
molecule reversably bound to the nitroxide, all appear significantly to influence the correlation time (approximately 16 ns) for this inner sphere contribution.
...
PMID:Interactions of nitroxides with plasma and blood: effect on 1/T1 of water protons. 216 85
(1) Isolated rat liver mitochondria were subjected to catalytic hydrogenation using a
water
-soluble Pd complex and molecular H2. This treatment resulted in a reduction of double bonds on phospholipid acyl chains as judged by gas chromatography of fatty acid methyl esters and HPLC of dinitrobenzoyldiacylglycerols. (2) After hydrogenation, mitochondria lost their ability to hydrolyze endogenous phospholipids in alkaline, Ca2+ containing medium, while phospholipase A2 retained full activity against exogenous substrates, regardless of whether those substrates were hydrogenated or not. (3) Inhibition by hydrogenation of endogenous phospholipid hydrolysis correlated with the loss of polyunsaturated fatty acyls, rather than with changes of the bulk membrane fluidity as measured by
ESR
and fluorescence studies. (4) These data suggest that the unsaturation of mitochondrial membrane lipids might be important for regulation of phospholipid breakdown by endogenous phospholipases. In particular, polyunsaturated molecular species seem to be involved in making phospholipids accessible to phospholipase A-mediated hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Intramembraneous hydrogenation of mitochondrial lipids reduces the substrate availability, but not the enzyme activity of endogenous phospholipase A. The role of polyunsaturated phospholipid species. 216 20
Solid pyrimidine nucleic acid bases (cytosine, thymine, and uracil) were gamma-irradiated (50 KGy) and dissolved in deaerated solutions of adriamycin in
water
and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). Analogous experiments using unirradiated pyrimidines as controls were also performed. In
water
only gamma-irradiated cytosine showed a reaction with the adriamycin yielding a single
ESR
peak (g = 2.0033) consistent with the adriamycin semiquinone radical. Since the unirradiated cytosine gave no reaction, the result suggests an electron transfer from cytosine radicals (generated by gamma-radiolysis) to adriamycin. In DMSO the three gamma-irradiated and unirradiated pyrimidines reacted with adriamycin yielding the adriamycin semiquinone radical observed by
ESR
. These results suggest that in DMSO an electron is transferred to adriamycin from the pyrimidine radicals and from the parent pyrimidine molecules. However, the process is on the order of 10(5) times more efficient for the pyrimidine radicals. Superoxide radicals (O2-.) were formed following addition of oxygen to the deaerated DMSO solutions containing adriamycin semiquinone radicals. O2-. was spin trapped using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO). The results show a possible reaction sequence in which an electron transferred to adriamycin, by pyrimidine radicals and parent pyrimidine molecules, is subsequently transferred to dissolved oxygen.
...
PMID:ESR study of electron transfer reactions between gamma-irradiated pyrimidines, adriamycin and oxygen. 217 26
During holidays in Suriname a six year old boy fell ill with high fever, general malaise, pain in the extremities and abdomen and vomiting. Because of a tentative diagnosis of acute rheumatism or bacterial enteritis amoxicillin and salicylates were started. After his return to the Netherlands an increased
ESR
and impaired renal and hepatic functions were found. The history revealed contact with sewage
water
. Further analysis established the diagnosis of Leptospirosis. This comparatively rare clinical entity, seldom mentioned in paediatric literature, is discussed.
...
PMID:[A patient with fever and pain in the extremities]. 237 42
Upon cleavage of the reactive thioester bonds (Cys-949-Glx-952) of tetrameric human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) by methylamine, one sulfhydryl group per alpha 2M subunit is exposed. These identical sulfhydryl group sites were labeled with the thiol-specific nitroxide spin-labels (1-oxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-3-pyrrolin-3-yl)methyl methanethiosulfonate and (1-oxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidinyl)methyl methanethiosulfonate, a homologous series of maleimide spin-labels, and the thiol-specific fluorescent probe 2-[(4-maleimidophenyl)amino]naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid sodium salt (MANS). The
ESR
and fluorescence results showed that these sulfhydryl group sites were at the base of a narrow crevice that is greater than or equal to 8 A deep. Although the bound MANS fluorophore was slightly blue shifted with an enhanced quantum yield vs the free label in
water
, the environment of the sulfhydryl site appeared to be of a polar nature when compared with the emission maxima in several solvents of varying polarity. The Glx residue participating in the thioester linkage in the intact protein was labeled with 4-amino-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl. The distance between the Glx and Cys moieties was estimated at greater than or equal to 10-25 A from double spin-labeling experiments.
...
PMID:Spin-label and fluorescence labeling studies of the thioester bonds in human alpha 2-macroglobulin. 245 60
Oxygen transport in phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol membranes has been studied by observing the collision of molecular oxygen with nitroxide radical spin labels placed at various distances from the membrane surface using long-pulse saturation recovery
ESR
techniques. The collision rate was estimated for tempocholine phosphatidic acid ester, 5-doxylstearic acid, and 16-doxylstearic acid from spin-lattice relaxation times (T1) measured in the presence and absence of molecular oxygen. Profiles of the local oxygen transport parameter across the membrane were obtained as a function of cholesterol mol fraction and temperature in L-alpha-dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine ([ Myr2]PtdCho) and L-alpha-dioleoylphosphatidylcholine ([ Ole2]PtdCho) membranes. Membrane oxygen permeability coefficients were estimated from oxygen transport parameter profiles. At approximately 30 degrees C, the oxygen permeability coefficients in the presence and absence of 50 mol % cholesterol are 22.7 and 125.2 cm/s, respectively, for [Myr2]PtdCho membranes, and 54.7 and 114.2 cm/s, respectively, for [Ole2]PtdCho membranes (compared with 60-80 cm/s for
water
layers with the same thicknesses as the membranes). The major results in the liquid-crystalline phase are as follows: (i) In the absence of cholesterol, membranes are not barriers to oxygen transport. (ii) Addition of 50 mol % cholesterol decreases oxygen permeability by a factor of approximately 5 and approximately 2.5 in [Myr2]PtdCho and [Ole2]PtdCho membranes, respectively. The resistance to oxygen transport is located in and near the polar headgroup regions in the membrane. (iii) Cholesterol increases oxygen transport in the central regions of [Ole2]PtdCho membranes.
...
PMID:Oxygen permeability of phosphatidylcholine--cholesterol membranes. 254 78
For the first time, the enzymatic one-electron oxidation of several naturally occurring and synthetic
water
-soluble porphyrins by peroxidases was investigated by
ESR
and optical spectroscopy. The
ESR
spectra of the free radical metabolites of the porphyrins were singlets (g = 2.0024, delta H = 2-3 G), which we assigned to their respective porphyrin pi-cation free radicals. Several porphyrins were investigated and ranked by the intensity of their
ESR
spectra (coproporphyrin III greater than coproporphyrin I greater than deuteroporphyrin IX greater than mesoporphyrin IX greater than Photofrin II greater than protoporphyrin IX greater than uroporphyrin I greater than uroporphyrin III greater than hematoporphyrin IX). The porphyrins were oxidized by several peroxidases (horseradish peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, and myeloperoxidase), yielding the same type of
ESR
spectra. From these results, we conclude that porphyrins are substrates for peroxidases. The changes in the visible absorbance spectra of the porphyrins during enzymatic oxidation were monitored. The two-electron oxidation product, which was assigned to the dihydroxyporphyrin, was detected as an intermediate of the oxidation process. The optical spectrum of the porphyrin pi-cation free radical was not detected, probably due to its low steady-state concentration.
...
PMID:The one-electron oxidation of porphyrins to porphyrin pi-cation radicals by peroxidases: an electron spin resonance investigation. 254 38
When argon-saturated aqueous solutions of alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) were sonicated, the spin adducts PBN-Phenyl (Ph), PBN-X, and PBN-H were observed. It can be inferred that PBN-Ph and -X arise from spin adducts of thermal decomposition products of PBN induced by the high temperature due to ultrasonic cavitation. The
ESR
signal of PBN-H was observed at a lower PBN concentration than those of PBN-Ph and PBN-X. The ratios of
ESR
intensity of PBN-H to those of PBN-Ph and PBN-X increased with the final temperatures of the cavitation bubbles created by different rare gases. The spin adducts of methyl and tert-butyl radicals from the pyrolysis of PBN, induced by the high temperatures due to cavitation, were found from spin trapping experiments in which 3,5-dibromo-2,6-dideuterio-4-nitrosobenzene sulfonate was used as a spin trap. Similar spin adducts induced by pyrolysis were also observed in sonicated aqueous solutions of other nitrone spin traps, such as alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone, and alpha-(4-nitrophenol) N-tert-butylnitrone. The greater the hydrophobicity of the spin traps, as measured by the 2-octanol/
water
partition coefficients, the lower the concentration of spin trap at which methyl radicals generated by thermal decomposition of the spin trap can be observed. The present results indicate that the nonvolatile, highly hydrophobic spin traps accumulate preferentially in the interfacial region of cavitation bubbles where they undergo thermal decomposition during cavitation to produce the radicals.
...
PMID:Sonochemistry of nitrone spin traps in aqueous solutions. Evidence for pyrolysis radicals from spin traps. 255 Mar 32
Location and dynamics of the voltage-dependent pore-forming icosapeptide alamethicin have been studied using spin labels which were linked directly and via spacers to the C-terminus of the amphiphilic alpha-helix. Ion-transport activities of these derivatives were found to be very similar to those of natural alamethicin in green plant thylakoids chosen as a model system. The shape of the electron spin resonance spectra indicates segmental motion of the nitroxide rather than rotation of the whole peptide. A population of spins showing narrow lines in the presence of thylakoids or lipid vesicles is attributed to alamethicin in the aqueous solution. A second population shows rotational correlation times greater than 10(-9) s and is bound to the membranes, the C-termini residing in an environment with a polarity close to that of
water
. This population is inaccessible to the hydrophilic, charged line broadening agent chromium oxalate. Since spectral shapes and amplitudes of spectra are unchanged by additions of unlabelled peptide, it is concluded that the
ESR
detectable spins are bound to peptides essentially in the monomeric state. Alamethicin induced pore formation under flash illumination is demonstrated by measurement of kinetics of proton deposition in the thylakoid interior. When pores are opened by illuminating thylakoids and thus applying a membrane potential, mainly the bound population is affected by a process reversibly suppressing the signal, whereas only limited disappearance of label from the external medium is detected. Apparently, the potential causes a change in the conformation of the peptide which leads to a further immobilisation of the label, possibly due to a deeper insertion of the alpha-helices into the lipid membrane. However, evidence has been presented experimentally that there is no detectable change of potential prior to the opening of the pore.
...
PMID:Location and dynamics of alamethicin in unilamellar vesicles and thylakoids as model systems. A spin label study. 255 81
KBr matrices appear to be convenient media to reveal the radicals formed on light exposure of eumelanin dispersions. The
ESR
signal of eumelanin dispersed at low concentration in KBr pellets is analyzed during and after irradiation at various wavelengths. Different types of radicals are observed. R'1- and R1-types of radicals are assigned, respectively, to neutral and deprotonated intrinsic phenoxy radicals of eumelanin. R'1 can be oxidized by oxygen as opposite to R1. R2- and R'2-types are formed in the indolic site.
Water
favours the conversion of R2, unreactive with oxygen, into R'2 which can be oxidized. R'1 and R2 result of an electron photoejection, respectively, from the phenolic and the indolic site. The R3-type radicals are associated with the band-to-band excitation of eumelanin considered as a semiorganized solid.
...
PMID:Electron spin resonance of eumelanin from hair: photoinduced radicals in solid matrix. 255 8
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