Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Superoxide anion mechanism

Although this mechanism could explain the inertness of di-t-butyl sulphide towards oxidation due to the absence of a-hydrogen atoms, it was later ruled out by Tezuka and coworkers They found that diphenyl sulphoxide was also formed when diphenyl sulphide was photolyzed in the presence of oxygen in methylene chloride or in benzene as a solvent. This implies that a-hydrogen is not necessary for the formation of the sulphoxide. It was proposed that a possible reactive intermediate arising from the excited complex 64 would be either a singlet oxygen, a pair of superoxide anion radical and the cation radical of sulphide 68 or zwitterionic and/or biradical species such as 69 or 70 (equation 35). [Pg.252]

Nitrosoarenes are readily formed by the oxidation of primary N-hydroxy arylamines and several mechanisms appear to be involved. These include 1) the metal-catalyzed oxidation/reduction to nitrosoarenes, azoxyarenes and arylamines (144) 2) the 02-dependent, metal-catalyzed oxidation to nitrosoarenes (145) 3) the 02-dependent, hemoglobin-mediated co-oxidation to nitrosoarenes and methe-moglobin (146) and 4) the 0 2-dependent conversion of N-hydroxy arylamines to nitrosoarenes, nitrosophenols and nitroarenes (147,148). Each of these processes can involve intermediate nitroxide radicals, superoxide anion radicals, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radicals, all of which have been observed in model systems (149,151). Although these radicals are electrophilic and have been suggested to result in DNA damage (151,152), a causal relationship has not yet been established. Nitrosoarenes, on the other hand, are readily formed in in vitro metabolic incubations (2,153) and have been shown to react covalently with lipids (154), proteins (28,155) and GSH (17,156-159). Nitrosoarenes are also readily reduced to N-hydroxy arylamines by ascorbic acid (17,160) and by reduced pyridine nucleotides (9,161). [Pg.360]

B. A., Tarpey, M. M., Harrison, D. G., Evidence for enhanced vascular superoxide anion production in nitrate tolerance. A novel mechanism underlying tolerance and cross-tolerance. J. Clin. Invest. 95 (1995), p. 187-194... [Pg.52]

A photooxidative reaction in which molecular oxygen is incorporated into the reaction products(s). Three mechanisms appear to be common for such processes (a) reaction of triplet O2 with free radicals that have been generated photochemically (b) reaction of photochemically produced singlet oxygen with a molecular species and (c) the production of superoxide anion which then acts as the reactive species. See also Photooxidation... [Pg.559]

The precise mechanism by which NO causes glutamase neurotoxicity is unknown. Calcium must be required because of the requirement for NMDA- and glutamate-induced NO formation in brain tissue (Garthwaite etal., 1988). Although both NMDA-receptor agonists and sodium nitroprusside induce specific neurotoxicity as well as cyclic GMP formation in brain tissue (Dawson et al., 1991), it is unlikely that cyclic GMP is the ultimate cause of the neurotoxicity. Instead, NO is most likely involved in producing target cell death. One possible mechanistic pathway is that locally synthesized NO and superoxide anion react with each other to yield peroxynitrite anion (Beckman et al., 1990), which can destroy cell membranes either directly via interaction with cellular thiols (Radi et al., 1991) or indirectly via decomposition to hydroxyl and other free radicals (Beckman et al., 1990). [Pg.126]

The enzyme copper, zinc superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) catalyzes the disproportionation of superoxide anion to dioxygen and hydrogen peroxide (equations 1 and 2). Crystallographic data can be found in References 41-46. This antioxidant enzyme is present in the cytosol and mitochondrial intermembrane space of eukaryotic cells and in the periplasmic space of bacterial cells as a homodimer of 32 kDa. Each monomer binds one copper and one zinc ion. The reaction mechanism involves the... [Pg.10]


See other pages where Superoxide anion mechanism is mentioned: [Pg.216]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.857]    [Pg.858]    [Pg.858]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.894]    [Pg.1161]    [Pg.1186]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.951]    [Pg.1311]    [Pg.1486]    [Pg.1161]    [Pg.1186]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.143]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.231 , Pg.232 , Pg.233 , Pg.234 , Pg.235 , Pg.236 ]




SEARCH



Anionic mechanism

Superoxide anion

© 2024 chempedia.info