60 research outputs found
Reaction of sulphate radical anion (SO<SUB>4</SUB><SUP>•-</SUP>) with hydroxy- and methyl-substituted pyrimidines: a pulse radiolysis study
Reactions of sulphate radical anion (SO4•-) with 4,6-dihydroxy-2-methyl pyrimidine (DHMP), 2,4-dimethyl-6-hydroxy pyrimidine (DMHP), 6-methyl uracil (MU) and 5,6-dimethyl uracil (DMU) have been studied by pulse radiolysis at pH 3 and at pH 10. The transient intermediate spectra were compared with those from the reaction of hydroxyl radical (•OH). It is proposed that SOSO4•- produces radical cations of these pyrimidines in the initial stage. These radical cations are short-lived except in the case of DMHP where a relatively longer lived radical cation is proposed to be formed. When there is a hydrogen atom attached to the N(1) or N(3) position, a deprotonation from these sites is highly favored. When there is no hydrogen attached to these sites, deprotonation from a substituted methyl group is favored. At acidic pH, deprotonation from nitrogen is observed for DHMP, MU and DMU. At basic pH, the radical cation reacts with OH- leading to the formation of OH adducts
Reaction of oxide radical ion (O<SUP>•-</SUP>) with substituted pyrimidines
Pulse radiolysis technique has been used to investigate the reaction of oxide radical ion (O•-) with 4,6-dihydroxy-2-methyl pyrimidine (DHMP), 2,4-dimethyl-6-hydroxy pyrimidine (DMHP), 5,6-dimethyl uracil (DMU) and 6-methyl uracil (MU) in strongly alkaline medium. The second-order rate constants for the reaction of O•- with these compounds are in the range 2-5 × 108 dm3 mol-1 s-1. The transient absorption spectra obtained with DHMP have two maxima at 290 and 370 nm and with DMHP have maxima at 310 and 470 nm. The transient spectrum from DMU is characterized by its absorption maxima at 310 and 520 nm and that of MU by its single maximum at 425 nm. The intermediate species were found to react with N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) with high G(TMPD•+) values ranged between 3.9 × 10-7 molJ-1 and 4.8 × 10-7 molJ-1. These radicals undergo decay by second-order kinetics (2k/ε = 1.0-1.7 × 106 s-1). The reaction of O•- with the selected pyrimidines is proposed to proceed through a hydrogen abstraction from the methyl group forming allyl type radicals. These are mainly oxidizing radicals and hence readily undergo electron transfer reactions with TMPD
Seminaphthofluorescein-Based Fluorescent Probes for Imaging Nitric Oxide in Live Cells
Fluorescent turn-on probes for nitric oxide based on seminaphthofluorescein scaffolds were prepared and spectroscopically characterized. The Cu(II) complexes of these fluorescent probes react with NO under anaerobic conditions to yield a 20–45-fold increase in integrated emission. The seminaphthofluorescein-based probes emit at longer wavelengths than the parent FL1 and FL2 fluorescein-based generations of NO probes, maintaining emission maxima between 550 and 625 nm. The emission profiles depend on the excitation wavelength; maximum fluorescence turn-on is achieved at excitations between 535 and 575 nm. The probes are highly selective for NO over other biologically relevant reactive nitrogen and oxygen species including NO3–, NO2–, HNO, ONOO–, NO2, OCl–, and H2O2. The seminaphthofluorescein-based probes can be used to visualize endogenously produced NO in live cells, as demonstrated using Raw 264.7 macrophages.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (CHE-0611944)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (K99GM092970
Properties of the OH Adducts of Hydroxy-, Methyl-, Methoxy-, and Amino-Substituted Pyrimidines: Their Dehydration Reactions and End-Product Analysis
Reactions of hydroxyl radicals (•OH) with 2-amino-4-methyl pyrimidine (AMP), 2-amino-4,6-dimethyl pyrimidine (ADMP), 2-amino-4-methoxy-6-methyl pyrimidine (AMMP), 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methyl pyrimidine (AHMP), 4,6-dihydroxy-2-methyl pyrimidine (DHMP), 2,4-dimethyl-6-hydroxy pyrimidine (DMHP), 6-methyl uracil (MU), and 5,6-dimethyl uracil (DMU) have been studied by pulse radiolysis and steady-state radiolysis techniques at different pH values. The second-order rate constants of the reaction of •OH with these systems are of the order of (2−9) × 10^9 dm^3 mol^(-1) s^(-1) at near neutral pH. The difference in the spectral features of the intermediates at near neutral pH and at higher pH (10.4) obtained with these pyrimidines are attributed to the deprotonation of the OH adducts. The G(TMPD•+) obtained at pH ∼ 6, from the electron-transfer reactions of the oxidizing intermediates with the reductant, N,N,N‘,N‘-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD), are in the range (0.2−0.9) × 10^(-7) mol J^(-1) which constituted about 3−16% oxidizing radicals. These yields were highly enhanced at pH 10.5 in the case of AHMP, DHMP, DMU, and MU (G(TMPD^(•+)) = 3.8−5.5 ≅ 66−95% oxidizing radical). On the basis of these results, it is proposed that a nonoxidizing C(6)-ylC(5)OH radical adduct is initially formed at pH 6 which is responsible for the observed transient spectra. The high yield of TMPD•+ at higher pH is explained in terms of a base-catalyzed conversion (via a dehydration reaction) of the initially formed C(6)-ylC(5)OH adduct (nonoxidizing) to C(5)-ylC(6)OH adduct which is oxidizing in nature. Among the selected pyrimidines, such a dehydration reaction was observed only with those having a keto (or hydroxy) group at the C(4) position of the pyrimidine ring. Qualitative analyses of the products resulting from the OH adducts of DHMP (at pH 4.5) and DMHP (at pH 6) were carried out using HPLC-ES-MS and a variety of products have been identified. Glycolic and dimeric products were observed as the major end-products. The product profiles of both DHMP and DMHP have shown that the precursors of the products are mainly the C(6)-ylC(5)OH and the H adduct radicals. The identified products are formed mainly by disproportionation and dimerization reactions of these radicals. The mechanistic aspects are discussed
Decomposition of S-Nitrosothiols Induced by UV and Sunlight
Photochemical release of nitric oxide (NO) from the S-nitroso derivatives of glutathione, L-cysteine, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, L-cysteinemethylester, D,L-penicillamine, N-acetyl-D,L-penicillamine, and N-acetylcysteamine has been investigated at neutral and acidic pH. The release of NO from RSNO is one of the key reactions that could be utilized in photodynamic therapy. The UV-VIS and HPLC analyses have shown that under argon saturated conditions, disulfide (RSSR) is the major product of UV as well as sunlight induced decomposition. While in aerated conditions, nitirite—the end product of the oxidation of NO—was also observed along with disulfide. The formation of thiyl radical as the intermediate was reconfirmed by laser flash photolysis. The initial rate of formation of NO was on the order of 10−10dm3mol−1s−1. The quantum yields of these reactions were in the range of 0.2–0.8. The high quantum yields observed in the photo induced release of NO from RSNO using both UV and sunlight demonstrate the potential application of these reactions in photodynamic therapy
Multilayered surface for the interactive separation of perchlorate from aqueous medium
Environmental contextPerchlorate from rocket fuel plants or firework manufacturing units can seriously contaminate drinking water. We developed a separation skin on a microfiltration membrane and on sand that can remove perchlorate from water in the presence of competing ions. This method is suitable for a domestic water purification unit selective for perchlorate removal.
AbstractThis study reports an interactive separation of perchlorate (ClO4−) by polyethyleneimine (PEI) and poly (styrene sulfonate) (PSS) deposited on a microfiltration membrane and on sand surfaces. The variation of the interaction with respect to deposition and feed variables was assessed. The 9 bilayered ((PEI/PSS) 0.15M NaCl, pH 6)) membranes showed a ClO4− rejection of ~80%. An increase in the feed concentration to 25mgL−1 reduced the rejection to 58%. With a feed pH from 4 to 10, the rejection varied between almost 100% and 16%. The presence of ions reduced the rejection percentage of ClO4− with the interference by the ions in the order of SO42−&gt;HCO3−&gt;NO3−&gt;Cl−. The interference is attributed to the characteristics of the competing ions and the nature of the multilayers. A positive impact of post-treatment (98%) and capping layers on rejection percentage (80% to nearly complete) for synthetic and ClO4− contaminated field water samples is clearly established. The presence of competing ions is also accounted for by a capped membrane system. The selectivity of the competing ions increases with capping layers of 1M NaCl in the order of HCO3−&gt;NO3−&gt;SO42−. In the field water samples up to a SO42− concentration of 3.0mgL−1, the capping layers with 0.4M NaCl result in a near complete rejection of ClO4−, whereas further enhancement requires a capping layer of 1M NaCl. A sand filtration system was developed by incorporating the pre-optimised polyelectrolyte multilayer on sand. Deposition of a single bilayered PEI/PSS multilayer on sand effectively (nearly completely) removes ClO4−.
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Oxidation Reactions of 2‑Thiouracil: A Theoretical and Pulse Radiolysis Study
The reaction of hydroxyl radical (<sup>•</sup>OH) with the
nucleic acid base analogue 2-thiouracil (<b>1</b>) has been
studied by pulse radiolysis experiments and DFT. The generic
intermediate radicals feasible for the <sup>•</sup>OH reactions
with <b>1</b>, namely, one electron oxidation product (<b>1</b><sup>•+</sup>), <sup>•</sup>OH-adducts (<b>3</b><sup>•</sup>, <b>4</b><sup>•</sup>, and <b>5</b><sup>•</sup>), and H-abstracted radicals (<b>6</b><sup>•</sup> and <b>7</b><sup>•</sup>), were
characterized by interpreting their electronic and structural properties
along with calculated energetics and UV–vis spectra. Pulse
radiolysis experiments showed that the transient formed in the reaction
of <sup>•</sup>OH with <b>1</b> in water at pH 6.5 has
λ<sub>max</sub> at 430 nm. A bimolecular rate constant, <i>k</i><sub>2</sub> of 9.6 × 10<sup>9</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>, is determined for this reaction via competition
kinetics with 2-propanol. The experiments suggested that the transient
species could be a dimer radical cation <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup>, formed by the reaction of <b>1</b> with the radical cation <b>1</b><sup>•+</sup>. For this reaction, an equilibrium constant
of 4.7 × 10<sup>3</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> was determined.
The transient formed in the reaction of <b>1</b> with pulse
radiolytically produced Br<sub>2</sub><sup>•–</sup> at
pH 6.5 as well as Cl<sub>2</sub><sup>•–</sup> at pH
1 has also produced λ<sub>max</sub> at 430 nm and suggested
the formation of <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup>. The calculated
UV–vis spectra of the transient species (<b>1</b><sup>•+</sup>, <b>3</b><sup>•</sup>, <b>4</b><sup>•</sup>, <b>5</b><sup>•</sup>, <b>6</b><sup>•</sup>, and <b>7</b><sup>•</sup>) showed
no resemblance to the experimental spectra, while that of <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup> (λ<sub>max</sub> = 420 nm) agreed well
with the experimental value and thus confirmed the formation of <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup>. The 420 nm peak was due to σ
→ σ* electronic excitation centered on a 2-center–3-electron
(2c–3e) sulfur–sulfur bond [−S∴S−]. <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup> is the first reported example of a dimer
radical cation in a pyrimidine heterocyclic system. Further, 5-C and
6-C substituted (substituents are −F, −Cl, −NH<sub>2</sub>, −N(CH<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, −OCH<sub>3</sub>, −CF<sub>3</sub>, −CH<sub>3</sub>, −CH<sub>2</sub>CH<sub>3</sub>, <i>n</i>-propyl, phenyl, and benzyl)
and 5,6-disubstituted 2-thiouracil systems have been characterized
by DFT and found that the reaction (<b>1</b> + <b>1</b><sup>•+</sup> → <b>2</b><sup>•+</sup>)
is exergonic (1.12–13.63 kcal/mol) for many of them
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