Oxoammonium cation intermediate in the nitroxide-catalyzed dismutation of superoxide.

MC Krishna, DA Grahame, A Samuni… - Proceedings of the …, 1992 - National Acad Sciences
MC Krishna, DA Grahame, A Samuni, JB Mitchell, A Russo
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992National Acad Sciences
Dismutation of superoxide has been shown previously to be catalyzed by stable nitroxide
compounds. In the present study, the mechanism of superoxide (. O2-) dismutation by
various five-membered ring and six-membered ring nitroxides was studied by electron
paramagnetic resonance spectrometry, UV-visible spectrophotometry, cyclic voltammetry,
and bulk electrolysis. Electron paramagnetic resonance signals from the carbocyclic
nitroxide derivatives (piperidinyl, pyrrolidinyl, and pyrrolinyl) were unchanged when …
Dismutation of superoxide has been shown previously to be catalyzed by stable nitroxide compounds. In the present study, the mechanism of superoxide (.O2-) dismutation by various five-membered ring and six-membered ring nitroxides was studied by electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry, UV-visible spectrophotometry, cyclic voltammetry, and bulk electrolysis. Electron paramagnetic resonance signals from the carbocyclic nitroxide derivatives (piperidinyl, pyrrolidinyl, and pyrrolinyl) were unchanged when exposed to enzymatically generated .O2-, whereas, in the presence of .O2- and reducing agents such as NADH and NADPH, the nitroxides underwent reduction to their respective hydroxylamines. The reaction of 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-hydroxypiperidine (Tempol-H) with .O2- was measured and, in agreement with earlier reports on related compounds, the rate was found to be too slow to be consistent with a mechanism of .O2- dismutation involving the hydroxylamine as an intermediate. Voltammetric analyses of the carbocyclic nitroxide derivatives revealed a reversible one-electron redox couple at positive potentials. In contrast, oxazolidine derivatives were irreversibly oxidized. At negative potentials, all of the nitroxides studied exhibited a broad, irreversible reductive wave. The rate of .O2- dismutation correlated with the reversible midpoint redox potential. Bulk electrolysis at positive potentials was found to generate a metastable oxidized form of the nitroxide. The results indicate that the dismutation of .O2- is catalyzed by the oxoammonium/nitroxide redox couple for carbocyclic nitroxide derivatives. In addition to the one-electron mitochondrial reduction pathway, the present results suggest the possibility that cellular bioreduction by a two-electron pathway may occur subsequent to oxidation of stable nitroxides. Furthermore, the cellular destruction of persistent spin adduct nitroxides might also be facilitated by a primary univalent oxidation.
National Acad Sciences