Artículos de revistas
Tryptophan Oxidation Photosensitizided by Pterin
Fecha
2013-05Registro en:
Thomas, Andrés Héctor; Serrano, Mariana Paula; Rahal, Virginie; Vicendo, Patricia; Claparols, Catherine; et al.; Tryptophan Oxidation Photosensitizided by Pterin; Elsevier; Free Radical Biology and Medicine; 63; 5-2013; 467–475
0891-5849
Autor
Thomas, Andrés Héctor
Serrano, Mariana Paula
Rahal, Virginie
Vicendo, Patricia
Claparols, Catherine
Oliveros, Esther
Lorente, Carolina
Resumen
Pterins are normal components of cells and they have been previously identified as good photosensitizers under UV-A irradiation, inducing DNA damage and oxidation of nucleotides. In this work, we have investigated the ability of pterin (Ptr), the parent compound of oxidized pterins, to photosensitize the oxidation of another class of biomolecules, aminoacids, using tryptophan (Trp) as a model compound. Irradiation of Ptr in the UV-A spectral range (350 nm) in aerated aqueous solutions containing Trp led to the consumption of the latter, whereas the Ptr concentration remained unchanged. Concomitantly, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) was produced. Although Ptr is a singlet oxygen (1O2) sensitizer, the degradation of Trp was inhibited in O2-saturated solutions, indicating that a 1O2-mediated process (Type II oxidation) was not an important pathway leading to Trp oxidation. By combining different analytical techniques, we could establish that a Type I photooxidation was the prevailing mechanism, initiated by an electron transfer from the Trp molecule to the Ptr triplet excited state yielding the corresponding radical ions (Trp.+/Trp(-H). and Ptr.-). The Trp reaction products that could be identified by UPLC-mass spectrometry are in agreement with this conclusion.