Title of article :
Oxidation of NADH by Chloramines and Chloramides and Its Activation by Iodide and by Tertiary Amines
Author/Authors :
Ines Prutz، نويسنده , , Walter A. and Kissner، نويسنده , , Reinhard and Koppenol، نويسنده , , Willem H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Irreversible oxidation of reduced nicotinamide nucleotides by neutrophil-derived halogen oxidants (HOCl, chloramines, HOBr, etc.) is likely to be a highly lethal process, because of the essential role of NAD(P)H in important cell functions such as mitochondrial electron transport, and control of the cellular thiol redox state by NADPH-dependent glutathione reductase. Chloramines (chloramine-T, NH2Cl, etc.) and N-chloramides (N-chlorinated cyclopeptides) react with NADH to generate the same products as HOCl, i.e., pyridine chlorohydrins, as judged from characteristic changes in the NADH absorption spectrum. Compared with the fast oxidation of NADH by HOCl, k ≈ 3 × 105 M−1 s−1 at pH 7.2, the oxidation by chloramines is about five orders of magnitude slower; that by chloramides is about four orders of magnitude slower. Apparent rate constants for oxidation of NADH by chloramines increase with increasing proton or buffer concentration, consistent with general acid catalysis, but oxidation by chloramides proceeds with pH-independent kinetics. In presence of iodide the oxidation of NADH by chloramines or chloramides is faster by at least two orders of magnitude; this is due to reaction of iodide with the N-halogen to give HOI/I2, the most reactive and selective oxidant for NADH among HOX species. Quinuclidine derivatives (QN) like 3-chloroquinuclidine and quinine are capable of catalyzing the irreversible degradation of NADH by HOCl and by chloramines; QN+Cl, the chain carrier of the catalytic cycle, is even more reactive toward NADH than HOCl/ClO− at physiological pH. Oxidation of NADH by NH2Br proceeds by fast, but complex, biphasic kinetics. A compilation of rate constants for interactions of reactive halogen species with various substrates is presented and the concept of selective reactivity of N-halogens is discussed.
Keywords :
halogenation of amines , hypohalous acids , peptide chloramines , chloramine reactions , pyridine nucleotide halogenation , NADH halogenation
Journal title :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Journal title :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics