4.7 Article

The role of the DMPO-hydrated electron spin adduct in DMPO-•OH spin trapping

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 1374-1380

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0891-5849(01)00540-8

Keywords

free radicals; spin trapping; ESR; EPR; radiation chemistry; DMPO; hydroxyl radical; yields; reaction kinetics; efficiency

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Time-resolved in situ radiolysis ESR (electron spin resonance, equivalently EPR, electron paramagnetic resonance) studies have shown that the scavenging of radiolytically produced hydroxyl radical in nitrous oxide-saturated aqueous solutions containing 2 mM DMPO is essentially quantitative (94% of the theoretical yield) at 100 mus after the electron pulse [1]. This result appeared to conflict with earlier results using continuous cobalt-60 gamma radiolysis and hydrogen peroxide photolysis, where factors of 35 and 33% were obtained, respectively [2,3]. To investigate this discrepancy, nitrogen-saturated aqueous solutions containing 15 mM DMPO were cobalt-60 gamma irradiated (dose rate = 223 Gy/min) for periods of 0.25-6 min, and ESR absorption spectra were observed similar to 30 s after irradiation. A rapid, pseudo-first-order termination reaction of the protonated DMPO-hydrated electron adduct (DMPO-H) with DMPO-OH was observed for the first time. The rate constant for the reaction of DMPO-H with DMPO-OH is 2.44 x 10(2) (+/- 2.2 x 10(1)) M-1 s(-1). In low-dose radiolysis experiments, this reaction lowers the observed yield of DMPO-OH to 44% of the radiation-chemical OH radical yield (G = 2.8), in good agreement with the earlier results [2,3]. In the absence of the DMPO-H radical, the DMPO-OH exhibits second-order radical termination kinetics, 2k(Gamma) = 22 (+/- 2) M-1 s(-1) at initial DMPO-OH concentrations greater than or equal to 13 muM, with first-order termination kinetics observed at lower concentrations, in agreement with earlier literature reports [4]. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc.

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