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1.
The effect of the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) on the autoxidation process of the giant extracellular hemoglobin of Glossoscolex paulistus (HbGp) is addressed in the present work. The complex oligomeric assembly of hemoglobin subunits may influence the autoxidation rate and the exponential decay behavior. Kinetic studies were developed using UV-vis measurements at 415 nm. These spectroscopic measurements are analyzed at two pH values, 7.0 and 9.0, where the hemoglobin presents different oligomeric assembly. At pH 7.0 a high stability of the native form of the oxy-hemoglobin is observed, while at pH 9.0 an intense dissociation of the oligomer is promoted by alkalization. This difference is evident by comparison of the rate constants in the absence of surfactant: at pH 7.0 the kinetics presents a mono-exponential behavior with a rate constant of 0.27 x 10(-4)s(-1) while at pH 9.0 a bi-exponential behavior was observed with rate constant increase to 7 x 10(-4)s(-1) (fast process) and 1 x 10(-4)s(-1) (slow process). In the autoxidation induced by SDS two factors affect significantly the process rate, namely, the oligomeric arrangement of the hemoglobin and the strength of the interaction between SDS and HbGp. At pH 7.0, for SDS concentrations up to 0.3mM, a mono-exponential behavior was observed, showing rate constants around 0.4 x 10(-4)s(-1), which suggest that the hemoglobin still maintains the more compact structure observed at this pH for the native protein. In the SDS concentration range 0.75-1.0mM, the mono-exponential process changes into a bi-exponential behavior with rate constants varying from 48 x 10(-4) up to 99 x 10(-4)s(-1) for the fast process and from 1.7 x 10(-4) up to 3.7 x 10(-4)s(-1) for the slow process, suggesting hemoglobin dissociation. At pH 9.0, a bi-exponential decay is observed for all studied SDS concentration range, presenting rate constants from 11.0 x 10(-4) up to 179 x 10(-4)s(-1) for the fast process and from 1.0 x 10(-4) up to 8 x 10(4)s(-1) for the slow process probably due to hemoglobin dissociation, which is already present in the absence of surfactant. At pH 7.0, the highly packed native protein structure should inhibit the autoxidation process, but the SDS/HbGp interaction is more intense as compared to pH 9.0, due to the acid pI value, promoting oligomeric dissociation. So, the autoxidation process is regulated at pH 7.0 by the interaction with SDS, which triggers oligomeric dissociation and increase of autoxidation rate. At pH 9.0, the autoxidation process should be very fast, probably due to the oligomeric dissociation, which is already present in the absence of surfactant. At alkaline pH, the interaction with SDS seems be weaker than at pH 7.0. This behavior at pH 7.0 can be observed through the higher autoxidation rate for the faster chains and it is associated to the acid pI of the giant extracellular hemoglobins.  相似文献   

2.
Detection of O(2)(1Delta(g)) phosphorescence emission, lambda(max)=1270 nm, following laser excitation and steady state methods were employed to determine the total rate constant, k(T), for the reaction between the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug piroxicam (PRX) and singlet oxygen in several solvents. Values of k(T) ranged from 0.048+/-0.003 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) in chloroform to 71.2+/-2.2 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) in N,N-dimethylformamide. The chemical reaction rate constant, k(R), was determined by using thermal decomposition of 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene endoperoxide as the singlet oxygen source. In acetonitrile, the k(R) value is equal to 5.0+/-0.4 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1), very close to the k(T) value. This result indicates that, in this solvent, the chemical reaction corresponds to the main reaction path. Dependence of total rate constant on the solvent parameters pi* and beta can be explained in terms of a reaction mechanism that involves the formation of a perepoxide intermediate. Rearrangement of the perepoxide to dioxetane followed by ring cleavage and transacylation accounts for the formation of N-methylsaccharine and N-(2-pyridyl)oxamic acid, the main reaction products. Data obtained in dioxane-water (pH 4) mixtures with neutral enolic and zwitterionic tautomers of piroxicam in equilibrium show that the zwitterionic tautomer reacts with singlet oxygen faster than the enolic tautomer.  相似文献   

3.
Two combined strategies are reported for improving the sensitivity of organohalide detection by redox catalysis. These are, improvement of the second order rate constant (k) for catalytic reduction of the organohalide, and improvement of the rate of substrate diffusion. Values of k are calculated for both alkyl and aryl halides, from slow scan rate cyclic voltammograms in homogeneous solution. It is shown that a Zn(ii) porphyrin exhibits higher catalytic rates than the previously used Co(ii) porphyrin or Co(i) salen. Amperometric and rotating disk electrode studies of electropolymerised films of the Zn(ii) porphyrin, reveal that at optimum thickness, mediator-substrate reaction and substrate diffusion are the rate limiting steps. Hence, immobilisation of the Zn(ii) porphyrin within the more open structure of a cubic phase liquid crystal produces an increase in sensitivity of approx. 10 times, and lowers the limit of detection by one order of magnitude. The optimised sensor responds linearly to seven organohalides in the range 0.1 microM to 1.0 microM with a sensitivity of 6.95 A M(-1) cm(-2). Chronoamperometric experiments with a microdisk electrode show that the rate of charge transport in the cubic phase films (apparent diffusion coefficient, D(E)= 5.65 x 10(-10)+/- 0.11 x 10(-10) cm(2) s(-1)) is faster than in the electropolymerised films (D(E)= 3.64 x 10(-11)+/- 0.02 x 10(-11) cm(2) s(-1)). The variation of D(E) with the concentration of Zn(ii) in the cubic phase suggests that diffusion of charge is predominantly by electron self-exchange, rather than by physical movement.  相似文献   

4.
The tetraazamacrocyclic ligand TRITA(4-) is intermediate in size between the widely studied and medically used 12-membered DOTA(4-) and the 14-membered TETA(4-). The kinetic inertness of GdTRITA(-) was characterized by the rates of exchange reactions with Zn(2+) and Eu(3+). In the Zn(2+) exchange, a second order [H(+)] dependence was found for the pseudo-first-order rate constant (k(0)=(4.2 +/- 0.5) x 10(-7) s(-1); k'=(3.5 +/- 0.3) x 10(-1) M(-1)s(-1), k" =(1.4 +/- 0.4) x 10(3) M(-2)s(-1)). In the Eu(3+) exchange, at pH <5 the rate decreases with increasing concentration of the exchanging ion, which can be accounted for by the transitional formation of dinuclear GdTRITAEu(2+) species. At physiological pH, the kinetic inertness of GdTRITA(-) is considerably lower than that of GdDOTA(-)(t(1/2)= 444 h (25 degrees C) vs. 3.8 x 10(5) h (37 degrees C), respectively). However, GdTRITA(-) is still kinetically more inert than GdDTPA(2-), the most commonly used MRI contrast agent (t(1/2)= 127 h). The formation reactions of LnTRITA(-) complexes (Ln = Ce, Gd and Yb) proceed via the rapid formation of a diprotonated intermediate and its subsequent deprotonation and rearrangement in a slow, OH(-) catalyzed process. The stability of the LnH(2)TRITA* intermediates (log K(LnH2L*)= 3.1-3.9) is lower than that of the DOTA-analogues. The rate constants of the OH(-) catalyzed step increase with decreasing lanthanide ion size, and are about twice as high as for DOTA-complexes.  相似文献   

5.
A newly constructed chamber/Fourier transform infrared system was used to determine the relative rate coefficient, k(i), for the gas-phase reaction of Cl atoms with 2-butanol (k(1)), 2-methyl-2-butanol (k(2)), 3-methyl-2-butanol (k(3)), 2,3-dimethyl-2-butanol (k(4)) and 2-pentanol (k(5)). Experiments were performed at (298 +/- 2) K, in 740 Torr total pressure of synthetic air, and the measured rate coefficients were, in cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) units (+/-2sigma): k(1)=(1.32 +/- 0.14) x 10(-10), k(2)=(7.0 +/- 2.2) x 10(-11), k(3)=(1.17 +/- 0.14) x 10(-10), k(4)=(1.03 +/- 0.17) x 10(-10) and k(5)=(2.18 +/- 0.36) x 10(-10), respectively. Also, all the above rate coefficients (except for 2-pentanol) were investigated as a function of temperature (267-384 K) by pulsed laser photolysis-resonance fluorescence (PLP-RF). The obtained kinetic data were used to derive the Arrhenius expressions: k(1)(T)=(6.16 +/- 0.58) x 10(-11)exp[(174 +/- 58)/T], k(2)(T)=(2.48 +/- 0.17) x 10(-11)exp[(328 +/- 42)/T], k(3)(T)=(6.29 +/- 0.57) x 10(-11)exp[(192 +/- 56)/T], and k(4)(T)=(4.80 +/- 0.43) x 10(-11)exp[(221 +/- 56)/T](in units of cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) and +/-sigma). Results and mechanism are discussed and compared with the reported reactivity with OH radicals. Some atmospheric implications derived from this study are also reported.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics and the equilibria of Ni(II) binding to p-hydroxybenzohydroxamic acid (PHBHA) and salicylhydroxamic acid (SHA) have been investigated in an aqueous solution at 25 degrees C and I=0.2 M by the stopped-flow method. Two reaction paths involving metal binding to the neutral acid and to its anion have been observed. Concerning PHBHA, the rate constants of the forward and reverse steps are k1=(1.9+/-0.1)x10(3) M-1 s-1 and k-1=(1.1+/-0.1)x10(2) s-1 for the step involving the undissociated PHBHA and k2=(3.2+/-0.2)x10(4) M-1 s-1 and k-2=1.2+/-0.2 s-1 for the step involving the anion. Concerning SHA, the analogous rate constants are k1=(2.6+/-0.1)x10(3) M-1 s-1, k-1=(1.3+/-0.1)x10(3) s-1, k2=(5.4+/-0.2)x10(3) M-1 s-1, and k-2=6.3+/-0.5 s-1. These values indicate that metal binding to the anions of the two acids concurs with the Eigen-Wilkins mechanism and that the phenol oxygen is not involved in the chelation. Moreover, a slow effect was observed in the SHA-Ni(II) system, which has been put down to rotation of the benzene ring around the C-C bond. Quantum mechanical calculations at the B3LYP/lanL2DZ level reveal that the phenol group in the most stable form of the Ni(II) chelate is in trans position relative to the carbonyl oxygen, contrary to the free SHA structure, where the phenol and carbonyl oxygen atoms both have cis configuration. These results bear out the idea that the complex formation is coupled with phenol rotation around the C-C bond.  相似文献   

7.
Bovine carbonic anhydrase (BCA) and its derivative with all lysine groups acetylated (BCA-Ac18) have different stabilities toward denaturation by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). This difference is kinetic: BCA-Ac18 denatures more slowly than BCA by several orders of magnitude over concentrations of SDS ranging from 2.5 to 10 mM. The rates of renaturation of BCA-Ac18 are greater than those of BCA, when these proteins are allowed to refold from a denatured state ([SDS]=10 mM) to a folded state ([SDS]=0.1 to 1.5 mM). On renaturation, the yields of the correctly folded protein (either BCA or BCA-Ac18) decrease with increasing concentration of SDS. At intermediate concentrations of SDS (from 0.7 to 2 mM for BCA, and from 1.5 to 2 mM for BCA-Ac18), both unfolding and refolding of the proteins are too slow to be observed; an alternative process-probably aggregation-competes with refolding of the denatured proteins at those intermediate concentrations. Because it is experimentally impractical to prove equilibrium, it is not possible to establish whether there is a difference in the thermodynamics of unfolding/refolding between BCA and BCA-Ac18.  相似文献   

8.
The synthetic flavylium salt 4-carboxy-7-hydroxy-4'-methoxyflavylium chloride (CHMF) exhibits two acid-base equilibria in the range of pH 1-8 in both aqueous and micellar sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solutions. The values of pK(a1) and pK(a2) for the cation-zwitterion (AH(2)(+) <--> Z + H(+)) and the zwitterion-base (Z <--> A(-) + H(+)) equilibria increase from 0.73 and 4.84 in water to 2.77 and 5.64 in SDS micelles, respectively. The kinetic study of the Z <--> A(-) + H(+) ground-state reactions in SDS points to the diffusion-controlled protonation of A(-) in the aqueous phase (k(p2w) = 4.2 x 10(10) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and in the micelle (k(p2m) = 2.3 x 10(11) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)). The deprotonation rate of Z did not significantly change upon going from water (k(d2) = 6.3 x 10(5) s(-)(1)) to SDS (k(d2) = 5.2 x 10(5) s(-)(1)), in contrast with the behavior of ordinary cationic flavylium salts, for which k(d2) strongly decreases in SDS micelles. These results suggest that deprotonation of the zwitterionic acid is not substantially perturbed by the micellar charge. Electronic excitation of the Z form of CHMF induces fast adiabatic deprotonation of the hydroxyl group of Z() (2.9 x 10(10) s(-)(1) in water and 8.4 x 10(9) s(-)(1) in 0.1 M SDS), followed by geminate recombination on the picosecond time scale. Interestingly, while recombination in water (k(rec) = 1.7 x 10(9) s(-)(1)) occurs preferentially at the carboxylate group, at the SDS micelle surface, recombination (k(rec) = 9.2 x 10(9) s(-)(1)) occurs at the hydroxyl group. The important conclusion is that proton mobility at the SDS micelle surface is substantially reduced with respect to the mobility in water, which implies that geminate recombination should be a general phenomenon in SDS micelles.  相似文献   

9.
The dissolution of nickel ferrite in oxalic acid and in ferrous oxalate-oxalic acid aqueous solution was studied. Nickel ferrite was synthesized by thermal decomposition of a mixed tartrate; the particles were shown to be coated with a thin ferric oxide layer. Dissolution takes place in two stages, the first one corresponding to the dissolution of the ferric oxide outer layer and the second one being the dissolution of Ni(1.06)Fe(1.96)O(4). The kinetics of dissolution during this first stage is typical of ferric oxides: in oxalic acid, both a ligand-assisted and a redox mechanism operates, whereas in the presence of ferrous ions, redox catalysis leads to a faster dissolution. The rate dependence on both oxalic acid and on ferrous ion is described by the Langmuir-Hinshelwood equation; the best fitting corresponds to K(1)(ads)=25.6 mol(-1) dm(-3) and k(1)(max)=9.17x10(-7) mol m(-2) s(-1) and K(2)(ads)=37.1x10(3) mol(-1) dm(-3) and k(2)(max)=62.3x10(-7) mol m(-2) s(-1), respectively. In the second stage, Langmuir-Hinshelwood kinetics also describes the dissolution of iron and nickel from nickel ferrite, with K(1)(ads)=20.8 mol(-1) dm(3) and K(2)(ads)=1.16x10(5) mol(-1) dm(3). For iron, k(1)(max)=1.02x10(-7) mol of Fe m(-2) s(-1) and k(2)(max)=2.38x10(-7) mol of Fe m(-2) s(-1); for nickel, the rate constants k(1)(max) and k(2)(max) are 2.4 and 1.79 times smaller, respectively. The factor 1.79 agrees nicely with the stoichiometric ratio, whereas the factor 2.4 implies the accumulation of some nickel in the residual particles. The rate of nickel dissolution in oxalic acid is higher than that in bunsenite by a factor of 8, whereas hematite is more reactive by a factor of 9 (in the absence of Fe(II)) and 27 (in the presence of Fe (II)). It may be concluded that oxalic acid operates to dissolve iron, and the ensuing disruption of the solid framework accelerates the release of nickel. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics and mechanism for the reaction of HCO with NO occurring by both singlet and triplet electronic state potential-energy surfaces (PESs) have been studied at the modified Gaussian-2 level of theory based on the geometric parameters optimized by the Becke-3 Lee-Yang-Parr/6-311G(d,p) method. There are two major reaction channels on both singlet and triplet PESs studied: one is direct H abstraction producing CO+HNO and the other is association forming a stable HC(O)NO (nitrosoformaldehyde) molecule. The dominant reaction is predicted to be the direct H abstraction occurring primarily by the lowest-energy path via a loose hydrogen-bonding singlet molecular complex, ON...HCO, with a 2.9-kcal/mol binding energy and a small decomposition barrier (1.9 kcal/mol). The commonly assumed HC(O)NO intermediate, predicted to lie below the reactants by 27.7 kcal/mol, has a high HNO-elimination barrier (34.5 kcal/mol). Bimolecular rate constants for the formation of the singlet products and their branching ratios have been calculated in the temperature range of 200-3000 K. The rate constant for the disproportionation process producing HNO+CO, found to be affected strongly by multiple reflections above the well of the complex at low temperature, is predicted to be k(HNO)=3.08 x 10(-12) T(0.10) exp(242T) for 200-500 K, and 1.72 x 10(-16) T(1.47) exp(888T) for 500-3000 K in units of cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1). The high- and low-pressure rate constants for the association process forming HC(O)NO can be represented by k(infinity)=4.42 x 10(-11) T(0.25) exp(-28T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) (200-3000 K) and k(0)=7.30x10(-16) T(-5.75) exp(-719T) (200-1000 K) and 1.82 x 10(2) T(-11.92) exp(1846T) (1000-3000 K) cm(6) molecule(-2) s(-1) for N(2)-buffer gas. The absolute values of total rate constant, predicted to be weakly dependent negatively on temperature but positively on pressure, are in close agreement with most experimental data within their reported errors.  相似文献   

11.
Mixtures of Zn(II) and 8-hydroxyquinoline (8QOH) in a 1:2 proportion, in aqueous solutions, result in fast complexation, followed by precipitation. Addition of 0.05 M sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethylammonio-1-propanesulfonate (SB3-12), N-hexadecyl-N,N-dimethylammonio-1-propanesulfonate (SB3-16) or Triton X-100 results in considerable retardation of precipitation. In the presence of SDS, SB3-12, SB3-16 and Triton X-100 the 8QOH chelates are only kinetically stable in solution and after 24 h, the precipitation is almost quantitative. Conversely, upon addition of the cationic surfactant hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTABr), the absorbance of the complex remains constant even after at least six months. The interaction of the ligand 8QOH (and of the (8QO)(2)Zn(II) complex) with the cationic surfactant was studied by ultraviolet and NMR spectroscopy and 8QOH has a pK(a)=9.05 in the presence of the cationic surfactant and the ligand intercalates in the micelle, being preferentially located near the headgroup of the micelle. Although the solubilization site of the (8QO)(2)Zn(II) complex is similar to that of 8QOH, the interaction of the aromatic moiety with the CTA(+) headgroup is much stronger, due to the increased electron density in the aromatic ring of the ligand. As a consequence of this interaction, sphere to rod transition and an increase in microscopic and macroscopic viscosity are observed.  相似文献   

12.
The oxidation kinetics of various aliphatic primary and secondary alcohols having varied hydrocarbon chain length were studied using cetyltrimethylammonium dichromate (CTADC) in dichloromethane (DCM) in the presence of acetic acid and in the presence of a cationic surfactant. The rate of the reaction is highly sensitive to the change in [CTADC], [alcohol], [acid], [surfactant], polarity of the solvents, and reaction temperature. A Michaelis-Menten type kinetics was observed with respect to substrate. The chemical nature of the intermediate and the reaction mechanism were proposed on the basis of (i) observed rate constant dependencies on the reactants, that is, fractional order with respect to alcohol and acid and a negative order with respect to oxidant, (ii) high negative entropy change, (iii) inverse solvent kinetic isotope effect, k(H2O)/k(D2O) = 0.76, (iv) low primary kinetic isotope effect, kH/kD = 2.81, and (v) the k(obs) dependencies on solvent polarity parameters. The observed experimental data suggested the self-aggregation of CTADC giving rise to a reverse micellar system akin to an enzymatic environment, and the proposed mechanism involves the following: (i) formation of a complex between alcohol and the protonated dichromate in a rapid equilibrium, equilibrium constant K = 5.13 (+/-0.07) dm(3) mol(-1), and (ii) rate determining decomposition (k(2) = (7.6 +/- 0.7) x 10(-3) s(-1)) of the ester intermediate to the corresponding carbonyl compound. The effect of [surfactant] on the rate constant and the correlation of solvent parameters with the rate constants support the contribution of hydrophobic environment to the reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
The reaction of cobalt(III) acetate with excess manganese(II) acetate in acetic acid occurs in two stages, since the two forms Co(IIIc) and Co(IIIs) are not rapidly equilibrated and thus react independently. The rate constants at 24.5 degrees C are kc = 37.1 +/- 0.6 L mol-1 s-1 and ks = 6.8 +/- 0.2 L mol-1 s-1 at 24.5 degrees C in glacial acetic acid. The Mn(III) produced forms a dinuclear complex with the excess of Mn(II). This was studied independently and is characterized by the rate constant (3.43 +/- 0.01) x 10(2) L mol-1 s-1 at 24.5 degrees C. A similar interaction between Mn(III) and Co(II) is substantially slower, with k = (3.73 +/- 0.05) x 10(-1) L mol-1 s-1 at 24.5 degrees C. Mn(II) is also oxidized by Ce(IV), according to the rate law -d[Ce(IV)]/dt = k[Mn(II)]2[Ce(IV)], where k = (6.0 +/- 0.2) x 10(4) L2 mol-2 s-1. The reaction between Mn(II) and HBr2., believed to be involved in the mechanism by which Mn(III) oxidizes HBr, was studied by laser photolysis; the rate constant is (1.48 +/- 0.04) x 10(8) L mol-1 s-1 at approximately 23 degrees C in HOAc. Oxidation of Co(II) by HBr2. has the rate constant (3.0 +/- 0.1) x 10(7) L mol-1 s-1. The oxidation of HBr by Mn(III) is second order with respect to [HBr]; k = (4.10 +/- 0.08) x 10(5) L2 mol-2 s-1 at 4.5 degrees C in 10% aqueous HOAc. Similar reactions with alkali metal bromides were studied; their rate constants are 17-23 times smaller. This noncomplementary reaction is believed to follow that rate law so that HBr2. and not Br. (higher in Gibbs energy by 0.3 V) can serve as the intermediate. The analysis of the reaction steps then requires that the oxidation of HBr2. to Br2 by Mn(III) be diffusion controlled, which is consistent with the driving force and seemingly minor reorganization.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogen dioxide ((*)NO(2)) participates in a variety of biological reactions. Of great interest are the reactions of (*)NO(2) with oxymyoglobin and oxyhemoglobin, which are the predominant hemeproteins in biological systems. Although these reactions occur rapidly during the nitrite-catalyzed autoxidation of hemeproteins, their roles in systems producing (*)NO(2) in the presence of these hemeproteins have been greatly underestimated. In the present study, we employed pulse radiolysis to study directly the kinetics and mechanism of the reaction of oxymyoglobin (MbFe(II)O(2)) with (*)NO(2). The rate constant of this reaction was determined to be (4.5 +/- 0.3) x 10(7) M(-1)s(-1), and is among the highest rate constants measured for (*)NO(2) with any biomolecule at pH 7.4. The interconversion among the various oxidation states of myoglobin that is prompted by nitrogen oxide species is remarkable. The reaction of MbFe(II)O(2) with (*)NO(2) forms MbFe(III)OONO(2), which undergoes rapid heterolysis along the O-O bond to yield MbFe(V)=O and NO(3-). The perferryl-myoglobin (MbFe(V)=O) transforms rapidly into the ferryl species that has a radical site on the globin ((*)MbFe(IV)=O). The latter oxidizes another oxymyoglobin (10(4) M(-1)s(-1) < k(17) < 10(7) M(-1)s(-1)) and generates equal amounts of ferrylmyoglobin and metmyoglobin. At much longer times, the ferrylmyoglobin disappears through a relatively slow comproportionation with oxymyoglobin (k(18) = 21.3 +/- 5.3 M(-1)s(-1)). Eventually, each (*)NO(2) radical converts three oxymyoglobin molecules into metmyoglobin. The same intermediate, namely MbFe(III)OONO(2), is also formed via the reaction peroxynitrate (O(2)NOO(-)/O(2)NOOH) with metmyoglobin (k(19) = (4.6 +/- 0.3) x 10(4) M(-1)s(-1)). The reaction of (*)NO(2) with ferrylmyoglobin (k(20) = (1.2 +/- 0.2) x 10(7) M(-1)s(-1)) yields MbFe(III)ONO(2), which in turn dissociates (k(21) = 190 +/- 20 s(-1)) into metmyoglobin and NO(3-). This rate constant was found to be the same as that measured for the decay of the intermediate formed in the reaction of MbFe(II)O(2) with (*)NO, which suggests that MbFe(III)ONO(2) is the intermediate observed in both processes. This conclusion is supported by thermokinetic arguments. The present results suggest that hemeproteins may detoxify (*)NO(2) and thus preempt deleterious processes, such as nitration of proteins. Such a possibility is substantiated by the observation that the reactions of (*)NO(2) with the various oxidation states of myoglobin lead to the formation of metmyoglobin, which, though not functional in the gas transport, is nevertheless nontoxic at physiological pH.  相似文献   

15.
Absolute rate coefficients for the gas-phase reactions of ground-state oxygen atoms with CCl(2)=CH(2) (1), (Z)-CHCl=CHCl (2) and CCl(2)=CCl(2) (3) have been measured directly using the fast flow discharge technique. The experiments were carried out under pseudo-first-order conditions with [O((3)P)](0) < [chloroethene](0). The temperature dependences of the reactions of O((3)P) with CCl(2)=CH(2), (Z)-CHCl=CHCl and CCl(2)=CCl(2) were studied in the range 298-359 K. The kinetic data obtained were used to derive the following Arrhenius expressions (in units of cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1)): k(1) = (1.82 +/- 1.29) x 10(-11) exp[-(12.63 +/- 0.97) x 10(3)/RT], k(2) = (1.56 +/- 0.92) x 10(-11) exp[-(16.68 +/- 1.54) x 10(3)/RT], k(3) = (4.63 +/- 1.38) x 10(-11) exp[-(19.59 +/- 3.21) x 10(3)/RT]. This is the first temperature dependence study of the reactions of O((3)P) atoms with (Z)-CHCl=CHCl and CCl(2)=CCl(2). All the rate coefficients display a positive temperature dependence and pressure independence, which points to the importance of the irreversibility of the addition mechanism for these reactions. The obtained rate coefficients are compared with previous studies carried out mainly at room temperature. The rates of addition of O atoms and OH radicals to the double bond of alkenes at 298 K are related by the expression: log k(OH) = 0.57278 log k(O(3P)) - 4.095. A correlation is presented between the reactivity of chloroethenes toward O atoms and the second-order perturbational term of the frontier molecular orbital theory which carries the contribution of the different atomic orbitals to the HOMO of the chloroethene. To a first approximation, this correlation allows room-temperature rate coefficients to be predicted within +/-25-30% of the measured values.  相似文献   

16.
Seok WK  Meyer TJ 《Inorganic chemistry》2004,43(17):5205-5215
The net six-electron oxidation of aniline to nitrobenzene or azoxybenzene by cis-[Ru(IV)(bpy)(2)(py)(O)](2+) (bpy is 2,2'-bipyridine; py is pyridine) occurs in a series of discrete stages. In the first, initial two-electron oxidation is followed by competition between oxidative coupling with aniline to give 1,2-diphenylhydrazine and capture by H(2)O to give N-phenylhydroxylamine. The kinetics are first order in aniline and first order in Ru(IV) with k(25.1 degrees C, CH(3)CN) = (2.05 +/- 0.18) x 10(2) M(-1) s(-1) (DeltaH(++) = 5.0 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol; DeltaS(++) = -31 +/- 2 eu). On the basis of competition experiments, k(H)2(O)/k(D)2(O) kinetic isotope effects, and the results of an (18)O labeling study, it is concluded that the initial redox step probably involves proton-coupled two-electron transfer from aniline to cis-[Ru(IV)(bpy)(2)(py)(O)](2+) (Ru(IV)=O(2+)). The product is an intermediate nitrene (PhN) or a protonated nitrene (PhNH(+)) which is captured by water to give PhNHOH or aniline to give PhNHNHPh. In the following stages, PhNHOH, once formed, is rapidly oxidized by Ru(IV)=O(2+) to PhNO and PhNHNHPh to PhN=NPh. The rate laws for these reactions are first order in Ru(IV)=O(2+) and first order in reductant with k(14.4 degrees C, H(2)O/(CH(3))(2)CO) = (4.35 +/- 0.24) x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) for PhNHOH and k(25.1 degrees C, CH(3)CN) = (1.79 +/- 0.14) x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) for PhNHNHPh. In the final stages of the six-electron reactions, PhNO is oxidized to PhNO(2) and PhN=NPh to PhN(O)=NPh. The oxidation of PhNO is first order in PhNO and in Ru(IV)=O(2+) with k(25.1 degrees C, CH(3)CN) = 6.32 +/- 0.33 M(-1) s(-1) (DeltaH(++) = 4.6 +/- 0.8 kcal/mol; DeltaS(++) = -39 +/- 3 eu). The reaction occurs by O-atom transfer, as shown by an (18)O labeling study and by the appearance of a nitrobenzene-bound intermediate at low temperature.  相似文献   

17.
A fluorophotometric method for the determination of anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) was proposed. The method is based on the quenching effect of SDS on the fluorescence of near-infrared (NIR) hydrophobic dye, 2-[4'chloro-7'(3'hexadecyl-2'benzothiazolinylidene)-3',5'-(1',3'-propanediyl)-1',3',5'-heptatriene-1'-yl]-3-ethylbenzothiazolium iodide (dye I) in the presence of Triton X-100. The calibration graph is linear in the concentration range from 0 to 2 x 10(-6) mol L(-1) of SDS with a detection limit (LOD) of 8.3 x 10(-8) mol L(-1). The relative standard deviation for the determination of 7 x 10(-7) mol L(-1) SDS was 4.1%. Recoveries of 95.3-110.3% were found for the addition to 1.0 x 10(-6) mol L(-1) SDS in the analysis of environmental water samples. Preliminary research shows that the fluorescence quenching is due to the formation of dye aggregate facilitated by SDS.  相似文献   

18.
The water exchange process on [(CO)(3)Re(H(2)O)(3)](+) (1) was kinetically investigated by (17)O NMR. The acidity dependence of the observed rate constant k(obs) was analyzed with a two pathways model in which k(ex) (k(ex)(298) = (6.3 +/- 0.1) x 10(-3) s(-1)) and k(OH) (k(OH)(298)= 27 +/- 1 s(-1)) denote the water exchange rate constants on 1 and on the monohydroxo species [(CO)(3)Re(I)(H(2)O)(2)(OH)], respectively. The kinetic contribution of the basic form was proved to be significant only at [H(+)] < 3 x 10(-3) M. Above this limiting [H(+)] concentration, kinetic investigations can be unambiguously conducted on the triaqua cation (1). The variable temperature study has led to the determination of the activation parameters Delta H(++)(ex) = 90 +/- 3 kJ mol(-1), Delta S(++)(ex) = +14 +/- 10 J K(-1) mol(-1), the latter being indicative of a dissociative activation mode for the water exchange process. To support this assumption, water substitution reaction on 1 has been followed by (17)O/(1)H/(13)C/(19)F NMR with ligands of various nucleophilicities (TFA, Br(-), CH(3)CN, Hbipy(+), Hphen(+), DMS, TU). With unidentate ligands, except Br(-), the mono-, bi-, and tricomplexes were formed by water substitution. With bidentate ligands, bipy and phen, the chelate complexes [(CO)(3)Re(H(2)O)(bipy)]CF(3)SO(3) (2) and [(CO)(3)Re(H(2)O)(phen)](NO(3))(0.5)(CF(3)SO(3))(0.5).H(2)O (3) were isolated and X-ray characterized. For each ligand, the calculated interchange rate constants k'(i) (2.9 x 10(-3) (TFA) < k'(I) < 41.5 x 10(-3) (TU) s(-1)) were found in the same order as the water exchange rate constant k(ex), the S-donor ligands being slightly more reactive. This result is indicative of I(d) mechanism for water exchange and complex formation, since larger variations of k'(i) are expected for an associatively activated mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
The heteropolynuclear complexes [Pd(2)M'(2)(mu-pz)(6)] (M'=Ag (1), Au (2); pzH=pyrazole), HT-[Pd(2)M'(2)(mu-3-tBupz)(6)] (M'=Ag (3 a), Au (4 a); 3-tBupzH=3-tert-butylpyrazole), and HH-[Pd(2)Au(2)(mu-3-tBupz)(6)] (4 b) have been prepared and some of them were structurally characterized. When 3-tert-butylpyrazolate was employed as a bridging ligand, two linkage isomers (head-to-tail (HT) and head-to-head (HH)) arise from the difference in orientation of the substituent groups on the pyrazolate bridges between the two Pd atoms. (1)H NMR spectroscopy has been used to identify and to follow the reversible stereochemical rearrangement of the HH isomer of [Pd(2)Ag(2)(mu-3-tBupz)(6)] (3 b) to form the HT isomer 3 a in CDCl(3) and the HT isomer of [Pd(2)Au(2)(mu-3-tBupz)(6)] (4 a) to form the HH isomer 4 b in C(6)D(6). Kinetic studies of the reaction have established the rate law to be -d(HH)/dt=d(HT)/dt=k(2)[HH]-k(1)[HT] for 3 b and -d(HT)/dt=d(HH)/dt=k(1)[HT]-k(2)[HH] for 4 a, where k(1) and k(2) denote the rate of isomerization from the HT to the HH isomer and that from the HH to the HT isomer, respectively. For typical runs at 50 degrees C in C(6)D(6), k(1)=13.8x10(-5) s(-1), k(2)=18.6x10(-5) s(-1), and K(eq)=k(2)/k(1)=1.24 for 3 b, and k(1)=1.26x10(-5) s(-1), k(2)=3.52x10(-5) s(-1), and K(eq)=k(1)/k(2)=0.36 for 4 a. Temperature-dependent rate measurements reveal DeltaH(not equal) and DeltaS(not equal) to be 100(1) kJ mol(-1) and 0(3) J mol(-1) K(-1) for 3 b and 112(5) kJ mol(-1) and 20(17) J mol(-1) K(-1) for 4 a, respectively. The rate of isomerization is essentially unaffected by the concentration of the complex or by the presence of neutral bridging ligands. These data and observations imply that the isomerization involves an intramolecular exchange process.  相似文献   

20.
The first detailed kinetic analysis and mechanistic interpretation of the reactions between serum albumin and the second-generation gold drug Auranofin [Et(3)PAuSATg = (triethylphosphine)(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-1-beta-D-glucopyranosato-S-) gold(I)] and its triisopropylphosphine analogue, iPr(3)PAuSATg, in vitro are reported. The reactions were investigated using Penefsky spun columns and NMR saturation transfer methods. Under the Penefsky chromatography conditions with 0.4-0.6 mM albumin and a wide range of Et(3)PAuSATg concentrations, the reaction is biphasic. The fast phase is apparently first order in albumin with a rate constant [k(1) = 3.4 +/- 0.3 x 10(-)(2) s(-)(1)] that decreases slightly in magnitude and becomes intermediate in order at low gold concentrations, [Et(3)PAuSATg] < [AlbSH]; it accounts for approximately 95% of the Au(I) that binds. A minor, slower step [k(2) = 2.3 +/- 0.3 x 10(-)(3) s(-)(1)), which accounts for only 5% of the reaction, is also first order with respect to albumin, and zero order with respect to auranofin. For iPr(3)PAuSATg, only the first step was observed, k(1) = (1.4 +/- 0.1) x 10(-)(2) s(-)(1), and is first order in albumin and independent of the iPr(3)PAuSATg concentration. (31)P-NMR saturation transfer experiments utilizing iPr(3)PAuSATg, under equilibrium conditions, yielded second-order rate constants for both the forward (1.2 x 10(2) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and the reverse (3.9 x 10(1) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) directions. A multistep mechanism involving a conformationally altered albumin species was developed. Albumin domain IA opens with concomitant Cys-34 rearrangement, allowing facile gold binding and exchange, and then closes. In conjunction with the steady-state approximation, this mechanism accounts for the different reaction orders observed under the two set of conditions. The rate-determining conformational change of albumin governs the reaction as monitored by the Penefsky columns. Rapid second order exchange of R(3)PAuSATg at the exposed Cys-34 residue is observed under the NMR conditions. The mechanism predicts that under physiological conditions where [Et(3)PAuSATg] is 10-25 &mgr;M, the reaction will be second order and rapid with a rate constant of 8 +/- 2 x 10(2) M(-)(1) s(-)(1). The Penefsky spun columns revealed a previously unreported and novel binding mechanism, association of auranofin in the pocket of albumin-disulfide species, which was confirmed by Hummel-Dreyer gel chromatographic techniques under equilibrium conditions. This albumin-auranofin complex (AlbSSR-Et(3)PAuSATg) is weakly bound and readily dissociates during conventional gel exclusion chromatography.  相似文献   

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