Cargando…

Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.

It has long been recognized that the aqueous mixture of hydrogen peroxide and ferrous ion, known as the Fenton reagent, generates powerful oxidants. Furthermore, the chemical intermediates and reaction pathways of the type generated by this reagent have been implicated in oxidative damage in biologi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wink, D A, Wink, C B, Nims, R W, Ford, P C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1994
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7843082
_version_ 1782129814531997696
author Wink, D A
Wink, C B
Nims, R W
Ford, P C
author_facet Wink, D A
Wink, C B
Nims, R W
Ford, P C
author_sort Wink, D A
collection PubMed
description It has long been recognized that the aqueous mixture of hydrogen peroxide and ferrous ion, known as the Fenton reagent, generates powerful oxidants. Furthermore, the chemical intermediates and reaction pathways of the type generated by this reagent have been implicated in oxidative damage in biological systems. Although the subject continues to be debated, the hydroxyl radical (.OH) is generally invoked as the predominant oxidizing intermediate formed by the Fenton reagent. However, recent results from this laboratory have demonstrated that the principal pathway for the Fenton-mediated oxidation of N-nitrosodimethylamine does not involve .OH, but instead must involve the intermediacy of another strongly oxidizing species. This conclusion was based on stopped-flow spectrophotometric observation of a transient, A, believed to be an iron(II) nitrosyl adduct, which was formed at a rate five-fold faster than that predicted for formation of .OH. Subsequent experiments have shown that methanol and other organic compounds can quench the formation of A. This quenching procedure provides a unique spectrophotometric probe with which to examine the relative reactivities of putative Fenton-type oxidizing intermediates toward organic substrates. Presented here are the results of several such quenching studies, plus an overview of our mechanistic investigations of the Fenton reaction.
format Text
id pubmed-1567375
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1994
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-15673752006-09-19 Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical. Wink, D A Wink, C B Nims, R W Ford, P C Environ Health Perspect Research Article It has long been recognized that the aqueous mixture of hydrogen peroxide and ferrous ion, known as the Fenton reagent, generates powerful oxidants. Furthermore, the chemical intermediates and reaction pathways of the type generated by this reagent have been implicated in oxidative damage in biological systems. Although the subject continues to be debated, the hydroxyl radical (.OH) is generally invoked as the predominant oxidizing intermediate formed by the Fenton reagent. However, recent results from this laboratory have demonstrated that the principal pathway for the Fenton-mediated oxidation of N-nitrosodimethylamine does not involve .OH, but instead must involve the intermediacy of another strongly oxidizing species. This conclusion was based on stopped-flow spectrophotometric observation of a transient, A, believed to be an iron(II) nitrosyl adduct, which was formed at a rate five-fold faster than that predicted for formation of .OH. Subsequent experiments have shown that methanol and other organic compounds can quench the formation of A. This quenching procedure provides a unique spectrophotometric probe with which to examine the relative reactivities of putative Fenton-type oxidizing intermediates toward organic substrates. Presented here are the results of several such quenching studies, plus an overview of our mechanistic investigations of the Fenton reaction. 1994-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1567375/ /pubmed/7843082 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Wink, D A
Wink, C B
Nims, R W
Ford, P C
Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title_full Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title_fullStr Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title_full_unstemmed Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title_short Oxidizing intermediates generated in the Fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
title_sort oxidizing intermediates generated in the fenton reagent: kinetic arguments against the intermediacy of the hydroxyl radical.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7843082
work_keys_str_mv AT winkda oxidizingintermediatesgeneratedinthefentonreagentkineticargumentsagainsttheintermediacyofthehydroxylradical
AT winkcb oxidizingintermediatesgeneratedinthefentonreagentkineticargumentsagainsttheintermediacyofthehydroxylradical
AT nimsrw oxidizingintermediatesgeneratedinthefentonreagentkineticargumentsagainsttheintermediacyofthehydroxylradical
AT fordpc oxidizingintermediatesgeneratedinthefentonreagentkineticargumentsagainsttheintermediacyofthehydroxylradical