2 resultados para Oxidants
em Digital Commons at Florida International University
Resumo:
The superoxide radical is considered to play important roles in physiological processes as well as in the genesis of diverse cytotoxic conditions such as cancer, various cardiovascular disorders and neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The detection and quantification of superoxide within cells is of critical importance to understand biological roles of superoxide and to develop preventive strategies against free radical-mediated diseases. Cyclic nitrone spin traps such as DMPO, EMPO, DEPMPO, BMPO and their derivatives have been widely used in conjunction with ESR spectroscopy to detect cellular superoxide with some success. However, the formation of unstable superoxide adducts from the reaction of cyclic nitrones with superoxide is a stumbling block in detecting superoxide by using electron spin resonance (ESR). A chemiluminescent probe, lucigenin, and fluorogenic probes, hydroethidium and MitoSox, are the other frequently used methods in detecting superoxide. However, luceginen undergoes redox-cycling producing superoxide by itself, and hydroethidium and MitoSox react with other oxidants apart from superoxide forming red fluorescent products contributing to artefacts in these assays. Hence, both methods were deemed to be inappropriate for superoxide detection. In this study, an effective approach, a selective mechanism-based colorimetric detection of superoxide anion has been developed by using silylated azulenyl nitrones spin traps. Since a nitrone moiety and an adjacent silyl group react readily with radicals and oxygen anions respectively, such nitrones can trap superoxide efficiently because superoxide is both a radical and an oxygen anion. Moreover, the synthesized nitrone is designed to be triggered solely by superoxide and not by other commonly observed oxygen radicals such as hydroxyl radical, alkoxyl radicals and peroxyl radical. In vitro studies have shown that these synthesized silylated azylenyl nitrones and the mitochondrial-targeted guanylhydrazone analog can trap superoxide efficiently yielding UV-vis identifiable and even potentially fluorescence-detectable orange products. Therefore, the chromotropic detection of superoxide using these nitrones can be a promising method in contrast to other available methods.
Resumo:
Selenium is known to occur in the enzyme, glutathione peroxidase, and plays an important role as an antioxidant. The objective of this investigation was to determine if amounts of selenium are selectively accumulated in different regions of the retina or uniformly distributed with eccentricity. 20 human retinas were analyzed for selenium. 18 of these were sectioned into a disc and two concentric annuli centered on the fovea using trephines having diameters of 3, 11, and 21 mm. The sections had areas of7.1, 93, and 343 mm2, respectively. Corresponding sections of these retinas were combined and analyzed together in sets of n = 5 and n = 11. For two donors, the whole retina of one eye was analyzed for selenium and the other retina was sectioned for analysis as described above. Selenium was determined using atomic fluorescence spectroscopy after digestion of the retinal tissues in nitric acid. The two whole retinas were found to have an average of 0.89 ± 0.49 pmoles/mm2 of selenium as compared to the companion which had 0.84 ± 0.28 pmoles/mm2 as determined from the sum of the selenium amounts measured in the individual sections. The inner, medial, and outer portions of these two sectioned retinas were found to contain an average of5.28 ± 1.1, 1.28 ± 0.44, 0.63 ± 0.22 pmoles/mm2, respectively. The five retinas that were sectioned and pooled for analysis were found to have average amounts of3.64, 1.26, and 0.56 pmoles/mm2 • The 11-sectioned retinas were found to have 1.16, 0.61, and 0.38 pmoles/mm2 respectively in the same three sections. This limited data set indicates that selenium is not uniformly distributed within the human retina but rather concentrated to a greater extent within the macula. If confirmed, these data would support the hypothesis that selenium may be an important antioxidant involved in protection of the macula from radical oxidants.