Publication | Open Access
Singlet molecular oxygen in the Haber-Weiss reaction.
213
Citations
8
References
1994
Year
Bioorganic ChemistrySinglet Molecular OxygenBiochemistryPhotochemistrySinglet OxygenNatural SciencesRadical (Chemistry)Molecular BiologyRedox ChemistryChemistryReactive Oxygen SpecieChemical BiologyMedicineEnzyme Superoxide DismutaseRedox BiologyDeoxygenationCharacteristic Chemiluminescence EmissionOxidative Stress
Characteristic chemiluminescence emission of singlet (1 delta g) molecular oxygen at 1268 nm is reported from a Haber-Weiss reaction. The reaction consists of mixing aqueous hydrogen peroxide with a solution of potassium superoxide, solubilized by 18-crown-6 ether in carbon tetrachloride or in dry acetonitrile at room temperature. Since the discovery of the enzyme superoxide dismutase by J.M. McCord and I. Fridovich [(1968) J. Biol. Chem. 243, 5733-5760], the identity of the reactive oxidant in superoxide-generating systems in biology has remained a chemical mystery. The results presented here suggest strongly that the reactive species is singlet oxygen generated via the Haber-Weiss reaction and not, as usually assumed, the hydroxyl radical, .OH, generated by the same reaction.
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