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Generation of Singlet Molecular Oxygen by Lipid Hydroperoxides and Nitronium Ion†.

Fernanda Manso PradoAlexsandra C ScalfoProf Sayuri MiyamotoMarisa Helena Gennari de MedeirosPaolo Di Mascio
Published in: Photochemistry and photobiology (2020)
Singlet molecular oxygen is a reactive species involved in biological oxidative processes. The major cellular targets of singlet molecular oxygen are unsaturated fatty acids in the membrane, as well as nucleic acids and proteins. The aim of this study was to investigate whether lipids and commercial hydroperoxides generate singlet molecular oxygen, in presence of nitronium and activated nitronium ion. For this purpose, monomol light emitted in the near-infrared region (λ = 1270 nm) was used to monitor singlet molecular oxygen decay in different solvents, with different hydroperoxides and in the presence of azide. Direct measurements of the singlet molecular oxygen spectrum at 1270 nm recorded during the reaction between lipids and commercial hydroperoxides and nitronium ions unequivocally demonstrated the formation of this excited species.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • single molecule
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • genetic diversity