| Literature DB >> 11546867 |
P Wentworth 1, L H Jones, A D Wentworth, X Zhu, N A Larsen, I A Wilson, X Xu, W A Goddard , K D Janda, A Eschenmoser, R A Lerner.
Abstract
Recently we reported that antibodies can generate hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) from singlet molecular oxygen (1O2*). We now show that this process is catalytic, and we identify the electron source for a quasi-unlimited generation of H2O2. Antibodies produce up to 500 mole equivalents of H2O2 from 1O2*, without a reduction in rate, and we have excluded metals or Cl- as the electron source. On the basis of isotope incorporation experiments and kinetic data, we propose that antibodies use H2O as an electron source, facilitating its addition to 1O2* to form H2O3 as the first intermediate in a reaction cascade that eventually leads to H2O2. X-ray crystallographic studies with xenon point to putative conserved oxygen binding sites within the antibody fold where this chemistry could be initiated. Our findings suggest a protective function of immunoglobulins against 1O2* and raise the question of whether the need to detoxify 1O2* has played a decisive role in the evolution of the immunoglobulin fold.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11546867 DOI: 10.1126/science.1062722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728