| Literature DB >> 6872093 |
M P Merville, J Piette, J Decuyper, C M Calberg-Bacq, A van de Vorst.
Abstract
Irradiation in the presence of O2, with near-UV light of five promazine (PZ) derivatives added to erythrocyte ghost membranes, causes covalent cross-linking between proteins as revealed by a progressive decrease in the amounts of proteins separable by electrophoresis after denaturation. The induction of cross-links in the two spectrin subunits is a single-hit process as a function of the irradiation time; relatively the rate constants (in min-1) of the photoreactions were 0.060 with chlorpromazine (CPZ), 0.039 with methoxypromazine (MTPZ), 0.031 with PZ, 0.029 with triflupromazine (TFPZ) and 0.006 with acepromazine (ACPZ). A main photochemical intermediate implicated in the spectrin aggregation seems to be the cation radical of the PZ derivatives. Indeed, (i) the chemically generated cation radicals can induce the reaction in the dark; (ii) the photoaggregation is regularly reduced upon addition of increasing concentrations of NaN3; (iii) NaN3 similarly affects the amount of cross-links induced by the isolated cation radicals. Hydroxyl radicals are also involved in the photocross-linking when the reaction is initiated only by MTPZ and not by the other sensitizers. In the absence of oxygen during irradiation, PZ, MTPZ and ACPZ completely loose their cross-linking activities whereas CPZ and TFPZ remain as efficient as in the presence of oxygen.Entities:
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Year: 1983 PMID: 6872093 DOI: 10.1016/0009-2797(83)90055-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol Interact ISSN: 0009-2797 Impact factor: 5.192