Stopped-flow kinetic study of vitamin E regeneration reaction with biological hydroquinones (reduced forms of ubiquinone, vitamin K, and tocopherolquinone) in solution
- PMID: 1429580
Stopped-flow kinetic study of vitamin E regeneration reaction with biological hydroquinones (reduced forms of ubiquinone, vitamin K, and tocopherolquinone) in solution
Abstract
A kinetic study of the regeneration reaction of vitamin E (tocopherol) with eight biological hydroquinones (HQs) (ubiquinol-10 (Q10H2 1); ubiquinol-0 (Q0H2 2); vitamin K1 HQ (VK1H2 3); vitamin K3 HQ (VK3H2 4); alpha-, beta-, and gamma-tocopherol-HQs (alpha-, beta-, and gamma-TQH2 5-7); and 2,3,5-trimethyl-1,4-HQ (TMQH2 8)) in solution was performed. The second-order rate constants (k4) for the reaction of HQs 1-8 with alpha-tocopheroxyl and 5,7-diisopropyltocopheroxyl radicals in ethanol, benzene, and isopropyl alcohol/water (5:1, v/v) solutions were measured with a stopped-flow spectrophotometer. The order of magnitude of k4 values obtained for HQs is VK1H2 > VK3H2 > alpha-TQH2 > beta-TQH2 approximately gamma-TQH2 approximately TMQH2 > Q10H2 > Q0H2, being independent of the kinds of tocopheroxyl radicals and the polarity of the solvents. The log of the k4 values obtained for HQs was found to correlate with their peak oxidation potentials. Comparing the k2 value (2.68 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 obtained for the reaction of alpha-tocopheroxyl with vitamin C (sodium ascorbate) with those (k4 = 2.54 x 10(5) and 8.15 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) obtained for the reaction of alpha-tocopheroxyl with Q10H2 and alpha-TQH2 in isopropyl alcohol/water mixtures, the former is approximately 11 and 3 times as reactive as the latter, respectively. On the other hand, the k2 value obtained for sodium ascorbate is smaller than the k4 values obtained for VK1H2 and VK3H2. These results suggest that mixtures of vitamin E and these HQs (as well as those of vitamins E and C) may function synergistically as antioxidants in various tissues and mitochondria.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
