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. 1976 Jan-Feb;31(1-2):29-39.
doi: 10.1515/znc-1976-1-209.

On the mechanism of the acridine orange sensitized photodynamic inactivation of lysozyme. I. Basic kinetics

On the mechanism of the acridine orange sensitized photodynamic inactivation of lysozyme. I. Basic kinetics

H Schmidt et al. Z Naturforsch C Biosci. 1976 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

The kinetics of the photodynamic desactivation of lysozyme in presence of acridine orange as the sensitizer have been investigated in detail varying oxygen, protein, dye concentration, ionic strength and pH value. The kinetics can be approximately described as an over all pseudo-first-order rate process. Changing the solvent from water to D2O or by quenching experiments in presence of azide ions it could be shown that the desactivation of lysozyme is caused exclusively by singlet oxygen. The excited oxygen occurs via the triplet state of the dye with a rate constant considerably lower than that to be expected for a diffusionally controlled reaction. Singlet oxygen react chemically (desactivation, k=2.9 X 10(7) m(-1) sec(-1)) and physically (quenching process, k=4.1 X 10(8) m(-1) sec(-1)) with the enzyme. The kinetical analysis shows that additional chemical reaction between singlet oxygen and lysozyme would have only little influence on the kinetics of the desactivation as long as their products would be enzymatically active and their kinetical constants would be less than about 1 X 10(8) m(-1) sec(-1)).

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