Fragmentation reactions of radicals formed from sugar phosphates and the hydroxyl radical: an investigation by electron spin resonance spectroscopy and pulse radiolysis
Abstract
E.s.r. spectroscopy has been employed with the radiomimetic TiIII–H2O2 couple and an aqueous flow system to study the reactions between the hydroxyl radical and some sugar phosphates. For the furanose compounds hydrogen-atom abstraction from the carbon adjacent to the alicyclic oxygen is preferred: subsequent phosphate loss occurs when the radical centre is adjacent to the carbon bound to phosphate, and, as judged by steady-state e.s.r. and time-resolved pulse-radiolysis experiments, is faster for radicals from ribose 5-phosphate, α-D-glucose 1-phosphate, and glycerol phosphates (k ca. 104s–1) than for fructose phosphates (k ca. 102–103 s–1).