Effect of Added Nucleophilic Species on the Rate of Primary Amino Acid Nitrosation
- 23 February 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 127 (11) , 3664-3665
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja042449o
Abstract
The rate of primary amino acid nitrosation, both with and without the addition of nucleophilic species, has been studied using stopped-flow spectrophotometry. The rate of nitrosation in the presence of strong nucleophilic species such as thiocyanate and thiourea was shown to be much faster than nitrosation without the addition of a nucleophile. Rate constants were determined at 25 °C for reaction of the amino acids alanine, glycine, and valine with five common nitrosating agents. For the nitrosating agents nitrosyl chloride, nitrosyl bromide, and dinitrogen trioxide the rate of reaction was observed to approach the predicted encounter-controlled limit. However, for nitrosyl thiocyanate and S-nitrosothiourea nitrosation was found to be reaction-controlled. In the reaction-controlled regime, rate constants were found to increase with increasing electrophilic strength of the nitrosating agent, as measured by the parameter En, with a slope indicative of a product-like transition state. Activation energies were also measured, being around 10−30 kJ mol-1 for encounter-controlled rate constants, and 30−50 kJ mol-1 for reaction-controlled rate constants. Our results are discussed in the context of in vivo amino acid nitrosation, where it is proposed that the rate of nitrosation may be considerably greater than currently thought, due to the presence of nucleophilic species.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nitrosation of Glycine Ethyl Ester and Ethyl Diazoacetate To Give the Alkylating Agent and Mutagen Ethyl Chloro(hydroximino)acetateChemical Research in Toxicology, 2004
- Nitrosative Adenine Deamination: Facile Pyrimidine Ring-Opening in the Dediazoniation of Adeninediazonium IonOrganic Letters, 2003
- Absence of 2‘-Deoxyoxanosine and Presence of Abasic Sites in DNA Exposed to Nitric Oxide at Controlled Physiological ConcentrationsChemical Research in Toxicology, 2003
- Conditions for acid catalysed luminal nitrosation are maximal at the gastric cardiaGut, 2003
- Quantitative relationship between oral nitrate-reducing activity and the endogenous formation of N-nitrosoamino acids in humansFood and Chemical Toxicology, 1991
- Hydrolysis equilibrium of dinitrogen trioxide in dilute acid solutionInorganic Chemistry, 1981
- Effect of thiocyanate on nitrosation of aminesNature, 1974
- The Production of Malignant Primary Hepatic Tumours in the Rat by Feeding DimethylnitrosamineBritish Journal of Cancer, 1956