Intramolecular kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) were determined for cytochrome P450-catalyzed hydroxylation reactions of methyl-dideuterated trans-2-phenylcyclopropylmethane-d2 (1-d2), which gives two products from oxidation of the methyl group, trans-2-phenylcyclopropylmethanol (2) and 1-phenyl-3-buten-1ol (3). In oxidations of each enantiomer of 1-d2 with three P450 enzymes (CYP2B1, CYPDelta2E1, and CYPDelta2E1 T303A), the apparent intramolecular KIEs were different for products 2 and 3 in all cases and different for each enzyme-substrate combination. In oxidations of each enantiomer of undeuterated 1-d0 and trideuteriomethyl 1-d3 by CYP2B1 and CYPDelta2E1, the ratio of products 2/3 decreased for 1-d3 in comparison to 1-d0 in all cases. The results require multiple pathways for P450-catalyzed hydroxylation and are consistent with the "two-oxidants" model, where hydroxylation is effected by both the hydroperoxy-iron species and the iron-oxo species. The results are not consistent with predictions of the "two-states" model for P450-catalyzed hydroxylations, where oxidations occur from a low-spin state and a high-spin state of iron-oxo.
An optical fiber has been developed with a maneuverable mini-probe tip that sparges O2 gas and photo-detaches pheophorbide (sensitizer) molecules. Singlet oxygen is produced at the probe tip surface which reacts with an alkene spacer group releasing sensitizer upon fragmentation of a dioxetane intermediate. Optimal sensitizer photorelease occurred when the probe tip was loaded with 60 nmol sensitizer, where crowding of the pheophorbide molecules and self-quenching were kept to a minimum. The fiber optic tip delivered pheophorbide molecules and singlet oxygen to discrete locations. 60 nmol sensitizer was delivered into petrolatum; however, sensitizer release was less efficient in toluene-d8 (3.6 nmol) where most had remained adsorbed on the probe tip, even after the covalent alkene spacer bond had been broken. The results open the door to a new area of fiber optic-guided sensitizer delivery for the potential photodynamic therapy of hypoxic structures requiring cytotoxic control.
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