Effect of phosphate buffer solutions on the reactions of glutathione with hydrogen peroxide and peroxyl radicals

2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (7) ◽  
pp. 1441-1444 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. Zinatullina ◽  
O. T. Kasaikina ◽  
V. A. Kuzmin ◽  
N. P. Khrameeva ◽  
L. M. Pisarenko

In the study, calcium phosphate spheres (CPS) were prepared using phosphate buffer solutions by hydrothermal method and were used to manufacture a lab-made bleaching paste. The obtained paste was used to whiten bovine teeth in order to investigate whitening effect with CPS in the paste. The results showed that the bleaching paste made by CPS does not affect bleaching effect of hydrogen peroxide (HP). On the contrary, it can prolong the bleaching effect compared the pure HP.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 2112-2116 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. F. Dantas ◽  
P. S. Castro ◽  
R. C. Peña ◽  
M. Bertotti

The cathodic reduction of hydrogen peroxide at copper microelectrodes was investigated in phosphate buffer solutions.


1974 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 88-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARSHALL R. URIST ◽  
HISASHI IWATA ◽  
STUART D. BOYD ◽  
PETER L. CECCOTTI ◽  
MARLYS OKADA ◽  
...  

Data on physicochemical conditions leading to loss of the bone morphogenetic property of bone matrix in neutral buffer solutions support the concept of an enzymic control mechanism better than a chemical blocking reaction or denaturation. The loss is associated with release of 35S-labeled constituents and not prevented by ε-amino caproic acid, an inhibitor of cathepsins. The loss is also associated with release of 35S-cysteine-labeled protein; about 60% of the yield is sustained by the addition of only 3 mmoles/liter of iodoacetic acid. A latent period of about 12 hr, decreased by extraction of bone matrix with CaCl2, is characterized by release of protein polysaccharide and other noncollagenous proteins. Release of sialic acid from the bone matrix by neuraminidase at pH 7.4 has no effect upon bone yield. At 2°C, Tris-HCl buffer or ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid extracts noncollagenous proteins without loss of bone yield; at 37°C, pH 7.4, these solutions also activate endogenous enzymes and reduce bone yield. The component of bone matrix responsible for reduction in bone yield is separable from bone matrix by extraction with phosphate buffer, by catheptic digestion of bone matrix in acidic buffer solutions, by sequential chemical extraction of noncollagenous proteins with cold slightly acidic salt solutions or by extraction-denaturation with chloroform-methanol. Detergents neither extinguish nor denature the morphogenetic property but some solubilize or extract degradative enzymes; hexodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide, at pH 5.0, is positively charged and extracts hydrophobic proteins, including part of the bone morphogenetic property. A special selection of sulfhydryl chemical inhibitors remarkably different from the selection inhibiting known enzymes preserves the bone morphogenetic property of bone matrix; p-chloromercuribenzoate preservation is reversible by chemical reactions with cysteine. Reduction in bone yield in phosphate buffer is not attributable to a chemical block because chloroform-methanol extraction of the agent does not restore bone yield and is not attributable to denaturation because bone yield sustained by p-chloromercuribenzoate is lost by chemical reactions with cysteine. An hypothetical insoluble bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) firmly bound to collagen is degraded by a soluble neutral proteinase (BMPase). Digestion of the hypothetical BMP occurs without loss of the 640-A electron micrographic image of bone collagen, resembles tryptic digestion and is more selective as well as physiologic in action.


2017 ◽  
Vol 83 (21) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kosei Kawasaki ◽  
Yoichi Kamagata

ABSTRACTPreviously, we reported that when agar is autoclaved with phosphate buffer, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is formed in the resulting medium (PT medium), and the colony count on the medium inoculated with environmental samples becomes much lower than that on a medium in which agar and phosphate are autoclaved separately (PS medium) (T. Tanaka et al., Appl Environ Microbiol 80:7659–7666, 2014,https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02741-14). However, the physicochemical mechanisms underlying this observation remain largely unknown. Here, we determined the factors affecting H2O2formation in agar. The H2O2formation was pH dependent: H2O2was formed at high concentrations in an alkaline or neutral phosphate buffer but not in an acidic buffer. Ammonium ions enhanced H2O2formation, implying the involvement of the Maillard reaction catalyzed by phosphate. We found that other gelling agents (e.g., gellan and κ-carrageenan) also produced H2O2after being autoclaved with phosphate. We then examined the cultivability of microorganisms from a fresh-water sample to test whether catalase and pyruvate, known as H2O2scavengers, are effective in yielding high colony counts. The colony count on PT medium was only 5.7% of that on PS medium. Catalase treatment effectively restored the colony count of PT medium (to 106% of that on PS medium). In contrast, pyruvate was not as effective as catalase: the colony count on sodium pyruvate-supplemented PT medium was 58% of that on PS medium. Given that both catalase and pyruvate can remove H2O2from PT medium, these observations indicate that although H2O2is the main cause of reduced colony count on PT medium, other unknown growth-inhibiting substances that cannot be removed by pyruvate (but can be by catalase) may also be involved.IMPORTANCEThe majority of bacteria in natural environments are recalcitrant to laboratory culture techniques. Previously, we demonstrated that one reason for this is the formation of high H2O2levels in media prepared by autoclaving agar and phosphate buffer together (PT medium). In this study, we investigated the factors affecting H2O2formation from agar. H2O2formation is pH dependent, and ammonium ions promote this phosphate-catalyzed H2O2formation. Amendment of catalase or pyruvate, a well-known H2O2-scavenging agent, effectively eliminated H2O2. Yet results suggest that growth-inhibiting factor(s) that cannot be eliminated by pyruvate (but can be by catalase) are present in PT medium.


2020 ◽  
pp. 158059
Author(s):  
Ali Hajian ◽  
Thomas Konegger ◽  
Konrad Bielecki ◽  
Bjoern Mieller ◽  
Torsten Rabe ◽  
...  

1950 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 655-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Armin F. Schick ◽  
George M. Hass

A new method for the isolation of large numbers of individual myofibrils from fresh mammalian skeletal and cardiac muscle has been described. Purification of isolated myofibrils was accomplished by differential centrifugation of fresh frozen sections of muscle which had been mechanically agitated after exposure for 30 to 45 minutes at 0°C. to the action of a dilute solution of trypsin in a phosphate buffer solution with a pH of 7.0 and an ionic strength of 0.25. Isolated skeletal myofibrils of the rabbit and man have similar constant solubility properties. They dissolve in an aqueous mixture of 0.5 N potassium chloride and 0.03 N sodium bicarbonate, giving viscous solutions which exhibit conspicuous birefringence of flow. They are soluble in buffer solutions (ionic strength 0.15) on the acid side of pH 4 and alkaline side of pH 10. If the ionic strength of potassium phosphate buffer solutions is increased to 0.5 or if the ionic strength of phosphate-borate buffer solutions is increased to a similar value by addition of potassium chloride, the isolated myofibrils become soluble at neutrality. Hence, it is possible, first to isolate the myofibrils and then dissolve them without deviating appreciably from physiologic ranges of pH. The extent to which myofibrils are modified by the conditions imposed by the method of isolation is unknown. There is no significant change in microscopic structure or optical birefringence. Furthermore, there is retention of a form of physiological reactivity, for when the isolated skeletal myofibrils are immersed in solutions of adenosinetriphosphate, they promptly and irreversibly change from elongated fibrils with distinct structural detail into dense spherical masses without recognizable microscopic structure.


Soil Research ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 159
Author(s):  
GH Simpson ◽  
JD Hughes

Elution of clays with buffer solutions was compared with the more destructive technique of peroxide oxidation to remove ultraviolet-absorbing contaminants from kaolinite and montmorillonite. Repetitive elution of kaolinite at pH 7.0 and of montmorillonite at pH 8.4 removed significant amounts, but the level of contamination after this treatment was still unacceptably high. Oxidation with hydrogen peroxide was considerably more effective, but X-ray diffraction data on the oxidized clays provided evidence of the breakdown of aggregates in the 2-5 �m size range. It was concluded that the contaminants were organic and that oxidation removed bonding groups from clay domains.


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