Abstract

Copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD) is considered one of the most important mammalian antioxidant defenses and plays a relevant role due to its main function in catalyzing the dismutation of superoxide anion to oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. However, interaction between SOD and H2O2 produced a strong copper-bound oxidant (Cu(II)•OH) that seems able to contrast the self-inactivation of the enzyme or oxidize other molecules through its peroxidase activity. The bicarbonate presence enhances the peroxidase activity and produces the carbonate anion radical (CO3•-). CO3•- is a freely diffusible reactive species capable of oxidizing several molecules that are unwieldy to access into the reactive site of the enzyme. Cu(II)•OH oxidizes bicarbonate to the CO3•-, which spreads out of the binding site and oxidizes hypotaurine and cysteine sulfinic acid to the respective sulfonates through an efficient reaction. These findings suggest a defense role for sulfinates against the damage caused by CO3•- . The effect of hypotaurine and cysteine sulfinic acid on the CO3•--mediated oxidation of the peroxidase probe ABTS to ABTS cation radical (ABTS•+) has been studied. Both sulfinates are able to inhibit the oxidation of ABTS mediated by CO3•-. The effect of hypotaurine and cysteine sulfinic acid against SOD inactivation by H2O2 (~42% protection of enzyme activity) has also been investigated. Interestingly, hypotaurine and cysteine sulfinic acid partially avoid the H2O2-mediated SOD inactivation, suggesting that the two sulfinates may have access to the SOD reactive site and preserve it by reacting with the copper-bound oxidant. In this way hypotaurine and cysteine sulfinic acid not only intercept CO3•- which could move out from the reactive site and cause oxidative damage, but also prevents the inactivation of SOD.

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