Abstract

Phenothiazines are used an antipsychotic drugs and as reagents to determine microamounts of hemoglobin in biological fluids and tissues. Several agents cause the oxidation of phenothiazines to chromophoric cation radicals, whose stability may be related with their biological action. Enzymes and proteins with peroxidase activity catalyze the oxidation by H 2O 2 of phenothiazines to their corresponding cation radicals, which suffer a non-enzymatic breakdown. The instability of these cation radicals makes the determination of their respective molar absorptivities very difficult. These properties, however, have been determined for a few phenothiazine cation radicals by cumbersome or unreliable procedures. In this paper a new method is proposed and applied to six different phenothiazines oxidized with H 2O 2/peroxidase. The method involves the stoichiometric exhaustion of H 2O 2, under assay conditions which yield a fast enzymatic formation of phenothiazine cation radicals and which slow down their nonezymatic breakdown. This method may be useful for quantitative studies on the enzymatic activity and the reaction mechanism of the oxidation of a number of phenothiazines catalyzed by different types of peroxidase, as well as by proteins with peroxidase activity, such as hemoglobin.

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