Abstract

Metmyoglobin (MbFe III), a major form of dietary iron, is an efficient inducer of lipid and protein oxidation. Indeed, MbFe III is able to cleave hydrogen peroxide and lipid hydroperoxides with subsequent formation of ferrylmyoglobin (MbFe IV = O) and lipid oxyl and peroxyl radicals. In the first part of this work, the mechanism of the reaction between MbFe III and H 2O 2 is revisited with an emphasis on the influence of bovine serum albumin (BSA). BSA does not affect the rate of MbFe IV = O formation but inhibits the formation of a redox-inactive green pigment (heme-protein cross-link species). Although tightly bound to BSA, the flavonol quercetin is still able to reduce MbFe IV = O as a likely result of long-range electron transfers within a protein–protein complex. In the second part, BSA is shown to strongly slow down the metmyoglobin-catalyzed consumption of linoleic acid hydroperoxides with formation of ketones as the main products. In the process, only low concentrations of ferrylmyoglobin are slowly accumulated. A catalytic mechanism is proposed that involves a one-electron-oxidized metmyoglobin species distinct from ferrylmyoglobin.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call