Abstract
1. This study deals with the oxidation of organophosphorus amino acid analogues by phenobarbital-induced rabbit liver microsomes. It has been shown that 1-aminoalkylphosphonous and 1-aminoalkylthiophosphonic acids are converted by P450 to 1-aminoalkylphosphonic acids. 2. Phosphonous analogues of amino acids cause type I spectral changes, and thiophosphonic analogues produce reverse type I changes in different spectra. 3. In the presence of NADPH, the 1-aminoalkylphosphonous acids form the corresponding 1-aminoalkylphosphonic acids by the reaction P-H-->P-OH, as monitored using 1H nmr spectroscopy. 4. Aminoalkylthiophosphonic acids have also proven to be the substrates for the NADPH-dependent monoxygenase system. During the course of oxidative desulphuration 1-aminoalkylphosphonic acids were formed by the reaction P = S-->P = O, as monitored by 31P-nmr spectroscopy. 5. Using resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy, the interaction of 1-aminoisobutyl-phosphonous acid with P450 was investigated, and characteristic changes in spectral frequencies in the region between 1370 and 1700 cm-1 were demonstrated. These latter changes indicate that substrate binding of organophosphorus compounds leads to alterations in haem conformation and to redistribution of the electron density.
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