The rate of a chemical reaction can be sensitive to the isotope composition of the reactants, which provides also for the sensitivity of such "spin-sensitive" reactions to the external magnetic field. Here we demonstrate the effect of the external magnetic field on the enzymatic DNA synthesis together with the effect of the spin-bearing magnesium ions ([Formula: see text]Mg). The rate of DNA synthesis monotonously decreased with the external magnetic field induction increasing in presence of zero-spin magnesium ions ([Formula: see text]Mg).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZero-point energies (ZPEs) of hydroxyl ion and hydrogen and water molecules, free and compressed in C cages, are computed; the excess energy acquired by molecules under compression is in the range 2-3 kcal/mol and depends on the isotopes. The differences in ZPE of compressed isotopic molecules strongly exceed those of the free molecules, resulting in the large deuterium and tritium isotope effects. These effects induced by compression are suggested as a probe for testing molecular compression of enzymatic sites; they may be important for understanding enormously large isotope effects observed in some enzymatic reactions, where they are attributed to the tunneling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe great diversity of molecular processes in chemistry, physics, and biology exhibits universal property: they are controlled by powerful factor, angular momentum. Conservation of angular momentum (electron spin) is a fundamental and universal principle: all molecular processes are spin selective, they are allowed only for those spin states of reactants whose total spin is identical to that of products. Magnetic catalysis induced by magnetic interactions is a powerful and universal means to overcome spin prohibition and to control physical, chemical and biochemical processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNuclear magnetic ions Mg, Ca, and Zn suppress DNA synthesis by 3-5 times with respect to ions with nonmagnetic nuclei. This observation unambiguously evidences that the DNA synthesis occurs by radical pair mechanism, which is well known in chemistry and implies pairwise generation of radicals by electron transfer between reaction partners. This mechanism coexists with generally accepted nucleophilic one; it is switched on, when at least two ions enter into the catalytic site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry is controlled by Coulomb energy; magnetic energy is lower by many orders of magnitude and may be confidently ignored in the energy balance of chemical reactions. The situation becomes less clear, however, when reaction rates are considered. In this case, magnetic perturbations of nearly degenerate energy surface crossings may produce observable, and sometimes even dramatic, effects on reactions rates, product yields, and spectroscopic transitions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioelectromagnetics
January 2016
The main source of magnetic and electromagnetic effects in biological systems is now generally accepted and demonstrated in this paper to be radical pair mechanism which implies pairwise generation of radicals in biochemical reactions. This mechanism was convincingly established for enzymatic adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and desoxynucleic acid (DNA) synthesis by using catalyzing metal ions with magnetic nuclei ((25)Mg, (43)Ca, (67)Zn) and supported by magnetic field effects on these reactions. The mechanism, is shown to function in medicine as a medical remedy or technology (trans-cranial magnetic stimulation, nuclear magnetic control of the ATP synthesis in heart muscle, the killing of cancer cells by suppression of DNA synthesis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnetic isotope and magnetic field effects on the rate of DNA synthesis catalysed by polymerases β with isotopic ions (24)Mg(2+), (25)Mg(2+) and (26)Mg(2+) in the catalytic sites were detected. No difference in enzymatic activity was found between polymerases β carrying (24)Mg(2+) and (26)Mg(2+) ions with spinless, non-magnetic nuclei (24)Mg and (26)Mg. However, (25)Mg(2+) ions with magnetic nucleus (25)Mg were shown to suppress enzymatic activity by two to three times with respect to the enzymatic activity of polymerases β with (24)Mg(2+) and (26)Mg(2+) ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree fundamental properties of atomic nuclei-mass, spin (and related magnetic moment), and volume-are the source of isotope effects. The mostly deserved and popular, with almost hundred-year history, is the mass-dependent isotope effect. The first mass-independent isotope effect which chemically discriminates isotopes by their nuclear spins and nuclear magnetic moments rather than by their masses was detected in 1976.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotolysis of (17,18)O-labeled water in the presence of molecular oxygen is accompanied by transfer of (17)O and (18)O isotopes from water to oxygen, demonstrating that photoinduced oxidation of water does occur. The reaction exhibits the following isotope effect: oxidation of H(2)(17)O is faster by 2.6% (in the Earth's magnetic field) and by 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is a fullerene-based low toxic nanocationite designed for targeted delivery of the paramagnetic stable isotope of magnesium to the doxorubicin (DXR)-induced damaged heart muscle providing a prominent effect close to about 80% recovery of the tissue hypoxia symptoms in less than 24 hrs after a single injection (0.03 - 0.1 LD50).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new, ion-radical mechanism of enzymatic ATP synthesis was recently discovered by using magnesium isotopes. It functions at a high concentration of MgCl(2) and includes electron transfer from the Mg(H(2)O)(m)(2+)(ADP(3-)) complex (m = 0-4) to the Mg(H(2)O)(n)(2+) complex as a primary reaction of ATP synthesis in catalytic sites of ATP synthase and kinases. Here, the structures and electron transfer reaction energies of magnesium complexes related to ATP synthesis are calculated in terms of DFT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rate of ATP synthesis by creatine kinase extracted from V. xanthia venom was shown to depend on the magnetic field. The yield of ATP produced by enzymes with 24Mg2+ and 26Mg2+ ions in catalytic sites increases by 7-8% at 55 mT and then decreases at 80 mT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: This is the first report on the targeted delivery of fullerene-based low toxic nanocationite particles (porphyrin adducts of cyclohexyl fullerene-C(60)) to treat hypoxia-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in mammalian heart muscle.
Methods: The magnetic isotope effect generated by the release of paramagnetic (25)Mg(2+) from these nanoparticles selectively stimulates the ATP overproduction in the oxygen-depleted cell.
Results: Because nanoparticles are membranotropic cationites, they will only release the overactivating paramagnetic cations in response to hypoxia-induced acidic shift.
Recent discovery of magnesium isotope effect in the rate of enzymatic synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) offers a new insight into the mechanochemistry of enzymes as the molecular machines. The activity of phosphorylating enzymes (ATP-synthase, phosphocreatine, and phosphoglycerate kinases) in which Mg(2+) ion has a magnetic isotopic nucleus 25Mg was found to be 2-3 times higher than that of enzymes in which Mg(2+) ion has spinless, nonmagnetic isotopic nuclei 24Mg or 26Mg. This isotope effect demonstrates unambiguously that the ATP synthesis is a spin-dependent ion-radical process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have measured the bimolecular contribution (relaxivity) R1 (M(-1) s(-1)) to the spin-lattice relaxation rate for the protons of H2 and H2@C60 dissolved in organic solvents in the presence of paramagnet nitroxide radicals. It is found that the relaxation effect of the paramagnets is enhanced 5-fold in H2@C60 compared to H2 under the same conditions. 13C relaxivity in C60 induced by nitroxide has also been measured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 1H nuclear spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) of H2 and H2@C60 in organic solvents varies with solvent, and it varies proportionally for H2 and for H2@C60. Since intermolecular magnetic interactions are ruled out, the solvent must influence the modulating processes of the relaxation mechanisms of H2 both in the solvent cage and inside C60. The temperature dependence of T1 also is very similar for H2 and H2@C60, T1 going through a maximum by varying the temperature in solvents which allow a wide range of temperatures to be explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn absorptive chemically induced dynamic electron polarization (CIDEP) was generated by the quenching of singlet oxygen by nitroxide radicals (TEMPO derivatives). The spin polarization decay time of the nitroxide (measured by time-resolved EPR) correlates with the lifetime of singlet oxygen (measured by singlet oxygen phosphorescence spectroscopy). In addition, a deuterium isotope effect on the spin polarization decay time was observed, a signature of singlet oxygen involvement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotolysis of organotin molecules RSnMe3 is shown to be a spin selective radical reaction accompanied by fractionation of magnetic, (117,119)Sn, and nonmagnetic, (118,120)Sn, isotopes between starting reagents and products. A primary photolysis process is a homolytic cleavage of the C-Sn bond and generation of a triplet radical pair as a spin-selective nanoreactor. Nuclear spin dependent triplet-singlet conversion of the pair results in the tin isotope fractionation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rates of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production by isolated mitochondria and mitochondrial creatine kinase incubated in isotopically pure media containing, separately, (24)Mg(2+), (25)Mg(2+), and (26)Mg(2+) ions were shown to be strongly dependent on the magnesium nuclear spin and magnetic moment. The rate of adenosine 5'-diphosphate phosphorylation in mitochondria with magnetic nuclei (25)Mg is about twice higher than that with the spinless, nonmagnetic nuclei (24,26)Mg. When mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation was selectively blocked by treatment with 1-methylnicotine amide, (25)Mg(2+) ions were shown to be nearly four times more active in mitochondrial ATP synthesis than (24,26)Mg(2+) ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2005
Phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) is found to be controlled by a (25)Mg(2+)-related magnetic isotope effect. Mg(2+) nuclear spin selectivity manifests itself in PGK-directed ADP phosphorylation, which has been clearly proven by comparison of ATP synthesis rates estimated in reaction mixtures with different Mg isotopy parameters. Both pure (25)Mg(2+) (nuclear spin 5/2, magnetic moment +0.
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