Publications by authors named "Dosymzhan Burbaev"

EPR, optical, electrochemical and stopped-flow methods were used to demonstrate that Fe(NO)2 fragments in paramagnetic mononuclear and diamagnetic binuclear forms of dinitrosyl iron complexes with glutathione are reversibly reduced by a two-electron mechanism to be further transformed from the initial state with d(7) configuration into states with the d(8) and d(9) electronic configurations of the iron atom. Under these conditions, both forms of DNIC display identical optical and EPR characteristics in state d(9) suggesting that reduction of the binuclear form of DNIC initiates their reversible decomposition into two mononuclear dinitrosyl iron fragments, one of which is EPR-silent (d(8)) and the other one is EPR-active (d(9)). Both forms of DNIC produce EPR signals with the following values of the g-factor: g⊥=2.

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Using the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and optical spectrophotometric methods, it has been established that biologically active, water-soluble dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNIC) with glutathione are predominantly represented by the diamagnetic binuclear form (B-DNIC) even in the presence of a 10-fold excess of glutathione non-incorporated into DNIC at neutral pH. With the increase in рН to 10-11, B-DNIC are fully converted into the paramagnetic mononuclear form (М-DNIC) with a characteristic EPR signal at g⊥=2.04, g‖=2.

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It has been found that heating of solutions of the binuclear form of dinitrosyl iron complexes (B-DNIC) with glutathione in a degassed Thunberg apparatus (рН 1.0, 70°С, 6 h) results in their decomposition with a concomitant release of four gaseous NO molecules per one B-DNIC. Further injection of air into the Thunberg apparatus initiates fast oxidation of NO to NO₂ and formation of two GS-NO molecules per one B-DNIC.

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The ability of mononuclear dinitrosyl iron commplexes (M-DNICs) with thiolate ligands to act as NO donors and to trigger S-nitrosation of thiols can be explain only in the paradigm of the model of the [Fe(+)(NO(+))(2)] core ({Fe(NO)(2)}(7) according to the Enemark-Feltham classification). Similarly, the {(RS(-))(2)Fe(+)(NO(+))(2)}(+) structure describing the distribution of unpaired electron density in M-DNIC corresponds to the low-spin (S = 1/2) state with a d(7) electron configuration of the iron atom and predominant localization of the unpaired electron on MO(d(z2)) and the square planar structure of M-DNIC. On the other side, the formation of molecular orbitals of M-DNIC including orbitals of the iron atom, thiolate and nitrosyl ligands results in a transfer of electron density from sulfur atoms to the iron atom and nitrosyl ligands.

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Electron paramagnetic resonance and optical spectrophotometric studies have demonstrated that low-molecular dinitrosyl iron complexes (DNICs) with cysteine or glutathione exist in aqueous solutions in the form of paramagnetic mononuclear (capital EM, Cyrillic-DNICs) and diamagnetic binuclear complexes (B-DNICs). The latter represent Roussin's red salt esters and can be prepared by treatment of aqueous solutions of Fe(2+) and thiols (small er, Cyrilliccapital EN, Cyrillic 7.4) with gaseous nitric oxide (NO) at the thiol:Fe(2+) ratio 1:1.

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Parameters of the EPR signals of monomeric dinitrosyl-iron complexes with 1H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thiol (DNIC-MT), obtained by treating MT+ferrous iron in DMSO solution with gaseous NO, have been compared with those of the crystalline monomeric DNIC-MT with tetrahedral structure. Dissolved DNIC-MT were characterized by the isotropic EPR signal centered at g=2.03 with half-width of 0.

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This paper reports results of a reexamination of some poorly understood peculiarities of laccases, an enzyme family which has been extensively studied in our laboratories as well as by others for some years. The issue that is reconsidered here is the previously proposed existence of "active" and "resting" forms of laccases. The presence of fungal laccases with partly reduced active sites is demonstrated.

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Mediatorless, electrochemically driven, redox transformations of T1 (type 1) and T2 copper sites in Trametes hirsuta laccase were studied by cyclic voltammetry and spectroelectrochemical redox titrations using bare gold electrode. DET (direct electron transfer) between the electrode and the enzyme was observed under anaerobic conditions. From analysis of experimental data it is concluded that the T2 copper site is in DET contact with gold.

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