The formation of hydrogen peroxide in catholytes and anolytes of electrochemically activated solutions: bidistilled water and solutions of sodium chloride and nutrition medium M9 was studied. The concentration of hydrogen peroxide was determined by the method of enhanced chemiluminescence in a system peroxidase-luminol-p-iodophenol. It was shown that the concentration of hydrogen peroxide depends on the ionic content of the solution and varies from a few fractions of a micromole in catholytes of bidistilled water and sodium chloride solutions (10(-5) divided by 10(-2) M) to 20-25 microM in catholytes of medium M9. The concentration of H2O2 in anolytes of various solutions was 15-20 times lower than in the corresponding catholytes and was equal to a few nanomoles in bidistilled water and a few micromoles in medium M9. The biological activity of the catholyte of medium M9 was determined from changes in the growth of E. coli cells. It was found that this catholyte stimulates the cell growth. The stimulating effect was 20-25% and did not change after the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide in the catholyte by catalase. The addition of H2O2 at the corresponding concentration to the inactivated nutrient medium produced no stimulating effect. These data suggest that hydrogen peroxide formed in the catholyte of nutrient medium M9 does not affect its biological activity.
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