Type I and Type II Photosensitized Oxidation Reactions: Guidelines and Mechanistic Pathways
Article 2017 en
Authors
MB
Maurı́cio S. Baptista
JC
Jean Cadet
PM
Paolo Di Mascio
Abstract
1 min read
Here, 10 guidelines are presented for a standardized definition of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation reactions. Because of varied notions of reactions mediated by photosensitizers, a checklist of recommendations is provided for their definitions. Type I and type II photoreactions are oxygen-dependent and involve unstable species such as the initial formation of radical cation or neutral radicals from the substrates and/or singlet oxygen (<sup>1</sup> O<sub>2</sub><sup>1</sup> ∆<sub>g</sub> ) by energy transfer to molecular oxygen. In addition, superoxide anion radical (O2·-) can be generated by a charge-transfer reaction involving O<sub>2</sub> or more likely indirectly as the result of O<sub>2</sub> -mediated oxidation of the radical anion of type I photosensitizers. In subsequent reactions, O2·- may add and/or reduce a few highly oxidizing radicals that arise from the deprotonation of the radical cations of key biological targets. O2·- can also undergo dismutation into H<sub>2</sub> O<sub>2</sub> , the precursor of the highly reactive hydroxyl radical (·OH) that may induce delayed oxidation reactions in cells. In the second part, several examples of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation reactions are provided to illustrate the complexity and the diversity of the degradation pathways of mostly relevant biomolecules upon one-electron oxidation and singlet oxygen reactions.
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