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research article

Carbon nanotubes quench singlet oxygen generated by photosynthetic reaction centers

Boldog, Peter
•
Hajdu, Kata
•
Magyar, Melinda
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2013
Physica Status Solidi B-Basic Solid State Physics

Photosensitizers may convert molecular oxygen into reactive oxygen species (ROS) including, e.g., singlet oxygen (O-1(2)), superoxide anion (O-2(-center dot)), and hydroxyl radicals ((OH)-O-center dot), chemicals with extremely high cyto- and potential genotoxicity. Photodynamic ROS reactions are determinative in medical photodynamic therapy (cancer treatment with externally added photosensitizers) and in reactions damaging the photosynthetic apparatus of plants (via internal pigments). The primary events of photosynthesis take place in the chlorophyll containing reaction center protein complex (RC), where the energy of light is converted into chemical potential. O-1(2) is formed by both bacterial bacteriochlorophylls and plant RC triplet chlorophylls in high light and if the quenching of O-1(2) is impaired. In plant physiology, reducing the formation of the ROS and thus lessening photooxidative membrane damage (including the RC protein) and increasing the efficiency of the photochemical energy conversion is of special interest. Carbon nanotubes, in artificial systems, are also known to react with singlet oxygen. To investigate the possibility of O-1(2) quenching by carbon nanotubes in a biological system, we studied the effect of carbon nanotubes on O-1(2) photogenerated by photosynthetic RCs purified from purple bacteria. 1,3-Diphenylisobenzofuran (DPBF), a dye responding to oxidation by O-1(2) with absorption decrease at 420nm was used to measure O-1(2) concentrations. O-1(2) was produced either from a photosensitizer (methylene blue) or from triplet photosynthetic RCs and the antioxidant capacity of carbon nanotubes was assessed. Less O-1(2) was detected by DPBF in the presence of carbon nanotubes, suggesting that these are potential quenchers of this ROS. (C) 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/pssb.201300074
Web of Science ID

WOS:000328325900006

Author(s)
Boldog, Peter
Hajdu, Kata
Magyar, Melinda
Hideg, Eva
Hernadi, Klara
Horvath, Endre  
Magrez, Arnaud  
Nagy, Krisztina
Varo, Gyoergy
Forro, Laszlo  
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Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Wiley-V C H Verlag Gmbh

Published in
Physica Status Solidi B-Basic Solid State Physics
Volume

250

Issue

12

Start page

2539

End page

2543

Subjects

carbon nanotube

•

reaction center protein

•

singlet oxygen

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPMC  
LPCM  
Available on Infoscience
January 20, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/99987
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