Elsevier, Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 5-6(27), p. 521-528
DOI: 10.1016/s0891-5849(99)00098-2
Full text: Unavailable
Biosynthetic and model in vitro studies have shown that pheomelanins, the distinctive pigments of red human hair, arise by oxidative cyclization of cysteinyldopas mainly 5-S-cysteinyldopa (1) via a critical o-quinonimine intermediate, which rearranges to unstable 1,4-benzothiazines. To get new evidence for these labile species, fast time resolution pulse radiolytic oxidation by dibromide radical anion of a suitable precursor, the dihydro-1,4-benzothiazine-3-carboxylic acid 7 was performed in comparison with that of 1. In the case of 7, dibromide radical anion oxidation leads over a few microseconds (k = 2.1 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1)) to a phenoxyl radical (lambda(max) 330 nm, epsilon = 6300 M(-1) cm(-1)) which within tens of milliseconds gives rise with second-order kinetics (2k = 2.7 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1)) to a species exhibiting an absorption maximum at 540 nm (epsilon = 2200 M(-1) cm(-1)). This was formulated as the o-quinonimine 3 arising from disproportionation of the initial radical. The quinonimine chromophore is converted over hundreds of milliseconds (k = 6.0 s(-1)) to a broad maximum at around 330 nm interpreted as due to a 1,4-benzothiazine or a mixture of 1,4-benzothiazines, which as expected are unstable and subsequently decay over a few seconds (k = 0.5 s(-1)). Interestingly, the quinonimine is observed as a labile intermediate also in the alternative reaction route examined, involving cyclization of the o-quinone (lambda(max) 390 nm, epsilon = 6900 M(-1) cm(-1)) arising by disproportionation (2k = 1.7 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1)) of an o-semiquinone (lambda(max) 320 nm, epsilon = 4700 M(-1) cm(-1)) directly generated by dibromide radical anion oxidation of 1. Structural formulation of the 540 nm species as an o-quinonimine was further supported by rapid scanning diode array spectrophotometric monitoring of the ferricyanide oxidation of a series of model dihydrobenzothiazines.