- Investigation of the chemical basis of nitroalkane toxicity: tautomerism and decomposition of propane 1- and 2-nitronate under physiological conditions.
Investigation of the chemical basis of nitroalkane toxicity: tautomerism and decomposition of propane 1- and 2-nitronate under physiological conditions.
Unlike primary nitroalkanes, such as 1-nitropropane, the secondary nitroalkane 2-nitropropane is geno- and hepatotoxic. Nitroalkanes exist in equilibrium with alkane nitronates. In order to investigate the relationship between nitroalkane toxicity and generation and stability of nitronates, propane 1- or 2-nitronate (4-6 mM) were incubated in buffer (pH 3.8 -7.4) in the absence or presence of cysteine. Equilibrium formation and degradation were studied by 1H-NMR spectroscopy and ion pair HPLC chromatography. Propane 1-nitronate generated 1-nitropropane rapidly and almost quantitatively. In the case of propane 2-nitronate equilibrium at pH 7.4 was reached within 8 h, when 48% of initial nitronate had tautomerised to 2-nitropropane. The pKa of the reaction 2-nitropropane less than--greater than propane 2-nitronate measured by HPLC was 7.63. Equilibrium formation, hydrolysis and reduction of nitronates were pH-dependent and, in the case of propane 2-nitronate, yielded mainly acetone, nitrite and acetone oxime, apart from 2-nitropropane. Hydrolysis of propane 2-nitronate (4 mM) to nitrite was modulated by cysteine (4 mM) and p-methoxyphenol (0.4 mM). At pH 7.4 they increased nitrite generation by 300 and 28%, respectively, at pH 4.8 they decreased nitrite formation by 91 and 82%, respectively, probably by scavenging radical intermediates. Differences between nitroalkanes in terms of content of nitronate tautomer at equilibrium are probably an important chemical determinant of their toxic potential.