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Unveiling the Synergistic Role of Oxygen Functional Groups in the Graphene-Mediated Oxidation of Glutathione

Yan Wang, Yasemin Basdogan, Tianyu Zhang, Ronald S. Lankone, Alexa N. Wallace, D. Howard Fairbrother, John A. Keith, Leanne M. Gilbertson

2020ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces20 citationsDOI

Abstract

This is the first report of an atomic-scale direct oxidation mechanism of the thiol group in glutathione (GSH) by epoxides on graphene oxide (GO) at room temperature. The proposed reaction mechanism is determined using a coupled experimental and computational approach; active sites for the reaction are determined through examination of GO surface chemistry changes before and after exposure to GSH, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations determine the reaction barriers for the possible GO-GSH reaction schemes. The findings build on the previously established catalytic mechanism of GSH oxidation by graphenic nanocarbon surfaces and importantly identify the direct reaction mechanism which becomes important in low-oxygen environments. Experimental results suggest epoxides as the active sites for the reaction with GSH, which we confirm using DFT calculations of reaction barriers and further identify a synergism between the adjacent epoxide and hydroxyl groups on the GO surface. The direct oxidation mechanism at specific oxygen sites offers insight into controlling GO chemical reactivity through surface chemistry manipulations. This insight is critical for furthering our understanding of GO oxidative stress pathways in cytotoxicity as well as for providing rational material design for GO applications that can leverage this reaction.

Topics & Concepts

GrapheneGlutathioneDensity functional theoryEpoxideOxideReaction mechanismOxygenCatalysisMechanism (biology)Reactivity (psychology)RedoxReactive oxygen speciesChemistryMaterials scienceCombinatorial chemistryPhotochemistryNanotechnologyComputational chemistryOrganic chemistryBiochemistryAlternative medicineMedicineEnzymeEpistemologyPhilosophyPathologyGraphene and Nanomaterials ApplicationsCarbon and Quantum Dots ApplicationsNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics