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Dive into the research topics where JinJie Jiang is active.

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Featured researches published by JinJie Jiang.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2008

Involvement of inducible nitric oxide synthase in hydroxyl radical-mediated lipid peroxidation in streptozotocin-induced diabetes.

Krisztian Stadler; Marcelo G. Bonini; Shannon Dallas; JinJie Jiang; Rafael Radi; Ronald P. Mason; Maria B. Kadiiska

Free radical production is implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus, where several pathways and different mechanisms were suggested in the pathophysiology of the complications. In this study, we used electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy combined with in vivo spin-trapping techniques to investigate the sources and mechanisms of free radical formation in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Free radical production was directly detected in the diabetic bile, which correlated with lipid peroxidation in the liver and kidney. EPR spectra showed the trapping of a lipid-derived radical. Such radicals were demonstrated to be induced by hydroxyl radical through isotope-labeling experiments. Multiple enzymes and metabolic pathways were examined as the potential source of the hydroxyl radicals using specific inhibitors. No xanthine oxidase, cytochrome P450s, the Fenton reaction, or macrophage activation were required for the production of radical adducts. Interestingly, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) (apparently uncoupled) was identified as the major source of radical generation. The specific iNOS inhibitor 1400W as well as L-arginine pretreatment reduced the EPR signals to baseline levels, implicating peroxynitrite as the source of hydroxyl radical production. Applying immunological techniques, we localized iNOS overexpression in the liver and kidney of diabetic animals, which was closely correlated with the lipid radical generation and 4-hydroxynonenal-adducted protein formation, indicating lipid peroxidation. In addition, protein tyrosine nitration occurred in the diabetic target organs. Taken together, our studies support inducible nitric oxide synthase as a significant source of EPR-detectable reactive intermediates, which leads to lipid peroxidation and may contribute to disease progression as well.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2008

Cadmium generates reactive oxygen- and carbon-centered radical species in rats: insights from in vivo spin-trapping studies.

Jie Liu; Steven Y. Qian; Qiong Guo; JinJie Jiang; Michael P. Waalkes; Ronald P. Mason; Maria B. Kadiiska

Cadmium (Cd) is a known industrial and environmental pollutant. In the present work, an in vivo spin-trapping technique was used in conjunction with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy to investigate free radical generation in rats following administration of cadmium chloride (CdCl2, 40 micromol/kg) and the spin trapping agent alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxide)-N-tert-butylnitrone (POBN, 1 g/kg). In Cd-treated rats, POBN radical adducts were formed in the liver, were excreted into the bile, and exhibited an ESR spectrum consistent with a carbon-centered radical species probably derived from endogenous lipids. Isotope substitution of dimethyl sulfoxide [(CH3)2SO] with 13C demonstrated methyl radical formation (POBN/*13CH3). This adduct indicated the production of hydroxyl radical, which reacted with [(13CH3)2SO] to form *13CH3, which then reacted with POBN to form POBN/*13CH3. Depletion of hepatic glutathione by diethyl maleate significantly increased free radical production, whereas inactivation of Kupffer cells by gadolinium chloride and chelation of iron by desferal inhibited it. Treatment with the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol, the catalase inhibitor aminobenzotriazole, or the cytochrome P450 inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole had no effect. This is the first study to show Cd generation of reactive oxygen- and carbon-centered radical species by involvement of both iron mediation through iron-catalyzed reactions and activation of Kupffer cells, the resident liver macrophages.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1999

NITRIC OXIDE-FORMING REACTIONS OF THE WATER-SOLUBLE NITRIC OXIDE SPIN-TRAPPING AGENT, MGD

Koichiro Tsuchiya; JinJie Jiang; Masanori Yoshizumi; Toshiaki Tamaki; Hitoshi Houchi; Kazuo Minakuchi; Kenji Fukuzawa; Ronald P. Mason

The objective of this study was to elucidate the nitric oxide-forming reactions of the iron-N-methyl-D-glucamine dithiocarbamate (Fe-MGD) complex from the nitrogen-containing compound hydroxyurea. The Fe2+(MGD)2 complex is commonly used in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic detection of NO both in vivo and in vitro. The reaction of Fe2+(MGD)2 with NO yields the resultant NO-Fe2+(DETC)2 complex, which has a characteristic triplet EPR signal. It is widely believed that only NO reacts with Fe2+(MGD)2 to form the NO-Fe2+(MGD)2 complex. In this report, the mechanism leading to the formation of NO-Fe2+(MGD)2 was investigated using oxygen-uptake studies in conjunction with the EPR spin-trapping technique. We found that the air oxidation of Fe2+(MGD)2 complex results in the formation of the Fe3+(MGD)3 complex, presumably concomitantly with superoxide (O3*-). Dismutation of superoxide forms hydrogen peroxide, which can subsequently reduce Fe3+(MGD)3 back to Fe2+(MGD)2. The addition of NO to the Fe3+(MGD)3 complex resulted in the formation of the NO-Fe2+(MGD)2 complex. Hydroxyurea is not considered to be a spontaneous NO donor, but has to be oxidized in order to form NO. We present data showing that in the presence of oxygen, Fe2+(MGD)2 can oxidize hydroxyurea to yield the stable NO-Fe2+(MGD)2 complex. These results imply that hydroxyurea can be oxidized by reactive oxygen species that are formed from the air oxidation of the Fe2+(MGD)2 complex. Formation of the NO-Fe2+(MGD)2 complex in this case could erroneously be interpreted as spontaneous formation of NO from hydroxyurea. The chemistry of the Fe2+(MGD)2 complexes in aerobic conditions must be taken into account in order to avoid erroneous conclusions. In addition, the use of these complexes may contribute to the overall oxidative stress of the system under investigation.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010

Studies on the photosensitized reduction of resorufin and implications for the detection of oxidative stress with Amplex Red

Baozhong Zhao; Kalina Ranguelova; JinJie Jiang; Ronald P. Mason

The photosensitized reduction of resorufin (RSF), the fluorescent product of Amplex Red, was investigated using electron spin resonance (ESR), optical absorption/fluorescence, and oxygen consumption measurements. Anaerobic reaction of RSF in the presence of the electron donor reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) demonstrated that during visible light irradiation (λ > 300 nm), RSF underwent one-electron reduction to produce a semiquinoneimine-type anion radical (RSF(•) ‾) as demonstrated by direct ESR. Spin-trapping studies of incubations containing RSF, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) and NADH demonstrated, under irradiation with visible light, the production of the superoxide dismutase (SOD)-sensitive DMPO/(•)OOH adduct. Both absorption and fluorescence spectra of RSF in the presence of NADH demonstrated that the RSF(•) ‾ was further reduced during irradiation with formation of its colorless dihydroquinoneimine form, dihydroresorufin (RSFH₂). Both RSF(•) ‾ and RSFH₂, when formed in an aerobic system, were immediately oxidized by oxygen, which regenerated the dye and formed superoxide. Oxygen consumption measurements with a Clark-type oxygen electrode showed that molecular oxygen was consumed in a light-dependent process. The suppression of oxygen consumption by addition of SOD or catalase further confirmed the production of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.


Free Radical Research | 2005

Characterization of the high-resolution ESR spectra of superoxide radical adducts of 5-(diethoxyphosphoryl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DEPMPO) and 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). Analysis of conformational exchange

Sergey Dikalov; JinJie Jiang; Ronald P. Mason

It has been previously reported that the spin trap 5-(diethoxyphosphoryl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DEPMPO) can form stable radical adducts with superoxide radical. However, the presence of diastereomers of DEPMPO radical adducts and the appearance of superhyperfine structure complicates the interpretation of the ESR spectra. It has been suggested that the superhyperfine structure in the ESR spectrum of DEPMPO/⋅OOH is a result of conformational exchange between conformers. The analysis of the temperature dependence of the ESR spectrum of DEPMPO/⋅OOH and of its structural analog DMPO/⋅OOH have demonstrated that both ESR spectra contain exchange effects resulting from conversion between two conformers. Computer simulation calculates a conformer lifetime on the order of 0.1 μs for DMPO/⋅OOH at room temperature. However, temperature dependence of the ESR spectrum of DEPMPO/⋅OOH suggests that superhyperfine structure does not depend on the conformational exchange. We have now found that the six-line ESR spectrum with superhyperfine structure should be assigned to a DEPMPO-superoxide-derived decomposition product. Therefore, ESR spectra previously assigned to DEPMPO/⋅OOH contain not only the two diastereomers of DEPMPO/⋅OOH but also the decomposition product, and these spectra should be simulated as a combination of four species: two conformers of the first diastereomer, one conformer of the second diastereomer and the superoxide-derived decomposition product. The presence of four species has been supported by the temperature dependence of the ESR spectra, nucleophilic synthesis of radical adducts, and isotopic substitution experiments. It is clear that to correctly interpret DEPMPO spin trapping of superoxide radicals, one must carefully consider formation of secondary radical adducts.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

Site-specific radical formation in DNA induced by Cu(II)–H2O2 oxidizing system, using ESR, immuno-spin trapping, LC-MS, and MS/MS

Suchandra Bhattacharjee; Leesa J. Deterding; Saurabh Chatterjee; JinJie Jiang; Marilyn Ehrenshaft; Olivier M. Lardinois; Dario C. Ramirez; Kenneth B. Tomer; Ronald P. Mason

Oxidative stress-related damage to the DNA macromolecule produces a multitude of lesions that are implicated in mutagenesis, carcinogenesis, reproductive cell death, and aging. Many of these lesions have been studied and characterized by various techniques. Of the techniques that are available, the comet assay, HPLC-EC, GC-MS, HPLC-MS, and especially HPLC-MS/MS remain the most widely used and have provided invaluable information on these lesions. However, accurate measurement of DNA damage has been a matter of debate. In particular, there have been reports of artifactual oxidation leading to erroneously high damage estimates. Further, most of these techniques measure the end product of a sequence of events and thus provide only limited information on the initial radical mechanism. We report here a qualitative measurement of DNA damage induced by a Cu(II)-H₂O₂ oxidizing system using immuno-spin trapping (IST) with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), MS, and MS/MS. The radical generated is trapped by DMPO immediately upon formation. The DMPO adduct formed is initially EPR active but subsequently is oxidized to the stable nitrone, which can then be detected by IST and further characterized by MS and MS/MS.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2008

Procainamide, but not N-Acetylprocainamide, Induces Protein Free Radical Formation on Myeloperoxidase : A Potential Mechanism of Agranulocytosis

Arno G. Siraki; Leesa J. Deterding; Marcelo G. Bonini; JinJie Jiang; Marilyn Ehrenshaft; Kenneth B. Tomer; Ronald P. Mason

Procainamide (PA) is a drug that is used to treat tachycardia in postoperative patients or for long-term maintenance of cardiac arrythmias. Unfortunately, its use has also been associated with agranulocytosis. Here, we have investigated the metabolism of PA by myeloperoxidase (MPO) and the formation of an MPO protein free radical. We hypothesized that PA oxidation by MPO/H 2O 2 would produce a PA cation radical that, in the absence of a biochemical reductant, would lead to the free radical oxidation of MPO. We utilized a novel anti-DMPO antibody to detect DMPO (5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide) covalently bound to protein, which forms by the reaction of DMPO with a protein free radical. We found that PA metabolism by MPO/H 2O 2 induced the formation of DMPO-MPO, which was inhibited by MPO inhibitors and ascorbate. N-acetyl-PA did not cause DMPO-MPO formation, indicating that the unsubstituted aromatic amine was more oxidizable. PA had a lower calculated ionization potential than N-acetyl-PA. The DMPO adducts of MPO metabolism, as analyzed by electron spin resonance spectroscopy, included a nitrogen-centered radical and a phenyl radical derived from PA, either of which may be involved in the free radical formation on MPO. Furthermore, we also found protein-DMPO adducts in MPO-containing, intact human promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60). MPO was affinity-purified from HL-60 cells treated with PA/H 2O 2 and was found to contain DMPO using the anti-DMPO antibody. Mass spectrometry analysis confirmed the identity of the protein as human MPO. These findings were also supported by the detection of protein free radicals with electron spin resonance in the cellular cytosolic lysate. The formation of an MPO protein free radical is believed to be mediated by free radical metabolites of PA, which we characterized by spin trapping. We propose that drug-induced free radical formation on MPO may play a role in the origin of agranulocytosis.


Redox biology | 2017

Fluorescent proteins such as eGFP lead to catalytic oxidative stress in cells

Douglas Ganini; Fabian Leinisch; Ashutosh Kumar; JinJie Jiang; Erik J. Tokar; Christine Malone; Robert M. Petrovich; Ronald P. Mason

Fluorescent proteins are an important tool that has become omnipresent in life sciences research. They are frequently used for localization of proteins and monitoring of cells [1], [2]. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) was the first and has been the most used fluorescent protein. Enhanced GFP (eGFP) was optimized from wild-type GFP for increased fluorescence yield and improved expression in mammalian systems [3]. Many GFP-like fluorescent proteins have been discovered, optimized or created, such as the red fluorescent protein TagRFP [4]. Fluorescent proteins are expressed colorless and immature and, for eGFP, the conversion to the fluorescent form, mature, is known to produce one equivalent of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) per molecule of chromophore [5,6]. Even though it has been proposed that this process is non-catalytic and generates nontoxic levels of H2O2 [6], this study investigates the role of fluorescent proteins in generating free radicals and inducing oxidative stress in biological systems. Immature eGFP and TagRFP catalytically generate the free radical superoxide anion (O2•–) and H2O2 in the presence of NADH. Generation of the free radical O2•– and H2O2 by eGFP in the presence of NADH affects the gene expression of cells. Many biological pathways are altered, such as a decrease in HIF1α stabilization and activity. The biological pathways altered by eGFP are known to be implicated in the pathophysiology of many diseases associated with oxidative stress; therefore, it is critical that such experiments using fluorescent proteins are validated with alternative methodologies and the results are carefully interpreted. Since cells inevitably experience oxidative stress when fluorescent proteins are expressed, the use of this tool for cell labeling and in vivo cell tracing also requires validation using alternative methodologies.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2011

Evaluation of the Forrester-Hepburn Mechanism as an Artifact Source in ESR Spin-Trapping

Fabian Leinisch; Kalina Ranguelova; Eugene F. DeRose; JinJie Jiang; Ronald P. Mason

Nitrone spin traps such as 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) are commonly used for free radical detection. Though proven examples are rare, artifact formation must be considered. For example, the Forrester-Hepburn mechanism yields the same radical adduct as that formed by genuine radical trapping. A hydroxylamine is formed by nucleophilic attack of the substrate on DMPO and subsequently oxidized to the respective nitroxide radical. One potential candidate for this artifact is the sulfur trioxide radical adduct (DMPO/(•)SO(3)(-)), as detected in spin-trapping experiments with horseradish peroxidase and sulfite. It has previously been shown by NMR experiments that the hydroxylamine intermediate does indeed form, but no direct proof for the ESR artifact has been provided. Here, we used isotopically labeled DMPO with horseradish peroxidase and ferricyanide to test for the Forrester-Hepburn artifact directly in a spin-trapping experiment. Besides sulfite, we investigated other nucleophiles such as cyanide, cysteine, and glutathione. Neither sulfite nor biological thiols produced detectable spin-trapping artifacts, but with cyanide the relatively weak signal originated entirely from the nucleophilic reaction. The hydroxylamine intermediate, which is more abundant with cyanide than with sulfite, was identified as cyano-hydroxylamine by means of 2D NMR experiments. Although our study found that spin trapping provided authentic free radical signals with most of the substrates, the occurrence of the Forrester-Hepburn mechanism artifact with cyanide emphasizes the importance of isotope measurements with nucleophile substrates.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Detection and imaging of the free radical DNA in cells—Site-specific radical formation induced by Fenton chemistry and its repair in cellular DNA as seen by electron spin resonance, immuno-spin trapping and confocal microscopy

Suchandra Bhattacharjee; Saurabh Chatterjee; JinJie Jiang; Birandra K. Sinha; Ronald P. Mason

Oxidative stress-related damage to the DNA macromolecule produces lesions that are implicated in various diseases. To understand damage to DNA, it is important to study the free radical reactions causing the damage. Measurement of DNA damage has been a matter of debate as most of the available methods measure the end product of a sequence of events and provide limited information on the initial free radical formation. We report a measurement of free radical damage in DNA induced by a Cu(II)-H2O2 oxidizing system using immuno-spin trapping supplemented with electron paramagnetic resonance. In this investigation, the short-lived radical generated is trapped by the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) immediately upon formation. The DMPO adduct formed is initially electron paramagnetic resonance active, but is subsequently oxidized to the stable nitrone adduct, which can be detected and visualized by immuno-spin trapping and has the potential to be further characterized by other analytical techniques. The radical was found to be located on the 2′-deoxyadenosine (dAdo) moiety of DNA. The nitrone adduct was repaired on a time scale consistent with DNA repair. In vivo experiments for the purpose of detecting DMPO–DNA nitrone adducts should be conducted over a range of time in order to avoid missing adducts due to the repair processes.

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Ronald P. Mason

National Institutes of Health

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Fabian Leinisch

National Institutes of Health

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Maria B. Kadiiska

National Institutes of Health

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Leesa J. Deterding

National Institutes of Health

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Marcelo G. Bonini

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Saurabh Chatterjee

University of South Carolina

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Birandra K. Sinha

National Institutes of Health

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Kalina Ranguelova

National Institutes of Health

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Arno G. Siraki

National Institutes of Health

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