Sergiu P. Palii
University of Florida
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Featured researches published by Sergiu P. Palii.
Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 2008
Christine Gersch; Sergiu P. Palii; Kyung Mee Kim; Alexander Angerhofer; Richard J. Johnson; George N. Henderson
The 1980 identification of nitric oxide (NO) as an endothelial cell-derived relaxing factor resulted in an unprecedented biomedical research of NO and established NO as one of the most important cardiovascular, nervous and immune system regulatory molecule. A reduction in endothelial cell NO levels leading to “endothelial dysfunction” has been identified as a key pathogenic event preceding the development of hypertension, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disease. The reduction in endothelial NO in cardiovascular disease has been attributed to the action of oxidants that either directly react with NO or uncouple its substrate enzyme. In this report, we demonstrate that uric acid (UA), the most abundant antioxidant in plasma, reacts directly with NO in a rapid irreversible reaction resulting in the formation of 6-aminouracil and depletion of NO. We further show that this reaction occurs preferentially with NO even in the presence of oxidants peroxynitrite and hydrogen peroxide and that the reaction is at least partially blocked by glutathione. This study shows a potential mechanism by which UA may deplete NO and cause endothelial dysfunction, particularly under conditions of oxidative stress in which UA is elevated and intracellular glutathione is depleted.
Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 2009
Christine Gersch; Sergiu P. Palii; Witcha Imaram; Kyung Mee Kim; S. Ananth Karumanchi; Alexander Angerhofer; Richard J. Johnson; George N. Henderson
Hyperuricemia is associated with hypertension, metabolic syndrome, preeclampsia, cardio-vascular disease and renal disease, all conditions associated with oxidative stress. We hypothesized that uric acid, a known antioxidant, might become prooxidative following its reaction with oxidants; and, thereby contribute to the pathogenesis of these diseases. Uric acid and 1,3-15N2-uric acid were reacted with peroxynitrite in different buffers and in the presence of alcohols, antioxidants and in human plasma. The reaction products were identified using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analyses. The reactions generate reactive intermediates that yielded triuret as their final product. We also found that the antioxidant, ascorbate, could partially prevent this reaction. Whereas triuret was preferentially generated by the reactions in aqueous buffers, when uric acid or 1,3-15N2-uric acid was reacted with peroxynitrite in the presence of alcohols, it yielded alkylated alcohols as the final product. By extension, this reaction can alkylate other biomolecules containing OH groups and others containing labile hydrogens. Triuret was also found to be elevated in the urine of subjects with preeclampsia, a pregnancy-specific hypertensive syndrome that is associated with oxidative stress, whereas very little triuret is produced in normal healthy volunteers. We conclude that under conditions of oxidative stress, uric acid can form reactive intermediates, including potential alkylating species, by reacting with peroxynitrite. These reactive intermediates could possibly explain how uric acid contributes to the pathogenesis of diseases such as the metabolic syndrome and hypertension.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2015
Sriram Ambadapadi; Peter L. Wang; Sergiu P. Palii; Margaret O. James
Celecoxib has been reported to switch the human SULT2A1-catalyzed sulfonation of 17β-estradiol (17β-E2) from the 3- to the 17-position. The effects of celecoxib on the sulfonation of selected steroids catalyzed by human SULT2A1 were assessed through in vitro and in silico studies. Celecoxib inhibited SULT2A1-catalyzed sulfonation of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), androst-5-ene-3β, 17β-diol (AD), testosterone (T) and epitestosterone (Epi-T) in a concentration-dependent manner. Low μM concentrations of celecoxib strikingly enhanced the formation of the 17-sulfates of 6-dehydroestradiol (6D-E2), 17β-dihydroequilenin (17β-Eqn), 17β-dihydroequilin (17β-Eq), and 9-dehydroestradiol (9D-E2) as well as the overall rate of sulfonation. For 6D-E2, 9D-E2 and 17β-Eqn, celecoxib inhibited 3-sulfonation, however 3-sulfonation of 17β-Eq was stimulated at celecoxib concentrations below 40 μM. Ligand docking studies in silico suggest that celecoxib binds in the substrate-binding site of SULT2A1 in a manner that prohibits the usual binding of substrates but facilitates, for appropriately shaped substrates, a binding mode that favors 17-sulfonation.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2010
Sergiu P. Palii; Cesar S. Contreras; Jeffrey D. Steill; Stela S. Palii; Jos Oomens; John R. Eyler
Triuret (also known as carbonyldiurea, dicarbamylurea, or 2,4-diimidotricarbonic diamide) is a byproduct of purine degradation in living organisms. An abundant triuret precursor is uric acid, whose level is altered in multiple metabolic pathologies. Triuret can be generated via urate oxidation by peroxynitrite, the latter being produced by the reaction of nitric oxide radical with superoxide radical anion. From this standpoint, an excess production of superoxide radical anions could indirectly favor triuret formation; however very little is known about the potential in vivo roles of this metabolite. Triurets structure is suggestive of its ability to adopt various conformations and act as a flexible ligand for metal ions. In the current study, HPLC-MS/MS, energy-resolved mass spectrometry, selected ion monitoring, collision-induced dissociation, IRMPD spectroscopy, Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry and computational methods were employed to characterize the structure of triuret and its metal complexes, to determine the triuret-alkali metal binding motif, and to evaluate triuret affinity toward alkali metal ions, as well as its affinity for Na(+) and K(+) relative to other organic ligands. The most favored binding motif was determined to be a bidentate chelation of triuret with the alkali metal cation involving two carbonyl oxygens. Using the complexation selectivity method, it was observed that in solution triuret has an increased affinity for potassium ions, compared to sodium and other alkali metal ions. We propose that triuret may act as a potential hypokalemic agent under pathophysiological conditions conducive to its excessive formation and thus contribute to electrolyte disorders. The collision- or photo-induced fragmentation channels of deprotonated and protonated triuret, as well as its alkali metal adducts, are likely to mimic the triuret degradation pathways in vivo.
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 1999
Sergiu P. Palii; Dmitri V. Zagorevskii; Nicolae V. Gerbeleu; Anatol A Dobrov; Liubovi A Nemchinova
Abstract Two series of bonding isomers of Ni(II) coordination compounds with tetradentate quasimacrocyclic ligands based on S-substituted isothiocarbohydrazides were characterized by electron impact (EI) mass spectrometry and by tandem mass spectrometry methods. Conventional EI mass spectra were more isomer specific than metastable ion (MI) and collision induced dissociation (CID) mass spectra of the molecular ions. The MI (and CID) mass spectra of the isomers were very similar. This effect resulted from a facile randomization of Ni–N bonds in the ions possessing low internal energies, prior to their dissociation. The compounds were found to be convenient precursors for coordinatively unsaturated metal-containing ions, [NiLn]+ and [RNiLn]+ (n = 1, 2; L = NCCH3, NCSCH3; R = OH, NO). Most of these species had a structure of mono- or disolvated nickel ion. The dissociation of [HONiNCCH3]+ ions was consistent with the formation of two isomers: one corresponding to the [HONi]+ ion solvated by acetonitrile and the other is a complex of H2O with [NiNCCH2]+. A structure of [HO,Ni,(NCCH3)2]+ ions was best represented by a five-membered cycle formed by two acetonitrile units and the metal atom with the OH group attached to one of the nitrogen atoms.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2017
Sriram Ambadapadi; Peter L. Wang; Sergiu P. Palii; Margaret O. James
Celecoxib is known to alter the preferred position of SULT2A1-catalyzed sulfonation of 17β-estradiol (17β-E2) and other estrogens from the 3- to the 17-position. Understanding the effects of celecoxib on estrogen sulfonation is of interest in the context of the investigational use of celecoxib to treat breast cancer. This study examined the effects on celecoxib on cytosolic sulfotransferases in human and rat liver and on SULT enzymes known to be expressed in liver. Celecoxibs effects on the sulfonation of several steroids catalyzed by human liver cytosol were similar but not identical to those observed previously for SULT2A1. Celecoxib was shown to inhibit recombinant SULT1A1-catalyzed sulfonation of 10nM estrone and 4μM p-nitrophenol with IC50 values of 2.6 and 2.1μM, respectively, but did not inhibit SULT1E1-catalyzed estrone sulfonation. In human liver cytosol, the combined effect of celecoxib and known SULT1A1 and 1E1 inhibitors, quercetin and triclosan, resulted in inhibition of 17β-E2-3-sulfonation such that the 17-sulfate became the major metabolite: this is of interest because the 17-sulfate is not readily hydrolyzed by steroid sulfatase to 17β-E2. Investigation of hepatic cytosolic steroid sulfonation in rat revealed that celecoxib did not stimulate 17β-E2 17-sulfonation in male or female rat liver as it does with human SULT2A1 and human liver cytosol, demonstrating that rat is not a useful model of this effect. In silico studies suggested that the presence of the bulky tryptophan residue in the substrate-binding site of the rat SULT2A homolog instead of glycine as in human SULT2A1 may explain this species difference.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2000
Claire Wilson; Bo B. Iversen; Jacob Overgaard; Finn K. Larsen; Guang Wu; Sergiu P. Palii; Grigore A. Timco; Nicolae V. Gerbeleu
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2002
Jacob Overgaard; Bo B. Iversen; Sergiu P. Palii; Grigore A. Timco; Nicolae Gerbeleu; Finn K. Larsen
Inorganica Chimica Acta | 2001
Sergiu P. Palii; David E. Richardson; Marianne L. Hansen; Bo B. Iversen; Finn K. Larsen; Lilia Sı̂ngerean; Grigore A. Timco; Nicolae Gerbeleu; Keith R. Jennings; John R. Eyler
Journal of Renal Nutrition | 2015
Younis A. Salmean; Mark S. Segal; Sergiu P. Palii; Wendy J. Dahl