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Featured researches published by Yuguang Song.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis of 14N- and 15N-labeled Trityl-nitroxide Biradicals with Strong Spin−Spin Interaction and Improved Sensitivity to Redox Status and Oxygen

Yangping Liu; Frederick A. Villamena; Yuguang Song; Jian Sun; Antal Rockenbauer; Jay L. Zweier

Simultaneous evaluation of redox status and oxygenation in biological systems is of great importance for the understanding of biological functions. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy coupled with the use of the nitroxide radicals have been an indispensable technique for this application but are still limited by low oxygen sensitivity and low EPR resolution in part due to the moderately broad EPR triplet and spin quenching through bioreduction. In this study, we showed that these drawbacks can be overcome through the use of trityl-nitroxide biradicals allowing for the simultaneous measurement of redox status and oxygenation. A new trityl-nitroxide biradical TNN14 composed of a pyrrolidinyl-nitroxide and a trityl and its isotopically labeled (15)N analogue TNN15 were synthesized and characterized. Both biradicals exhibited much stronger spin-spin interaction with J > 400 G compared with that of the previous synthesized trityl-nitroxide biradicals TN1 (∼160 G) and TN2 (∼52 G) with longer linker chain length. The enhanced stability of TNN14 was evaluated using ascorbate as reductant, and the effect of different types of cyclodextrins on its stability in the presence of ascorbate was also investigated. Both biradicals are sensitive to redox status, and their corresponding trityl-hydroxylamines resulting from the reduction of the biradicals by ascorbate share the same oxygen sensitivity. Of note is that the (15)N-labeled TNN15-H with an EPR doublet exhibits improved EPR signal amplitude as compared with that of TNN14-H with an EPR triplet. In addition, cyclic voltammetric studies verify the characteristic electrochemical behaviors of the trityl-nitroxide biradicals.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2012

Tetrathiatriarylmethyl radical with a single aromatic hydrogen as a highly sensitive and specific superoxide probe

Yangping Liu; Yuguang Song; Francesco De Pascali; Xiaoping Liu; Frederick A. Villamena; Jay L. Zweier

Superoxide (O(2)(•-)) plays crucial roles in normal physiology and disease; however, its measurement remains challenging because of the limited sensitivity and/or specificity of prior detection methods. We demonstrate that a tetrathiatriarylmethyl (TAM) radical with a single aromatic hydrogen (CT02-H) can serve as a highly sensitive and specific O(2)(•-) probe. CT02-H is an analogue of the fully substituted TAM radical CT-03 (Finland trityl) with an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) doublet signal due to its aromatic hydrogen. Owing to the neutral nature and negligible steric hindrance of the hydrogen, O(2)(•-) preferentially reacts with CT02-H at this site with production of the diamagnetic quinone methide via oxidative dehydrogenation. Upon reaction with O(2)(•-), CT02-H loses its EPR signal and this EPR signal decay can be used to quantitatively measure O(2)(•-). This is accompanied by a change in color from green to purple, with the quinone methide product exhibiting a unique UV-Vis absorbance (ε=15,900 M(-1) cm(-1)) at 540 nm, providing an additional O(2)(•-) detection method. More than five-fold higher reactivity of CT02-H for O(2)(•-) relative to CT-03 was demonstrated, with a second-order rate constant of 1.7×10(4) M(-1) s(-1) compared to 3.1×10(3) M(-1) s(-1) for CT-03. CT02-H exhibited high specificity for O(2)(•-) as evidenced by its inertness to other oxidoreductants. The O(2)(•-) generation rates detected by CT02-H from xanthine/xanthine oxidase were consistent with those measured by cytochrome c reduction but detection sensitivity was 10- to 100-fold higher. EPR detection of CT02-H enabled measurement of very low O(2)(•-) flux with a detection limit of 0.34 nM/min over 120 min. HPLC in tandem with electrochemical detection was used to quantitatively detect the stable quinone methide product and is a highly sensitive and specific method for measurement of O(2)(•-), with a sensitivity limit of ~2×10(-13) mol (10 nM with 20-μl injection volume). Based on the O(2)-dependent linewidth broadening of its EPR spectrum, CT02-H also enables simultaneous measurement of O(2) concentration and O(2)(•-) generation and was shown to provide sensitive detection of extracellular O(2)(•-) generation in endothelial cells stimulated either by menadione or with anoxia/reoxygenation. Thus, CT02-H is a unique probe that provides very high sensitivity and specificity for measurement of O(2)(•-) by either EPR or HPLC methods.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Structural Factors Controlling the Spin−Spin Exchange Coupling: EPR Spectroscopic Studies of Highly Asymmetric Trityl−Nitroxide Biradicals

Yangping Liu; Frederick A. Villamena; Antal Rockenbauer; Yuguang Song; Jay L. Zweier

Highly asymmetric exchange-coupled biradicals, e.g., the trityl-nitroxides (TNs), possess particular magnetic properties that have opened new possibilities for their application in biophysical, physicochemical, and biological studies. In the present work, we investigated the effect of the linker length on the spin-spin coupling interaction (J) in TN biradicals using the newly synthesized biradicals CT02-GT, CT02-AT, CT02-VT, and CT02-PPT as well as the previously reported biradicals TNN14 and TN1. The results show that the magnitude of J can be easily tuned from ~4 G (conformer 1 in CT02-PPT) to >1200 G (in TNN14) by varying the linker separating the two radical moieties and changing the temperature. Computer simulations of EPR spectra were carried out to estimate J values of the TN biradicals directly. In addition to the spin-spin coupling interaction of TN biradicals, their g, hyperfine-splitting, and zero-field-splitting interactions were explored at low temperature (220 K). Our present study clearly shows that varying the spin-spin interaction as a function of linker distance and temperature provides an effective strategy for the development of new TN biradicals that can find wide applications in relevant fields.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis of trityl radical-conjugated disulfide biradicals for measurement of thiol concentration.

Yangping Liu; Yuguang Song; Antal Rockenbauer; Jian Sun; Craig Hemann; Frederick A. Villamena; Jay L. Zweier

Measurement of thiol concentrations is of great importance for characterizing their critical role in normal metabolism and disease. Low-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and imaging, coupled with the use of exogenous paramagnetic probes, have been indispensable techniques for the in vivo measurement of various physiological parameters owing to the specificity, noninvasiveness and good depth of magnetic field penetration in animal tissues. However, in vivo detection of thiol levels by EPR spectroscopy and imaging is limited due to the need for improved probes. We report the first synthesis of trityl radical-conjugated disulfide biradicals (TSSN and TSST) as paramagnetic thiol probes. The use of trityl radicals in the construction of these biradicals greatly facilitates thiol measurement by EPR spectroscopy since trityls have extraordinary stability in living tissues with a single narrow EPR line that enables high sensitivity and resolution for in vivo EPR spectroscopy and imaging. Both biradicals exhibit broad characteristic EPR spectra at room temperature because of their intramolecular spin-spin interaction. Reaction of these biradicals with thiol compounds such as glutathione (GSH) and cysteine results in the formation of trityl monoradicals which exhibit high spectral sensitivity to oxygen. The moderately slow reaction between the biradicals and GSH (k(2) ∼ 0.3 M(-1) s(-1) for TSSN and 0.2 M(-1) s(-1) for TSST) allows for in vivo measurement of GSH concentration without altering the redox environment in biological systems. The GSH concentration in rat liver was determined to be 3.49 ± 0.14 mM by TSSN and 3.67 ± 0.24 mM by TSST, consistent with the value (3.71 ± 0.09 mM) determined by the Ellmans reagent. Thus, these trityl-based thiol probes exhibit unique properties enabling measurement of thiols in biological systems and should be of great value for monitoring redox metabolism.


RSC Advances | 2014

Characterization of the Binding of the Finland Trityl Radical with Bovine Serum Albumin.

Yuguang Song; Yangping Liu; Wenbo Liu; Frederick A. Villamena; Jay L. Zweier

Understanding the interactions of trityl radicals with proteins is required to expand their biomedical applications. In this work, we demonstrate that the Finland trityl radical CT-03 binds to bovine serum albumin (BSA) in aqueous solution. Upon binding with BSA, CT-03 exhibits a much broader electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal and this line broadening can be reversed by proteolysis of the BSA. The binding induces a red-shift of the maximal UV-Vis absorbance wavelength of CT-03 around 470 nm, likely due to localization of CT-03 in the relatively hydrophobic region of the protein. The interaction between CT-03 and BSA is driven by a hydrophobic interaction with an estimated binding constant of 2.18 ×105 M-1 at 298 K. Furthermore, only one CT-03 is bound to each molecule of BSA and the binding site is determined to be the sub-domain IIA (Sudlows site I). This protein binding of the trityl probe to albumin can be used to study the structure and function of albumin and also must be considered for its use as an in vivo imaging agent or spin label.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Esterified dendritic TAM radicals with very high stability and enhanced oxygen sensitivity

Yuguang Song; Yangping Liu; Craig Hemann; Frederick A. Villamena; Jay L. Zweier

In this work, we have developed a new class of dendritic TAM radicals (TG, TdG, and dTdG) through a convergent method based on the TAM core CT-03 or its deuterated analogue dCT-03 and trifurcated Newkome-type monomer. Among these radicals, dTdG exhibits the best EPR properties with sharpest EPR singlet and highest O(2) sensitivity due to deuteration of both the ester linker groups and the TAM core CT-03. Like the previous dendritic TAM radicals, these new compounds also show extremely high stability toward various reactive species owing to the dendritic encapsulation. The highly charged nature of these molecules resulting from nine carboxylate groups prevents concentration-dependent EPR line broadening at physiological pH. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these TAM radicals can be easily derivatized (e.g., PEGylation) at the nine carboxylate groups and the resulting PEGylated analogue dTdG-PEG completely inhibits the albumin binding, thereby enhancing suitability for in vivo applications. These new dendritic TAM radicals show great potential for in vivo EPR oximetric applications and provide insights on approaches to develop improved and targeted EPR oximetric probes for biomedical applications.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2017

Synthesis and Characterization of PEGylated Trityl Radicals: Effect of PEGylation on Physicochemical Properties

Wenbo Liu; Jiangping Nie; Xiaoli Tan; Huiqiang Liu; Nannan Yu; Guifang Han; Yutian Zhu; Frederick A. Villamena; Yuguang Song; Jay L. Zweier; Yangping Liu

Tetrathiatriarylmethyl (TAM, trityl) radicals have attracted considerable attention as spin probes for biological electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and imaging owing to their sharp EPR singlet signals and high biostability. However, their in vivo applications were limited by the short blood circulation lifetimes and strong binding with albumins. Our previous results showed that PEGylation is a feasible method to overcome the issues facing in vivo applications of TAM radicals. In the present study, we synthesized a series of new PEGylated TAM radicals (TTP1, TPP2, TNP1, TNP2, d-TNP1, and d-TNP3) containing various lengths and numbers of mPEG chains. Our results found that the pattern of PEGylation exerts an important effect on physicochemical properties of the resulting TAM radicals. Dendritic PEGylated TAM radicals, TNP1 and TNP2, have higher water solubility and lower susceptibility for self-aggregation than their linear analogues TPP1 and TPP2. Furthermore, dendritic PEGylated TAM radicals exhibit extremely high stability toward various biological oxidoreductants as well as in rat whole blood, liver homogenate, and following in vivo intravenous administration in mice. Importantly, the deuterated derivatives, especially d-TNP3, exhibit excellent properties including the sharp and O2-sensitive EPR singlet signal, good biocompatibility, and prolonged kinetics with half-life time of ≥10 h in mice. These PEGylated TAM radicals should be suitable for a wide range of applications in in vivo EPR spectroscopy and imaging.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2017

Thiol-Dependent Reduction of the Triester and Triamide Derivatives of Finland Trityl Radical Triggers O2-Dependent Superoxide Production

Xiaoli Tan; Li Chen; Yuguang Song; Antal Rockenbauer; Frederick A. Villamena; Jay L. Zweier; Yangping Liu

Tetrathiatriaylmethyl (trityl) radicals have found wide biomedical applications as magnetic resonance probes. Trityl radicals and their derivatives are generally stable toward biological reducing agents such as glutathione (GSH) and ascorbate. We demonstrate that the triester (ET-03) and triamide (AT-03) derivatives of the Finland trityl radical exhibit unique reduction by thiols such as GSH and cysteine (Cys) to generate the corresponding trityl carbanions as evidenced by the loss of EPR signal and appearance of characteristic UV-vis absorbance at 644 nm under anaerobic conditions. The trityl carbanions can be quickly converted back to the original trityl radicals by oxygen (O2) in air, thus rendering the reaction between the trityl derivative and biothiol undetectable under aerobic conditions. The reduction product of O2 by the trityl carbanions was shown to be superoxide radical (O2•-) by EPR spin-trapping. Kinetic studies showed that the reaction rate constants (k) depend on the types of both trityl radicals and thiols with the order of kET-03/Cys (0.336 M-1 s-1) > kET-03/GSH (0.070 M-1 s-1) > kAT-03/Cys (0.032 M-1 s-1) > kAT-03/GSH (0.027 M-1 s-1). The reactivity of trityl radicals with thiols is closely related to the para-substituents of trityl radicals as well as the pKa of the thiols and is further reflected by the rate of O2•- production and consumptions of O2 and thiols. This novel reaction represents a new metabolic process of trityl derivatives and should be considered in the design and application of new trityl radical probes.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2011

Novel Glutathione-linked Nitrones as Dual Free Radical Probes

Yangping Liu; Yuguang Song; Libo Du; Frederick A. Villamena; Yiqiong Ji; Qiu Tian; Ke-Jian Liu; Yang Liu

The detection and identification of transient radicals in biological systems is of importance for the understanding of their roles in a variety of biological processes. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy coupled with the use of the spin trapping technique has been an indispensable tool for this application owing to its high specificity. In this study, we developed a general method using dual function free radical probes (GS-PBN and its phosphorylated analogue GS-PPN) for the simultaneous determination of transient radicals and the microenvironment where the corresponding spin adducts are situated. This conception was initially proved by high spectral sensitivity of the p-ClPh˙ spin adduct of GS-PBN towards its rotational motion in the glycerol–water system. Results showed that a relatively bulky glutathionyl group in the spin adduct plays an important role in its high sensitivity to the molecular motion. This was further verified by high sensitivity of the p-ClPh˙ spin adduct of the newly synthesized probe GS-PPN to its molecular motion. Unlike GS-PBN, GS-PPN can be used to detect O2˙− generated in the enzymatic system and PSII membranes of chloroplasts. Based on the relationship between the τC values of the superoxide spin adduct and the medium viscosity, the local environment of the adduct in the PSII membranes was determined to be similar to that of the aqueous solution containing ∼15% glycerol (η ≈ 1.33 p).


Photosynthetica | 2011

Biphasic regulation of superoxide radical levels in Mn-depleted and photoactivated photosystem II

Yuguang Song; B. Liu; Yangping Liu; Libo Du; Frederick A. Villamena; Yang-Ping Liu

In the past decades, it has become clear that superoxide radical (O2·−) can be generated from photosystem II (PSII) during photosynthesis. Depending on the extent of its accumulation, O2·− plays an important role in plant physiology and pathology. The photoinhibition/repair cycle is a typical process in PSII which is mainly responsible for the survival of plants under the photoinihibition condition. It is therefore of significant importance to determine O2·− production in this cycle, and then explore how O2·− is controlled by PSII within a normal physiological level. With this in mind, we herein investigate the variation of the O2·− levels in PSII under Mn-depleted and photoactivated conditions mimicking the photoinhibition/repair cycle in vitro. The effect of intrinsic SOD-like component on the O2·− levels was also studied. Results show that PSII has the ability to regulate the O2·− levels in these two processes by simultaneously modulating the O2·− generation activity and intrinsic SOD-like activity. This finding could shed new lights on the photoprotective property of PSII against O2·− and other reactive oxygen species.

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Antal Rockenbauer

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Jian Sun

Ohio State University

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Libo Du

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qiu Tian

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenbo Liu

Tianjin Medical University

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Xiaoli Tan

Tianjin Medical University

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