06 اردیبهشت 1403
كوروش قيصري

کوروش قیصری

مرتبه علمی: دانشیار
نشانی: دانشکده علوم و فناوری نانو و زیستی - گروه فیزیک
تحصیلات: دکترای تخصصی / فیزیک هسته ای-راکتور
تلفن: 07731222242
دانشکده: دانشکده علوم و فناوری نانو و زیستی

مشخصات پژوهش

عنوان Radioprotective Role of Vitamins C and E against the Gamma Ray-Induced Damage to the Chemical Structure of Bovine Serum Albumin
نوع پژوهش مقالات در نشریات
کلیدواژه‌ها
protein; gamma radiation; radioprotection; vitamin C and E
مجله ANTIOXIDANTS
شناسه DOI antiox10121875
پژوهشگران هاجر زارعی (نفر اول) ، محسن بحرینی پور (نفر دوم) ، یحیی سفیدبخت (نفر سوم) ، شکوه رضایی (نفر چهارم) ، کوروش قیصری (نفر پنجم) ، سوسن کبودیان اردستانی (نفر ششم به بعد) ، ووک یوسکوکوویک (نفر ششم به بعد) ، هیروشی وتب (نفر ششم به بعد)

چکیده

Radioprotective effects of vitamin C and vitamin E as a water-soluble and a lipid-soluble agent, respectively, were investigated at the molecular level during the imposition of gamma radiation-induced structural changes to bovine serum albumin (BSA) at the therapeutic dose of 3 Gy. Secondary and tertiary structural changes of control and irradiated BSA samples were investigated using circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy. The preirradiation tests showed nonspecific and reversible binding of vitamins C and E to BSA. Secondary and tertiary structures of irradiated BSA considerably changed in the absence of the vitamins. Upon irradiation, -helices of BSA transitioned to beta motifs and random coils, and the fluorescence emission intensity decreased relative to nonirradiated BSA. In the presence of the vitamins C or E, however, the irradiated BSA was protected from these structural changes caused by reactive oxygen species (ROS). The two vitamins exhibited different patterns of attachment to the protein surface, as inspected by blind docking, and their mechanisms of protection were different. The hydrophilicity of vitamin C resulted in the predominant scavenging of ROS in the solvent, whereas hydrophobic vitamin E localized on the nonpolar patches of the BSA surface, where it did not only form a barrier for diffusing ROS but also encountered them as an antioxidant and neutralized them thanks to the moderate BSA binding constant. Very low concentrations of vitamins C or E (0.005 mg/mL) appear to be sufficient to prevent the oxidative damage of BSA.