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The Environmental Effects of Lead Concentrations on Protein and DNA Structures in Epileptic Patients from an Infrared Spectroscopic Study
Author(s) -
J. Anastassopoulou,
Maria Kyriakidou,
Pavlos Nisianakis,
George Papatheodorou,
Michail Rallis,
T. Théophanides
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of basic and applied sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1927-5129
DOI - 10.29169/1927-5129.2019.15.07
Subject(s) - chemistry , amide , protein secondary structure , dna , oxidative stress , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , infrared , infrared spectroscopy , analytical chemistry (journal) , crystallography , biochemistry , chromatography , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , optics
Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) elementary analysis were used to investigate the environmental effects of lead blood serum levels on the life metal ions (Cu2+ and Zn2+), protein secondary structure and DNA structure in epileptic patients. By increasing the lead concentration an increased intensity of the band at 1744 cm-1 was observed due to induced oxidative stress. The shifts of the amide I and amide II bands of the peptide group, -CONH- from 1655 cm-1 and 1550 cm-1, respectively, to lower frequencies is due to the change of protein molecular structure from α-helix to β-sheets. An important change in the spectral region between 1200-900 cm-1, where the phosphates and phosphate-ribose groups of DNA and RNA are absorbing, is suggesting an attack on the DNA backbone as a function of the increase of lead concentration. The characteristic band at 1170 cm-1 could be used as a “marker band” for the damaged DNA backbone structure upon lead exposure. The ICP-MS elementary analysis showed a decrease of the ratio [Cu/Zn] by increasing the lead levels in blood serum is linked to oxidative stress and is confirming the FT-IR data.

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