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    Reactive species driven oxidative modifications of peptides—Tracing physical plasma liquid chemistry
    (Melville, NY : American Inst. of Physics, 2021) Wenske, Sebastian; Lackmann, Jan-Wilm; Busch, Larissa Milena; Bekeschus, Sander; von Woedtke, Thomas; Wende, Kristian
    The effluence of physical plasma consists of a significant share of reactive species, which may interact with biomolecules and yield chemical modifications comparable to those of physiological processes, e.g., post-translational protein modifications (oxPTMs). Consequentially, the aim of this work is to understand the role of physical plasma-derived reactive species in the introduction of oxPTM-like modifications in proteins. An artificial peptide library consisting of ten peptides was screened against the impact of two plasma sources, the argon-driven MHz-jet kINPen and the helium-driven RF-jet COST-Jet. Changes in the peptide molecular structure were analyzed by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. The amino acids cysteine, methionine, tyrosine, and tryptophan were identified as major targets. The introduction of one, two, or three oxygen atoms was the most common modification observed. Distinct modification patterns were observed for nitration (+N + 2O–H), which occurred in kINPen only (peroxynitrite), and chlorination (+Cl–H) that was exclusive for the COST-Jet in the presence of chloride ions (atomic oxygen/hypochlorite). Predominantly for the kINPen, singlet oxygen-related modifications, e.g., cleavage of tryptophan, were observed. Oxidation, carbonylation, and double oxidations were attributed to the impact of hydroxyl radicals and atomic oxygen. Leading to a significant change in the peptide side chain, most of these oxPTM-like modifications affect the secondary structure of amino acid chains, and amino acid polarity/functionality, ultimately modifying the performance and stability of cellular proteins.
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    On a heavy path – determining cold plasma-derived short-lived species chemistry using isotopic labelling
    (London : RSC Publishing, 2020) Wende, Kristian; Bruno, Giuliana; Lalk, Michael; Weltmann, Klaus-Dieter; von Woedtke, Thomas; Bekeschus, Sander; Lackmann, Jan-Wilm
    Cold atmospheric plasmas (CAPs) are promising medical tools and are currently applied in dermatology and epithelial cancers. While understanding of the biomedical effects is already substantial, knowledge on the contribution of individual ROS and RNS and the mode of activation of biochemical pathways is insufficient. Especially the formation and transport of short-lived reactive species in liquids remain elusive, a situation shared with other approaches involving redox processes such as photodynamic therapy. Here, the contribution of plasma-generated reactive oxygen species (ROS) in plasma liquid chemistry was determined by labeling these via admixing heavy oxygen 18O2 to the feed gas or by using heavy water H218O as a solvent for the bait molecule. The inclusion of heavy or light oxygen atoms by the labeled ROS into the different cysteine products was determined by mass spectrometry. While products like cysteine sulfonic acid incorporated nearly exclusively gas phase-derived oxygen species (atomic oxygen and/or singlet oxygen), a significant contribution of liquid phase-derived species (OH radicals) was observed for cysteine-S-sulfonate. The role, origin, and reaction mechanisms of short-lived species, namely hydroxyl radicals, singlet oxygen, and atomic oxygen, are discussed. Interactions of these species both with the target cysteine molecule as well as the interphase and the liquid bulk are taken into consideration to shed light onto several reaction pathways resulting in observed isotopic oxygen incorporation. These studies give valuable insight into underlying plasma–liquid interaction processes and are a first step to understand these interaction processes between the gas and liquid phase on a molecular level.