Issue 1, 2016

Halogen mediated voltammetric oxidation of biological thiols and disulfides

Abstract

The electrochemical generation of the halides, bromine and iodine, in the presence of biologically relevant organosulfur is demonstrated to result in an analytically useful response. In the case of the iodide/iodine redox couple only the thiol causes an increase in the electrochemical oxidative peak current. Conversely, the formed bromine may catalytically oxidise both thiols and disulfides. Hence, the differing reactivities of the halide ions readily allow discrimination between the closely related thiol and disulphide species. For all of the organosulfur species investigated (glutathione, cysteine and homocysteine) micromolar limits of detection are attainable. In the case of the bromine mediated oxidation this sensitivity at least partially arises from the large catalytic amplification, such that, for each disulphide molecule up to ten electrons may be transferred. Ultimately this bromine oxidation results in the formation of the sulfonate species. For the iodine mediated oxidation of the thiols the oxidation proceeds no further than to the formation of the associated disulfide.

Graphical abstract: Halogen mediated voltammetric oxidation of biological thiols and disulfides

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Sep 2015
Accepted
30 Oct 2015
First published
30 Oct 2015

Analyst, 2016,141, 144-149

Author version available

Halogen mediated voltammetric oxidation of biological thiols and disulfides

E. Valero-Ruiz, M. I. González-Sánchez, C. Batchelor-McAuley and R. G. Compton, Analyst, 2016, 141, 144 DOI: 10.1039/C5AN01955A

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