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1 ological activity of 2-chloro-3-(substituted phenoxyl)-1, 4-naphthoquinones and 2,3-bis(substituted p
2 ion can transfer an electron and a proton to phenoxyl and nitroxyl radicals, indicating that e(-) and
3 f selected vibrational levels of the various phenoxyl and thiophenoxyl coproducts, providing uniquely
4 n resulted in the formation of surface-bound phenoxyl- and semiquinoine-type radicals with characteri
6 ctive cofragments (imidazolyl, pyrrolyl, and phenoxyl) are formed in very limited subsets of their av
7 2))) and reduced salen (2(R(1),R(2))) Cu(II)-phenoxyl complexes with a combination of -(t)Bu, -S(i)Pr
8 roject along the subunit helix axis, and one phenoxyl engages in hydrogen-bonding interaction that ha
9 en atom abstraction by the tyrosine-cysteine phenoxyl free radical ligand to form the product aldehyd
10 activation barrier for the beta-scission of phenoxyl from 1-phenyl-2-phenoxyethanol-1-yl (V): log(k
14 with the aromatic ring, which stabilizes the phenoxyl hole by ca. 8 kcal mol(-1) (1 kcal = 4.18 kJ; 3
15 nvolve hydrogen atom transfer to the tyrosyl phenoxyl in a radical redox mechanism for catalysis.
16 signature of a modified (cysteinyl-tyrosine) phenoxyl in the vibrational spectra of the active comple
17 computational studies indicate that the key phenoxyl intermediate serves as an open-shell electron-w
18 s suggest that oxygen activation via a Cu(I) phenoxyl ligand-to-metal charge transfer complex is high
20 to polarization of the pi-charge toward the phenoxyl-OH as well as the resonating character of its H
21 d donor, I2/I1 = 0.30, and when the tyrosine phenoxyl oxygen is a strong hydrogen-bond acceptor, I2/I
27 eling is electronically nonadiabatic for the phenoxyl/phenol reaction and electronically adiabatic fo
31 ty on the oxygens selectively stabilizes the phenoxyl/phenol TS by providing a larger binding energy
33 oxygens in the PCET transition structure for phenoxyl/phenol, as compared to the PCET hilltop for met
34 [1(SR2)](+) are class II mixed-valent Cu(II)-phenoxyl-phenolate species that exhibit intervalence cha
35 on mode nu(16a), such that when the tyrosine phenoxyl proton is a strong hydrogen-bond donor, I2/I1 =
43 elding a 2-substituted (cyano- or isocyano-) phenoxyl radical and an H-atom, (ii) recombination of th
44 lable and crystallographically characterized phenoxyl radical and is the only example in which the pa
48 nisms involving the evolution of the primary phenoxyl radical ArO are proposed to rationalise these e
51 contrast, when ascorbic acid reduced the DCF phenoxyl radical back to its parent molecule, it formed
52 lving the reduction of the resorufin-derived phenoxyl radical by the drugs' hydroquinone moiety back
55 ens up strategies for the stabilization of a phenoxyl radical cofactor, with its full oxidizing capab
56 = CF(3), tBu) and a localized Cr(V) nitride phenoxyl radical for the more electron-donating NMe(2) s
57 essions were determined for beta-scission of phenoxyl radical from 1-phenyl-2-phenoxyethanol-1-yl, Ph
59 -tyrosine cross-link to the stability of the phenoxyl radical in the enzyme, while highlighting the i
60 ectrochemical oxidations in each case is the phenoxyl radical in which the phenolic proton has transf
61 AT, a second molar equiv of 2 couples to the phenoxyl radical initially formed, giving a Cu(II)-OO-(A
63 lectron oxidation of etoposide by MPO to its phenoxyl radical is important for converting this antica
64 uces Fe(IV) horizontal lineO, Cu(II)-OH, and phenoxyl radical moieties, analogous to the chemistry ca
65 This complex, containing an unusual iron(II)-phenoxyl radical motif, represents an elusive example of
67 NADPH quenched directly the EPR signal of phenoxyl radical of a phenolic antitumor drug, etoposide
68 OR catalyzed quenching of EPR signal of the phenoxyl radical of a vitamin E homolog, 2,2,5,7,8-penta
71 by EPR spectroscopy and equilibrated with a phenoxyl radical of known stability in order to determin
72 tes lead to generation of kinetically stable phenoxyl radical of the incarcerated 4-hydroxy-diphenyla
73 ), for (i) benzyl radical plus toluene, (ii) phenoxyl radical plus phenol, and (iii) methoxyl radical
75 tion of halophenols, wherein generation of a phenoxyl radical via formal homolysis of the aryl O-H bo
78 scheme that involves coupling of a liberated phenoxyl radical with a ligated 2-naphthoxyl radical.
79 utyl phenol is oxidized to the corresponding phenoxyl radical with a second-order rate constant of 0.
80 tributed to the coupling between a liberated phenoxyl radical with an iron-ligated phenolic coupling
81 adical scavenging and/or by MPO results in a phenoxyl radical with low reactivity toward lipids, its
82 )), i.e., the first 1H(+)/1e(-) (catechol--> phenoxyl radical) and the second 1H(+)/1e(-) (phenoxyl r
85 full characterization of the 4-(nitrophenyl)phenoxyl radical, 2,6-di-(t)butyl-4-(4'-nitrophenyl) phe
86 e of the dimer, the first for a para-coupled phenoxyl radical, revealed a bond length of 1.6055(23) A
87 lic moiety with reactive radicals yields its phenoxyl radical, whose reactivity may determine the pro
88 henoxyl radical) and the second 1H(+)/1e(-) (phenoxyl radical--> quinone) free radical scavenging mec
89 e consistent with the initial formation of a phenoxyl radical-spectroscopic studies indicated that th
92 tion increases the midpoint potential of the phenoxyl radical/phenol couple so that proton translocat
94 s, and luminescence quenching data implicate phenoxyl radicals and Bronsted acid-activated oligo(phen
95 emarkably augmented EPR-detectable etoposide phenoxyl radicals and enhanced etoposide-induced topoiso
96 nce of H2O2 and GSH caused the generation of phenoxyl radicals and GS* radicals, of which only the la
100 neration of reactive intermediates, possibly phenoxyl radicals but not H2O2, is responsible for the E
102 chromane, a hindered phenolic compound whose phenoxyl radicals do not oxidize endogenous thiols, effe
103 nce for MPO-dependent formation of etoposide phenoxyl radicals in growth factor-mobilized CD34(+) cel
104 lic compounds resulting in the generation of phenoxyl radicals may be an important contributor to the
107 radicals with higher redox potential, e.g., phenoxyl radicals of etoposide, oxidize NADPH directly.
111 ence for the combination of hydroperoxyl and phenoxyl radicals over H-atom transfer between them.
112 tin-phenol substrate, APEX2 generates biotin-phenoxyl radicals that covalently tag proximal endogenou
114 noxyl radicals, (b) the ability of etoposide phenoxyl radicals to oxidize GSH and protein thiols (aft
115 ar redox reaction of the cyclohexadienyl and phenoxyl radicals to yield a carbocation/phenoxide pair,
116 adish peroxidase (HRP) can be inactivated by phenoxyl radicals upon reaction with H(2)O(2)/phenol, we
119 (GSH) to eliminate EPR-detectable etoposide phenoxyl radicals, (b) the ability of etoposide phenoxyl
120 e-electron oxidation products of phenol, its phenoxyl radicals, is involved in the oxidative effects.
121 y phenols that yield comparatively transient phenoxyl radicals, leading to cross-coupling between the
122 This value is higher than related isolated phenoxyl radicals, making this a useful reagent for hydr
123 ein-derived (tyrosyl) radicals and etoposide phenoxyl radicals, respectively, we established that car
124 rO-C bond homolysis to give para-substituted phenoxyl radicals, which can be observed directly in las
125 lectron transfer (PCET) with phenols to form phenoxyl radicals, with dihydroanthracene to form anthra
128 nation of the rotational conformation of the phenoxyl ring in a radical with unprecedented accuracy (
131 lations to impulsively excited low-frequency phenoxyl-ring motions, which optimize the geometry of th
133 ing sulfanyl substituents into copper-bonded phenoxyls significantly alters their optical and redox p
134 age g value (gav = 2.0055) characteristic of phenoxyl tau-radicals arising from a minority apoenzyme
135 hydrogen atom transfers (HAT) to 2 equiv of phenoxyl that are generated transiently at the anode.
138 st lifetimes, 25 and 23 h, were observed for phenoxyl-type radicals on 0.5% CuO and chlorophenoxyl-ty