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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Type I and Type II Photosensitized Oxidation Reactions: Guidelines and Mechanistic Pathways

TLDR
Several examples of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation reactions are provided to illustrate the complexity and the diversity of the degradation pathways of mostly relevant biomolecules upon one‐electron oxidation and singlet oxygen reactions.
Abstract
Here, 10 guidelines are presented for a standardized definition of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation reactions. Because of varied notions of reactions mediated by photosensitizers, a checklist of recommendations is provided for their definitions. Type I and type II photoreactions are oxygen-dependent and involve unstable species such as the initial formation of radical cation or neutral radicals from the substrates and/or singlet oxygen (1 O21 ∆g ) by energy transfer to molecular oxygen. In addition, superoxide anion radical (O2·-) can be generated by a charge-transfer reaction involving O2 or more likely indirectly as the result of O2 -mediated oxidation of the radical anion of type I photosensitizers. In subsequent reactions, O2·- may add and/or reduce a few highly oxidizing radicals that arise from the deprotonation of the radical cations of key biological targets. O2·- can also undergo dismutation into H2 O2 , the precursor of the highly reactive hydroxyl radical (·OH) that may induce delayed oxidation reactions in cells. In the second part, several examples of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation reactions are provided to illustrate the complexity and the diversity of the degradation pathways of mostly relevant biomolecules upon one-electron oxidation and singlet oxygen reactions.

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Transition Metal Complexes and Photodynamic Therapy from a Tumor-Centered Approach: Challenges, Opportunities, and Highlights from the Development of TLD1433

TL;DR: The challenges to bringing PDT into mainstream cancer therapy are summarized, the chemical and photophysical solutions that transition metal complexes offer are considered, and the multidisciplinary effort needed to bring a new drug to clinical trial is put into context.
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Antimicrobial photodynamic therapy – what we know and what we don’t

TL;DR: A review of the history of the antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT), its fundamental photochemical and photophysical mechanisms as well as photosensitizers and light sources that are currently applied for aPDT in vitro and implications for proper comparison of in vitro studies regarding a PDT are given.
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Singlet Molecular Oxygen Reactions with Nucleic Acids, Lipids, and Proteins.

TL;DR: Emphasis is placed in this Review on the description of the main oxidation reactions initiated by 1O2 and the resulting modifications within key cellular targets, including guanine for nucleic acids, unsaturated lipids, and targeted amino acids.
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Formation of UV-induced DNA damage contributing to skin cancer development

TL;DR: Basic photochemistry of DNA is described and exposure to sunlight mostly induces pyrimidine dimers, which explains the mutational signature found in skin tumors, with lower amounts of 8-oxoGua and strand breaks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends and targets in antiviral phototherapy

TL;DR: This review focuses on the PDI of viruses as an alternative treatment in antiviral therapy, but also as a means of viral decontamination, covering mainly the literature of the last decade.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Superoxide Ion: Generation and Chemical Implications

TL;DR: This review comprises the main characteristics of O2(•-) followed by generation methods, and its potential applications including the destruction of hazardous chemicals, synthesis of organic compounds, and many other applications are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

New photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy

TL;DR: The dual-specificity of PDT relies on accumulation of the PS in diseased tissue and also on localized light delivery, and future directions include photochemical internalization, genetically encoded protein PSs, theranostics, two-photon absorption PDT, and sonodynamic therapy using ultrasound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Definition of type I and type II photosensitized oxidation.

TL;DR: This editorial briefly reviews the history and mechanism of photosensitized oxidations in order to provide the background for the definition of Type I and Type I1 photoensitized oxidation reactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial photodynamic inactivation: a bright new technique to kill resistant microbes.

TL;DR: The microbial killing by aPDI can be synergistically potentiated by harmless inorganic salts via photochemistry, and genetically engineered bioluminescent microbial cells allow PDT to treat infections in animal models.
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Oxidatively generated base damage to cellular DNA.

TL;DR: In this review the formation of 11 single base lesions that is accounted for by reactions of singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radical or high intensity UVC laser pulses with nucleobases is discussed on the basis of the mechanisms available from model studies.
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