Molecular mechanism of the metal-independent production of hydroxyl radicals by thiourea dioxide and H2O2

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Apr 2;121(14):e2302967120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2302967120. Epub 2024 Mar 28.

Abstract

It is well-known that highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (HO) can be produced by the classic Fenton system and our recently discovered haloquinone/H2O2 system, but rarely from thiol-derivatives. Here, we found, unexpectedly, that HO can be generated from H2O2 and thiourea dioxide (TUO2), a widely used and environmentally friendly bleaching agent. A carbon-centered radical and sulfite were detected and identified as the transient intermediates, and urea and sulfate as the final products, with the complementary application of electron spin-trapping, oxygen-18 isotope labeling coupled with HPLC/MS analysis. Density functional theory calculations were conducted to further elucidate the detailed pathways for HO production. Taken together, we proposed that the molecular mechanism for HO generation by TUO2/H2O2: TUO2 tautomerizes from sulfinic acid into ketone isomer (TUO2-K) through proton transfer, then a nucleophilic addition of H2O2 on the S atom of TUO2-K, forming a S-hydroperoxide intermediate TUO2-OOH, which dissociates homolytically to produce HO. Our findings represent the first experimental and computational study on an unprecedented new molecular mechanism of HO production from simple thiol-derived sulfinic acids, which may have broad chemical, environmental, and biomedical significance for future research on the application of the well-known bleaching agent and its analogs.

Keywords: ESR spin-trapping; hydrogen peroxide; hydroxyl radical; isotope labeling; thiourea dioxide.