- Lamberson, Connor R;
- Xu, Libin;
- Muchalski, Hubert;
- Montenegro-Burke, J Rafael;
- Shmanai, Vadim V;
- Bekish, Andrei V;
- McLean, John A;
- Clarke, Catherine F;
- Shchepinov, Mikhail S;
- Porter, Ned A
Substitution of -CD2- at the reactive centers of linoleic and linolenic acids reduces the rate of abstraction of D by a tocopheryl radical by as much as 36-fold, compared to the abstraction of H from a corresponding -CH2- center. This H atom transfer reaction is the rate-determining step in the tocopherol-mediated peroxidation of lipids in human low-density lipoproteins, a process that has been linked to coronary artery disease. The unanticipated large kinetic isotope effects reported here for the tocopherol-mediated oxidation of linoleic and linolenic acids and esters suggests that tunneling makes this process favorable.