4.7 Article

Quenching of Triplet-Excited Flavins by Flavonoids. Structural Assessment of Antioxidative Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 74, Issue 19, Pages 7283-7293

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jo901301c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Arla Foods
  2. Danish Dairy Research Foundation
  3. Directorate for Food, Fisheries, and Agricultural Business

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The mechanism of flavin-mediated photooxidation of flavonoids was investigated for aqueous solutions. Interaction of triplet-excited flavin mononucleotide with phenols, as determined by laser flash photolysis, occurred at nearly diffusion-controlled rates (k similar to 1.6 x 10(9) L mol(-1) s(-1) for phenol at pH 7, 293 K), but protection of the phenolic function by methylation inhibited reaction. Still, electron transfer was proposed as the dominating mechanism due to the lack of primary kinetic hydrogen/deuterium isotope effect and the low activation enthalpy (< 20 kJ mol(-1)) for photooxidation. Activation entropy worked compensating in a series of phenolic derivatives. supporting a common oxidation mechanism. An ortho-hydroxymethoxy pattern was equally reactive (k similar to 2.3 x 10(9) L mol(-1) s(-1) for guaiacol at pH 7) as compounds with ortho-dihydroxy substitution (k similar to 2.4 x 10(9) L mol(-1) s(-1) for catechol at pH 7), which are generally referred to as good antioxidants. This refutes the common belief that stabilization of incipient phenoxyl radicals through intramolecular hydrogen bonding is the driving force behind the reducing activity of catechol-like compounds. Instead, such bonding improves ionization characteristics of the substrates, hence the differences in reactivity with (photo)oxidation of isolated phenols. Despite the similar reactivity, radicals from ortho-dihydroxy compounds are detected in high steady-state concentrations by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, while those resulting from oxidation of ortho-hydroxymethoxy (or isolated phenolic) patterns were too reactive to be observed. The ability to deprotonate and form the corresponding radical anions at neutral pH was proposed as the decisive factor for stabilization and, consequently, for antioxidative action. Thus, substituting other ionizable functions for the ortho- or para-hydroxyl in phenolic compounds resulted in stable radical anion formation, as demonstrated for para-hydroxybenzoic acid, in contrast to its methyl ester.

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