Natural Chain-Breaking Antioxidant and their Synthetic Analogs as Modulator of Oxidative Stress
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2021
abstract:
Oxidative stress is associated with the increased production of reactive oxygen species or
with a significant decrease in the effectiveness of antioxidant enzymes and nonenzymatic defense.
The penetration of oxygen and free radicals in the hydrophobic interior of biological membranes
initiates radical disintegration of the hydrocarbon "tails" of the lipids. This process is known as
"lipid peroxidation", and the accumulation of the oxidation products as peroxides and the aldehydes and acids derived from them are often used as a measure of oxidative stress levels. In total,
40 phenolic antioxidants were selected for a comparative study and analysis of their chain-breaking
antioxidant activity, and thus as modulators of oxidative stress. This included natural and naturallike ortho-methoxy and ortho-hydroxy phenols, nine of them newly synthesized. Applied experimental and theoretical methods (bulk lipid autoxidation, chemiluminescence, in silico methods
such as density functional theory (DFT) and quantitative structure-activity relationship ((Q)SAR)
modeling) were used to clarify their structure-activity relationship. Kinetics of non-inhibited and
inhibited lipid oxidation in close connection with inhibitor transformation under oxidative stress is
considered. Special attention has been paid to chemical reactions resulting in the initiation of free
radicals, a key stage of oxidative stress. Effects of substituents in the side chains and in the phenolic
ring of hydroxylated phenols and biphenols, and the concentration were discussed.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
oxidative stress; bio-antioxidant; chain breaking antioxidant activity; structure-activity relationship; synthesis
List of contributors:
Fabbri, DAVIDE GAETANO; Carta, Paola; Dettori, MARIA ANTONIETTA
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