Publications by authors named "Tatyana A Konovalova"

Chemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (CIDNP) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques have been used to study the paramagnetic species formed during the photolysis of the alkaloid lappaconitine and its synthetic analogues in solution. Lappaconitine is a photosensitive antiarrhythmic and hypertension drug, whose major photoproduct (N-acetyl anthranilic acid) is also a potent photosensitizer. Both these compounds are lipophilic and might bind efficiently to cell membranes thereby causing phototoxic damage.

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Photoirradiation of TiO(2) nanoparticles by visible light in the presence of the water-soluble natural polysaccharide arabinogalactan complexes of the hydrocarbon carotenoid β-carotene leads to enhanced yield of the reactive hydroxyl (OH) radicals. The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping technique using α-phenyl-N-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN) as the spin-trap has been applied to detect this intermediate by trapping the methyl and methoxy radicals generated upon reaction of the hydroxyl radical with dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). The free radicals formed in this system proceed via oxygen reduction and not via the reaction of holes on the TiO(2) surface.

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Interspin distances between the Ti(3+) ions and the carotenoid radicals produced inside TiMCM-41 pores by photoinduced electron transfer from 7'-apo-7'-(4-carboxyphenyl)-beta-carotene (coordinated to Ti(3+)), canthaxanthin (formed as a random distribution of isomers), and beta-ionone (model for a short-chain polyene) to Ti(3+) framework sites were determined using the pulsed EPR relaxation enhancement method. To estimate the electron transfer distances, the temperature dependence of relaxation rates was analyzed in both siliceous and metal-substituted siliceous materials. The phase memory times, T(M), of the carotenoid radicals were determined from the best fits of two-pulse ESEEM curves.

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We present the first example of water soluble complexes of carotenoids. The stability and reactivity of carotenoids in the complexes with natural polysaccharide arabinogalactan were investigated by different physicochemical techniques: optical absorption, HPLC, and pulsed EPR spectroscopy. Compared to pure carotenoids, polysaccharide complexes of carotenoids showed enhanced photostability by a factor of 10 in water solutions.

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Carotenoid (Car) radical intermediates formed upon catalytic or photooxidation of lutein (I), 7'-apo-7',7'-dicyano-beta-carotene (II), and lycopene (III) inside Cu(II)-MCM-41 molecular sieves were studied by pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopies. The Davies and Mims ENDOR spectra (15-20 K) were simulated using the hyperfine coupling constants predicted by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The DFT calculations revealed that upon chemical oxidation, carotenoid radical cations (Car*+) are formed, whereas carotenoid neutral radicals (#Car*) are produced by proton loss (indicated by #) from the radical cation.

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Pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and two-dimensional (2D)-hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy (HYSCORE) studies in combination with density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that photo-oxidation of natural zeaxanthin (ex Lycium halimifolium) and violaxanthin (ex Viola tricolor) on silica-alumina produces the carotenoid radical cations (Car*+) and also the neutral carotenoid radicals (#Car*) as a result of proton loss (indicated by #) from the C4(4') methylene position or one of the methyl groups at position C5(5'), C9(9'), or C13(13'), except for violaxanthin where the epoxide at positions C5(5')-C6(6') raises the energy barrier for proton loss, and the neutral radicals #Car*(4) and #Car*(5) are not observed. DFT calculations predict the largest isotropic beta-methyl proton hyperfine couplings to be 8 to 10 MHz for Car*+, in agreement with previously reported hyperfine couplings for carotenoid pi-conjugated radicals with unpaired spin density delocalized over the whole molecule. Anisotropic alpha-proton hyperfine coupling tensors determined from the HYSCORE analysis were assigned on the basis of DFT calculations with the B3LYP exchange-correlation functional and found to arise not only from the carotenoid radical cation but also from carotenoid neutral radicals, in agreement with the analysis of the pulsed ENDOR data.

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Direct evidence of carotenoid/cyclodextrin inclusion complex formation was obtained for the water-soluble sodium salt of beta-caroten-8'-oic acid (IV) by using 1H NMR and UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy. It was shown that this carotenoid forms a stable 1:1 inclusion complex with beta-cyclodextrin (stability constant K11 approximately 1500 M(-1)). All other carotenoids under study in the presence of cyclodextrins (CDs) form large aggregates in aqueous solution as demonstrated by very broad absorption spectra and considerable change in color.

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