AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured singlet oxygen quenching rates and relative absorption capacities of various phenolic antioxidants and vitamin C in a specific solvent mixture at 35 °C, showing new insights into antioxidant effectiveness.
  • Singlet oxygen absorption capacity (SOAC) was found to correlate with the oxidation potentials of the antioxidants, revealing that those with lower potentials exhibit higher reactivities when quenching singlet oxygen.
  • Measurements indicated that the quenching rates of phenolic antioxidants and carotenoids are consistent across different solvent types, suggesting that the antioxidant performance remains reliable regardless of solvent choice when α-tocopherol serves as a standard.

Article Abstract

Measurements of the singlet oxygen ((1)O(2)) quenching rates (k(Q) (S)) and the relative singlet oxygen absortpion capacity (SOAC) values were performed for 16 phenolic antioxidants (tocopherol derivatives, ubiquinol-10, caffeic acids, and catechins) and vitamin C in ethanol/chloroform/D(2)O (50:50:1, v/v/v) solution at 35 °C. It has been clarified that the SOAC method is useful to evaluate the (1)O(2)-quenching activity of lipophilic and hydrophilic antioxidants having 5 orders of magnitude different rate constants from 1.38 × 10(10) M(-1) s(-1) for lycopene to 2.71 × 10(5) for ferulic acid. The logarithms of the k(Q) (S) and the SOAC values for phenolic antioxidants were found to correlate well with their peak oxidation potentials (E(p)); the antioxidants that have smaller E(p) values show higher reactivities. In previous works, measurements of the k(Q) (S) values for many phenolic antioxidants were performed in ethanol. Consequently, measurements of the k(Q) (S) and relative SOAC values were performed for eight carotenoids in ethanol to investigate the effect of solvent on the (1)O(2)-quenching rate. The k(Q) (S) values for phenolic antioxidants and carotenoids in ethanol were found to correlate linearly with the k(Q) (S) values in ethanol/chloroform/D(2)O solution with a gradient of 1.79, except for two catechins. As the relative rate constants (k(Q)(AO) (S)/k(Q)(α-Toc) (S)) of antioxidants (AO) are equal to the relative SOAC values, the SOAC values do not depend on the kinds of solvent used, if α-tocopherol is used as a standard compound. In fact, the SOAC values obtained for carotenoids in mixed solvent agreed well with the corresponding ones in ethanol.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf302021rDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

soac values
28
phenolic antioxidants
20
values phenolic
16
singlet oxygen
12
values
11
soac
9
capacity soac
8
antioxidants
8
values performed
8
rate constants
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!