Experimental and computational study on morin and its complexes with Mg, Mn, Zn, and Al: Coordination and antioxidant properties.

J Inorg Biochem

Dipartimento di Scienze Chimiche, Biologiche, Farmaceutiche ed Ambientali, Università di Messina, Viale F. Stagno d'Alcontres 31, 98166 Messina, Italy.

Published: September 2024

Morin (MRN), an intriguing bioflavonol, has received increasing interest for its antioxidant properties, as have its metal complexes (M-MRN). Understanding their antioxidant behavior is critical to assess their pharmaceutical, nutraceutical potential, and therapeutic impact in the design of advanced antioxidant drugs. To this end, knowing the speciation of different H-MRN and M-MRN is pivotal to understand and compare their antioxidant ability. In this work, the protonation constant values of MRN under physiological ionic strength and temperature conditions (I = 0.15 mol L and t = 37 °C), determined by UV-vis spectrophotometric titrations, are introduced. Thus, a reliable speciation model on H-MRN species in aqueous solution is presented, which exhibits five stable forms depending on pH, supplemented by quantum-mechanical calculations useful to determine the proton affinities of each functional group and corresponding deprotonation order. Furthermore, potentiometry and UV-vis spectrophotometry have been exploited to determine the thermodynamic interaction parameters of MRN with different metal cations (Mg, Mn, Zn, Al). The antioxidant ability of H-MRN and M-MRN has been evaluated by the 2,2'-diphenyl-1-benzopyran-4-one (DPPH) method, and the Zn-MRN system has proven to afford the most potent antioxidant effect. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of M-MRN species at all possible chelation sites and under explicit water solvation allowed for the fine characterization not only of the metal chelation modalities of MRN in explicit water, but also of the role played by the local water environment around the metal cations. Those microscopic patterns reveal to be informative on the different antioxidant capabilities recorded experimentally.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2024.112635DOI Listing

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