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Insight into the Antioxidant Activity of 1,8-Dihydroxynaphthalene Allomelanin Nanoparticles.

Alexandra Mavridi-PrinteziFabio MollicaRosa LucernatiMarco MontaltiRiccardo Amorati
Published in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Melanins are stable and non-toxic pigments with great potential as chemopreventive agents against oxidative stress for medical and cosmetic applications. Allomelanin is a class of nitrogen-free melanin often found in fungi. The artificial allomelanin obtained by the polymerization of 1,8-dihydroxynaphthalene (DHN), poly-DHN (PDHN), has been recently indicated as a better radical quencher than polydopamine (PDA), a melanin model obtained by the polymerization of dopamine (DA); however, the chemical mechanisms underlying this difference are unclear. Here we investigate, by experimental and theoretical methods, the ability of PDHN nanoparticles (PDHN-NP), in comparison to PDA-NP, to trap alkylperoxyl (ROO • ) and hydroperoxyl (HOO • ) radicals that are involved in the propagation of peroxidation in real conditions. Our results demonstrate that PDHN-NP present a higher antioxidant efficiency with respect to PDA-NP against ROO • in water at pH 7.4 and against mixed ROO • and HOO • in acetonitrile, showing catalytic cross-termination activity. The antioxidant capacity of PDHN-NP in water is 0.8 mmol/g (ROO • radicals quenched by 1 g of PDHN-NP), with a rate constant of 3 × 10 5 M -1 s -1 for each reactive moiety. Quantum-mechanical calculations revealed that, thanks to the formation of a H-bond network, the quinones in PDHN-NP have a high affinity for H-atoms, thus justifying the high reactivity of PDHN-NP with HOO • observed experimentally.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • molecular dynamics
  • dna damage
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • uric acid
  • metabolic syndrome
  • signaling pathway