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Alkaline earth metal ion coordination increases the radical scavenging efficiency of kaempferol.

Ling-Ling QianYao LuYi XuZhi-Yin YangJing YangYi-Ming ZhouRui-Min HanJian-Ping ZhangLeif H Skibsted
Published in: RSC advances (2020)
Flavonoids are used as natural additives and antioxidants in foods, and after coordination to metal ions, as drug candidates, depending on the flavonoid structure. The rate of radical scavenging of the ubiquitous plant flavonoid kaempferol (3,5,7,4'-tetrahydroxyflavone, Kaem) was found to be significantly enhanced by coordination of Mg(ii), Ca(ii), Sr(ii), and Ba(ii) ions, whereas the radical scavenging rate of apigenin (5,7,4'-trihydroxyflavone, Api) was almost unaffected by alkaline earth metal (AEM) ions, as studied for short-lived β-carotene radical cations (β-Car˙ + ) formed by laser flash photolysis in chloroform/ethanol (7 : 3) and for the semi-stable 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical, DPPH˙, in ethanol at 25 °C. A 1 : 1 Mg(ii)-Kaem complex was found to be in equilibrium with a 1 : 2 Mg(ii)-Kaem 2 complex, while for Ca(ii), Sr(ii) and Ba(ii), only 1 : 2 AEM(ii)-Kaem complexes were detected, where all complexes showed 3-hydroxyl and 4-carbonyl coordination and stability constants of higher than 10 9 L 2 mol -2 . The 1 : 2 Ca(ii)-Kaem 2 complex had the highest second order rate constant for both β-Car˙ + (5 × 10 8 L mol -1 s -1 ) and DPPH˙ radical (3 × 10 5 L mol -1 s -1 ) scavenging, which can be attributed to the optimal combination of the stronger electron withdrawing capability of the ( n - 1)d orbital in the heavier AEM ions and their spatially asymmetrical structures in 1 : 2 AEM-Kaem complexes with metal ion coordination of the least steric hindrance of two perpendicular flavone backbones as ligands in the Ca(ii) complex, as shown by density functional theory calculations.
Keyphrases
  • quantum dots
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • high resolution