| Literature DB >> 29562698 |
Xican Li1,2, Yulu Xie3,4, Hong Xie5,6, Jian Yang7, Dongfeng Chen8,9.
Abstract
α-Viniferin and caraphenol A, the two oligostilbenes, have the sole difference of the presence or absence of an exocyclic double bond at the π-π conjugative site. In this study, the antioxidant capacity and relevant mechanisms for α-viniferin and caraphenol A were comparatively explored using spectrophotometry, UV-visible spectral analysis, and electrospray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-ESI-Q-TOF-MS/MS) analysis. The spectrophotometric results suggested that caraphenol A always gave lower IC50 values than α-viniferin in cupric ion-reducing antioxidant capacity assay, ferric-reducing antioxidant power assay, 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazl radical (DPPH•)-scavenging, and 2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl 3-oxide radical-scavenging assays. In UV-visible spectra analysis, caraphenol A was observed to show enhanced peaks at 250-350 nm when mixed with Fe2+, but α-viniferin exhibited no similar effects. UPLC-ESI-Q-TOF-MS/MS analysis revealed that α-viniferin mixed with DPPH• produced radical adduct formation (RAF) peak (m/z = 1070-1072). We conclude that the antioxidant action of α-viniferin and caraphenol A may involve both redox-mediated mechanisms (especially electron transfer and H⁺-transfer) and non-redox-mediated mechanisms (including Fe2+-chelating or RAF). The π-π conjugation of the exocyclic double bond in caraphenol A can greatly enhance the redox-mediated antioxidant mechanisms and partially promote the Fe2+-chelating mechanism. This makes caraphenol A far superior to α-viniferin in total antioxidant levels.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; caraphenol A; conjugative double bond; oligostilbene; stilbene trimer; α-viniferin
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29562698 PMCID: PMC6017043 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23030694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The trans-1,2-diphenylethene core.
Figure 2Structures and preferential conformation-based ball-stick models of reference compounds: (A) the structure of α-viniferin; (B) the structure of caraphenol A; (C) the preferential conformation-based ball-stick model of α-viniferin; (D) the preferential conformation-based ball-stick model of caraphenol A. (The ball-stick models were created in Chem3D Pro 14.0).
Figure 3The IC50 values of α-viniferin and caraphenol A in antioxidant assays, including the ferric-reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) assay, cupric ion-reducing antioxidant capacity (CUPRAC) assay, DPPH•-scavenging assay, and PITO•-scavenging assay.
Figure 4UV spectra of Fe2+-chelating with caraphenol A (A) and α-viniferin (B).
Figure 5The main results of UPLC–ESI–Q–TOF–MS/MS analysis: (A) Total ion chromatographical diagram of α-viniferin; (B) Primary MS spectra (i.e., molecular ion peaks) of α-viniferin; (C) Secondary MS spectra (i.e., the fragment peaks) of α-viniferin; (D) Total ion chromatographical diagram of α-viniferin-DPPH• extracted by C60H41N5O15; (E) Primary MS spectra (i.e., molecular ion peaks) of α-viniferin-DPPH•; (F) Secondary MS spectra (i.e., the fragment peaks) of α-viniferin-DPPH•.