| Literature DB >> 31689968 |
Xueqi Sun1,2,3, Jingjing Zhang4,5,6, Yuan Chen7,8,9, Yingqi Mi10,11,12, Wenqiang Tan13,14, Qing Li15,16, Fang Dong17,18, Zhanyong Guo19,20,21.
Abstract
A new class of chitosan derivatives possessing thiourea salts were synthesized to improve the solubility and the antioxidant activity of chitosan. Firstly, chitosan was modified to carboxymethyl chitosan, combining carboxymethyl chitosan with thiourea salts that have different structures to form new chitosan derivatives. The chitosan and chitosan derivatives were characterized by FT-IR, 13C NMR, TGA, and elemental analyses. The new peaks of thiourea salts could be clearly observed at about 1240 cm-1 in the IR spectra, and the peak of C=S was clearly observed at around 180 ppm in the 13C NMR. IR spectra and 13C NMR of the structural units of these polymers validated the chitosan derivatives possessing thiourea salts were successfully synthesized. Their antioxidant properties were tested, including DPPH-radical scavenging ability, superoxide-radical scavenging ability, and hydroxyl-radical scavenging ability. Our results suggested the increase of thiourea salt groups in chitosan derivatives promotes the scavenging effect. The scavenging activity of 4TMCMCS, TMCMCS. 4,4DCMCS, and 4ACMCS against DPPH-radical and superoxide-radical were more than 90% at 1.6 mg/mL, respectively. In the cytotoxicity assay, no cytotoxicity was observed for the L929 cells with chitosan and its derivatives at all testing concentrations. These results demonstrated that the combination of chitosan and thiourea salt groups improved the antioxidant activity of chitosan, and the antioxidants or free radical scavengers based on natural polymers and thiourea salts showed potential applications.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant ability; characterization; chitosan derivatives; thiourea salts
Year: 2019 PMID: 31689968 PMCID: PMC6918197 DOI: 10.3390/polym11111810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1The structure of thiosemicarbazide.
Scheme 1Synthesis routes for chitosan derivatives.
The elemental analyses, yields, and the degrees of substitution of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
| Compounds | Yields (%) | Elemental Analyses (%) | Degrees of Substitution (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | N | S | C/N | C/S | |||
| CS | - | 40.86 | 7.28 | - | 5.62 | - | 73.5 |
| 75.85 | 35.24 | 3.96 | - | 8.90 | 96.27 | ||
| 4TCMCS | 42.56 | 35.50 | 5.39 | 1.50 | 6.59 | 23.72 | 8.47 |
| TCMCS | 27.71 | 36.25 | 5.71 | 1.57 | 6.35 | 23.14 | 8.55 |
| 4,4DCMCS | 26.52 | 35.47 | 4.36 | 1.18 | 8.14 | 30.06 | 6.89 |
| 4ACMCS | 20.41 | 35.06 | 5.14 | 1.34 | 6.83 | 26.24 | 7.64 |
Figure 2FT-IR spectra of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 313C NMR spectra of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 4TGA thermogram curves of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 5DPPH radicals’ scavenging ability of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 6Superoxide radicals’ scavenging ability of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 7Hydroxyl radicals’ scavenging activity of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts.
Figure 8The sample concentration in the cell growth pictures was 500 μg/mL.
Figure 9The cytotoxicity of CS, N, O-CMCS, and Carboxymethyl chitosan containing thiourea salts on L929 cells.