Abstract

BackgroundFree radical attack of cellular structures in the human system is the major cause of various forms of degenerative diseases. Consequently, recent research has been focused on the development of new antioxidants with more efficient free radical scavenging potentials. Ligand-based virtual screening was employed in the rational design of potent antioxidant derivatives of curcumin by the density functional theory method. Various antioxidant descriptors that characterize the three major mechanisms of free radical scavenge, namely, hydrogen atom transfer (HAT), single electron transfer followed by proton transfer (SET-PT), and sequential proton loss electron transfer (SPLET), were calculated. Also, the spin density distribution on the generated radicals and the frontier orbital distribution and energy of the studied compounds were evaluated in order to gain further insight on the reaction mechanism. The reaction Gibbs free energy for scavenging the two important peroxyl radicals (HOO· and CH3OO·) was calculated in order to evaluate the preferred mechanism of free radical scavenge by these compounds.ResultsThe investigated compounds were able to scavenge HOO· and CH3OO· radicals by HAT and SPLET mechanisms in the gas phase and aqueous solution, based on the computed results of reaction enthalpies and Gibbs free energy. The SET-PT mechanism for these compounds was observed to be thermodynamically unfeasible in the gas phase. However, the thermodynamic feasibility of free radical scavenge by SET-PT mechanism was observed in aqueous solution. Among the investigated compounds, MCC 009 (1E,4E)-1-(3-(aminomethyl)-4-hydroxyphenyl)-5-(4-hydroxy-3-((hydroxy (methyl)amino)methyl)phenyl)penta-1,4-dien-3-one at the 19-OH position possessed the highest capacity to scavenge both HOO· and CH3OO· radicals by HAT, SET-PT, and SPLET mechanisms. The reaction Gibbs free energy of scavenging HOO· radical by this molecule in the gas phase and aqueous solution is ∆rGBDEgas = − 58.18, {Delta _r{G}_{BDE}}_{H_2O}=-73.77 , ∆rGAIPgas = 611.48, {Delta _r{G}_{AIP}}_{H_2O}=-74305.49 , ∆rGPDEgas = − 669.66, {Delta _r{G}_{PDE}}_{H_2O}=74231.72 , ∆rGPAgas = − 271.40, {Delta _r{G}_{PA}}_{H_2O}=-73.09 ,∆rGETEgas = 213.22, and {Delta _r{G}_{ETE}}_{H_2O}=-0.69 .ConclusionNew set of curcumin derivatives with potent free radical scavenging properties was successfully designed, and their mechanism of free radical scavenging evaluated by thermodynamic studies. This research is a gateway to the exploitation of the considered curcumin derivatives in food chemistry and pharmacy.

Highlights

  • Free radical attack of cellular structures in the human system is the major cause of various forms of degenerative diseases

  • This research employed the technique of virtual screening to design a new set of curcumin antioxidants whose free radical scavenging potency was tested using the developed quantitative structure activity relationship (QSAR) model

  • MCCM 07, MCCM 09, and MCCM 15 showed better antioxidant activities compared to the template molecule

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Summary

Introduction

Free radical attack of cellular structures in the human system is the major cause of various forms of degenerative diseases. Various antioxidant descriptors that characterize the three major mechanisms of free radical scavenge, namely, hydrogen atom transfer (HAT), single electron transfer followed by proton transfer (SET-PT), and sequential proton loss electron transfer (SPLET), were calculated. The 1,5-diphenylpenta-1,4-dien-3-one derivatives are monoketone curcumin analogues with a broad range of biological activities Various studies on these compounds show that they possess anti-parasitical (Aher et al 2011; Din et al 2014; Din et al 2016), leishmanicidal (Chauhan et al 2018; Singh and Chauhan 2018), aldose reductase inhibitory (Kondhare et al 2019), and antioxidant (Naik et al 2011) activities. Three major mechanisms of free radical scavenge by antioxidants have been recognized These include hydrogen atom transfer (HAT), single electron transfer followed by proton transfer (SETPT), and sequential proton loss electron transfer (SPLET) (Galano et al 2016; Vo et al 2018)

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