Journal Article10.1016/j.molliq.2024.125336
Is lecanoric acid a good antioxidant?
Quan V. Vo,Lê Trung Hiếu,Hoang Thi Thuy Hang,Vo Huynh Ngoc Diep,Nguyễn Thị Hòa,Huynh Thi Diem Uyen,Nguyễn Quang Trung,Ádám Mechler +7 more
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TL;DR: The antioxidant capacity of lecanoric acid remains uncertain due to conflicting experimental findings and the lack of a definitive mechanism. This work provides a detailed mechanistic investigation using DFT calculations and antioxidant assays, suggesting that LA is an efficient scavenger of the HO radical but exhibits weak activity against the HOO radical.
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Abstract: Lecanoric acid (LA), an abundant chemical found in lichens, has demonstrated a wide range of biological activities, including anti-cancer cytotoxic, antibiotic, antimycobacterial, antiviral, and anti-hepatocarcinoma properties. The antioxidant capacity of this molecule, while inferred from certain experimental findings, is doubtful based on structural characteristics and therefore remains to be established. DFT calculations are used in this work to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of the mechanism and kinetics governing the antiradical activity of LA in lipidic and aqueous solvent environments. Although the DPPH/ABTS+ assays revealed good antioxidant activity in vitro, the modeling yielded mixed results. The data suggests that LA is an efficient scavenger of the HO radical with rate constants of 2.01 × 1010 and 2.80 × 108 M−1 s−1 in polar and lipid media, respectively, by the FHT and RAF mechanisms. However, the data also suggests that LA exhibits only weak activity against the HOO radical in all physiological environments. This is consistent with structural features that predict low activity.
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Citations
Comprehensive investigation of the multifunctional antiradical mechanisms of icaritin in lipid-mimicking media
Kristina Milisavljević,Žiko Milanović +1 more
Exploring Plant-Derived Natural Products Against Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Causative Agent by Targeting Protein Kinase 5: Insights Into Computational Approaches.
Haruna Isiyaku Umar,Soukayna Baammi,Felix Oluwasegun Ishabiyi,Abdullahi Tunde Aborode,Omoboyede Victor,Blessing O Awoyemi,Ibukun Faith Michael,Bashir Bolaji Tiamiyu,Ibrahim Akindeji Makinde,Chibuzo Carole Nweze,Mohammed Bourhia,Pravin Badhe,Soufyane Lafraxo,Gamal A. Shazly +13 more
TL;DR: This study employs cheminformatics to identify potential PfPK5 inhibitors from Nigerian plants, discovering marmesin, cryptolepinone, and lecanoric acid as promising candidates for novel antimalarial therapies targeting Plasmodium falciparum's protein kinase 5.
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