4.6 Article

Expanding the spectrum of polydopamine antioxidant activity by nitroxide conjugation

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 9, Issue 48, Pages 9980-9988

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1tb02154k

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Funding

  1. ENI SpA
  2. Fondazione CarisBo [18668]

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Polydopamine (PDA) nanoparticles have been studied for their antioxidant activity, with purified PDA unable to quench alkylperoxyls while copolymerized PDA nanoparticles show good antioxidant activity. Theoretical calculations suggest that PDA has an onion-like structure, with a catechol-rich core and a quinone-represented surface.
Polydopamine (PDA) materials are important due to their unique physicochemical properties and their potential as chemopreventive agents for diseases connected with oxidative stress. Although PDA has been suggested to display antioxidant activity, its efficacy is controversial and its mechanism of action is still unclear. Herein, we report that accurately purified PDA nanoparticles in water at pH 7.4 are unable to quench alkylperoxyls (ROO), which are the radicals responsible for the propagation of lipid peroxidation, despite PDA reacting with the model DPPH and ABTS(+) radicals. PDA nanoparticles prepared by copolymerization of dopamine with the dialkyl nitroxide 4-NH2TEMPO show instead good antioxidant activity, thanks to the ROO trapping ability of the nitroxide. Theoretical calculations performed on a quinone-catechol dimer, reproducing the structural motive of PDA, indicate a reactivity with ROO similar to catechol. These results suggest that PDA nanoparticles have an onion-like structure, with a catechol-rich core, which can be reached only by DPPH and ABTS(+), and a surface mainly represented by quinones. The importance of assessing the antioxidant activity by inhibited autoxidation studies is also discussed.

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