Intrinsic antioxidant potential of the aminoindole structure. A computational kinetics study of tryptamine
Fecha
2018Autor
Bentz, Erika Natalia
Lobayan de Bonczok, Rosana María
Martínez, Henar
Redondo, Pilar
Largo,Antonio
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
A computational kinetics study of the antioxidant activity of tryptamine toward HO* and HOO* radicals in water at 298 K has been carried out. Density
functional methods have been employed for the quantum chemical calculations and conventional transition state theory was used for rate constants evaluation.
Different mechanisms have been considered: radical adduct formation (RAF), single electron transfer (SET), and hydrogen atom transfer (HAT). For the
reaction of tryptamine with the hydroxyl radical nearly all channels are diffusion controlled, and the overall rate constant is very high, 6.29 x 1010 M-1 s-1.The
RAF mechanism has a branching ratio of 55%, followed by the HAT mechanism (31%), whereas the SET mechanism accounts just for 13% of the products.
The less hindered carbon atom neighbor to the nitrogen of the indole ring seems to be the preferred site for the RAF mechanism, with a branching ratio of
16%. The overall rate constant for the reaction of tryptamine with the HOO● radical is 3.71 x 104 M-1 s-1, suggesting that it could be a competitive process with
other reactions of hydroperoxyl radicals in biological environments. For this reaction only the HAT mechanism seems viable. Furthermore, only two centers
may contribute to the HAT mechanism, the nitrogen atom of the indole ring and a carbon atom of the aminoethyl chain, the former accounting for more than
91% of the total products. Our results suggest that tryptamine could have a noticeable scavenging activity toward radicals, and that this activity is mainly
related to the nitrogen atom of the indole ring thus showing the relevance of their behavior in the study of aminoindoles.
Colecciones
- Artículos de revista [853]










