(S)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-2,3-dihydro-5,7-dihydroxy-4-benzopyrone

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CAS: 552-58-9
MF: C15H12O6
MW: 288.25218
Synonyms: (S)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-2,3-dihydro-5,7-dihydroxy-4-benzopyrone

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XinYu Jiang

Central South University
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ShuYun Shi

Central South University
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Martha M. Vestling

University of Wisconsin–Madison
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Michael L. Gross

Washington University in St. Louis
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Co-reporter: Tingting Tu, Daryl Giblin, and Michael L. Gross
pp: 1527
Publication Date(Web):July 1, 2011
DOI: 10.1021/tx200140s
Although many phenols and catechols found as polyphenol natural products are antioxidants and have putative disease-preventive properties, others have deleterious health effects. One possible route to toxicity is the bioactivation of the phenolic function to quinones that are electrophilic, redox-agents capable of modifying DNA and proteins. The structure-property relationships of biologically important quinones and their precursors may help understand the balance between their health benefits and risks. We describe a mass-spectrometry-based study of four quinones produced by oxidizing flavanones and flavones. Those with a C2–C3 double bond on ring C of the flavonoid stabilize by delocalization of an incipient positive charge from protonation and render the protonated quinone particularly susceptible to nucleophilic attack. We hypothesize that the absence of this double bond is one specific structural determinant that is responsible for the ability of quinones to modify biological macromolecules. Those quinones containing a C2–C3 single bond have relatively higher aqueous stability and longer half-lives than those with a double bond at the same position; the latter have short half-lives at or below ∼1 s. Quinones with a C2–C3 double bond show little ability to depurinate DNA because they are rapidly hydrated to unreactive species. Molecular-orbital calculations support that quinone hydration by a highly structure-dependent mechanism accounts for their chemical properties. The evidence taken together support a hypothesis that those flavonoids and related natural products that undergo oxidation to quinones and are then rapidly hydrated are unlikely to damage important biological macromolecules.

Anne Hanneken

Scripps Research Institute
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Yan Li

Northwest University
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JunPing Kou

China Pharmaceutical University
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Ping Li

China Pharmaceutical University
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Hui-Jun Li

Key Laboratory of Modern Chinese Medicines (China Pharmaceutical University)
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De-An Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences
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