Apak Resat, Güçlü Kubilay, Ozyürek Mustafa, Karademir Saliha Esin
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Istanbul University, Avcilar 34320, Turkey.
J Agric Food Chem. 2004 Dec 29;52(26):7970-81. doi: 10.1021/jf048741x.
The chemical diversity of antioxidants makes it difficult to separate and quantify antioxidants from the vegetable matrix. Therefore, it is desirable to establish a method that can measure the total antioxidant activity level directly from vegetable extracts. The current literature clearly states that there is no "total antioxidant" as a nutritional index available for food labeling because of the lack of standard quantitation methods. Thus, this work reports the development of a simple, widely applicable antioxidant capacity index for dietary polyphenols and vitamins C and E, utilizing the copper(II)-neocuproine [Cu(II)-Nc] reagent as the chromogenic oxidizing agent. Because the copper(II) (or cupric) ion reducing ability of polyphenols is measured, the method is named by our research group "cupric reducing antioxidant capacity" abbreviated as the CUPRAC method. This method should be advantageous over the ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) method because the redox chemistry of copper(II)-as opposed to that of ferric ion-involves faster kinetics. The method comprises mixing of the antioxidant solution (directly or after acid hydrolysis) with a copper(II) chloride solution, a neocuproine alcoholic solution, and an ammonium acetate aqueous buffer at pH 7 and subsequent measurement of the developed absorbance at 450 nm after 30 min. Because the color development is fast for compounds such as ascorbic acid, gallic acid, and quercetin but slow for naringin and naringenin, the latter compounds were assayed after incubation at 50 degrees C on a water bath for 20 min [after Cu(II)-Nc reagent addition] so as to force the oxidation reaction to reach completion. The flavonoid glycosides were hydrolyzed to their corresponding aglycons by refluxing in 1.2 M HCl-containing 50% MeOH so as to exert maximal reducing power toward Cu(II)-Nc. Certain compounds also needed incubation after acid hydrolysis to fully exhibit their reducing capability. The CUPRAC antioxidant capacities of synthetic mixtures of antioxidants were experimentally measured as Trolox equivalents and compared to those theoretically found by making use of the principle of additivity of absorbances assuming no chemical interaction between the mixture constituents. Because ascorbic acid is not resistant to elevated temperature incubation, it should be assayed initially by measuring the absorbance (at 450 nm) difference of original and ascorbate oxidase-added mixture solutions at the end of 1 min of Cu(II)-Nc reagent addition. Thus, the total CUPRAC antioxidant capacity of a mixture containing various antioxidants should be that finally measured after a suitable combination of hydrolysis and incubation procedures, added to the initially measured capacity due to ascorbate. The antioxidant polyphenolic compounds tested demonstrate that the highest capacities in the CUPRAC method were observed for epicatechin gallate, epigallocatechin gallate, quercetin, fisetin, epigallocatechin, catechin, and caffeic acid in this order, in accordance with theoretical expectations, because the number and position of the hydroxyl groups as well as the degree of conjugation of the whole molecule are important. The antioxidant potency of flavonoids is nearly proportional to the total number of -OH groups and is positively affected by the presence of an o-dihydroxy moiety in the B-ring. beta-Carotene, which did not react with the CUPRAC reagent in alcoholic aqueous medium, could be assayed in dichloromethane solvent. Linear calibration curves for ascorbic acid and flavonoids were redrawn in synthetic solutions containing a mixture of antioxidants, and also in real matrices such as grape and orange juices, green tea, and blackberry tea, showing an initial nonzero absorbance with the CUPRAC reagent. The parallellism of the linear calibration curves of pure compounds in a given complex matrix effectively demonstrated that there were no interferent chemical interactions among the solution constituents and that the antioxidant capacities of the tested antioxidants were additive. The CUPRAC reagent is reasonably selective, stable, easily accessible, and sensitive toward thiol-type oxidants, unlike the FRAP method. The reaction is carried out at nearly physiological pH as opposed to the unrealistic acidic pH of FRAP.
抗氧化剂的化学多样性使得从植物基质中分离和定量抗氧化剂变得困难。因此,需要建立一种能够直接从植物提取物中测量总抗氧化活性水平的方法。当前文献明确指出,由于缺乏标准定量方法,不存在可用于食品标签的“总抗氧化剂”营养指标。因此,本研究报告了一种简单、广泛适用的膳食多酚以及维生素C和E的抗氧化能力指数的开发方法,该方法利用铜(II)-新亚铜试剂[Cu(II)-Nc]作为显色氧化剂。由于该方法测量的是多酚的铜(II)(或二价铜)离子还原能力,因此我们的研究小组将其命名为“铜还原抗氧化能力”,简称为CUPRAC方法。该方法应优于铁还原抗氧化能力(FRAP)方法,因为与铁离子相比,铜(II)的氧化还原化学涉及更快的动力学。该方法包括将抗氧化剂溶液(直接或酸水解后)与氯化铜溶液、新亚铜醇溶液和pH为7的醋酸铵水溶液缓冲液混合,然后在30分钟后测量在450nm处产生的吸光度。由于抗坏血酸、没食子酸和槲皮素等化合物显色快,而柚皮苷和柚皮素显色慢,因此后两种化合物在50℃水浴中孵育20分钟(加入Cu(II)-Nc试剂后)进行测定,以使氧化反应完全进行。黄酮苷通过在含50%甲醇的1.2M HCl中回流水解为相应的苷元,以对Cu(II)-Nc发挥最大还原能力。某些化合物在酸水解后也需要孵育以充分展现其还原能力。通过实验测定抗氧化剂合成混合物的CUPRAC抗氧化能力,并以Trolox当量表示,然后与利用吸光度加和原理理论计算得到的值进行比较,前提是假设混合物成分之间不存在化学相互作用。由于抗坏血酸不耐高温孵育,应在加入Cu(II)-Nc试剂1分钟后,通过测量原始溶液和添加抗坏血酸氧化酶的混合溶液在450nm处的吸光度差值来进行初始测定。因此,含有各种抗氧化剂的混合物的总CUPRAC抗氧化能力应是在适当的水解和孵育程序组合后最终测量的值,再加上最初测定的抗坏血酸的能力值。所测试的抗氧化多酚化合物表明,在CUPRAC方法中,表儿茶素没食子酸酯、表没食子儿茶素没食子酸酯、槲皮素、漆黄素、表没食子儿茶素、儿茶素和咖啡酸的抗氧化能力依次最高,这与理论预期一致,因为羟基的数量和位置以及整个分子的共轭程度很重要。黄酮类化合物的抗氧化能力几乎与-OH基团的总数成正比,并且受到B环中邻二羟基部分的存在的积极影响。β-胡萝卜素在醇水介质中不与CUPRAC试剂反应,可以在二氯甲烷溶剂中进行测定。在含有抗氧化剂混合物的合成溶液以及葡萄汁、橙汁、绿茶和黑莓茶等实际基质中重新绘制了抗坏血酸和黄酮类化合物的线性校准曲线,结果显示使用CUPRAC试剂时初始吸光度非零。给定复杂基质中纯化合物线性校准曲线的平行性有效地证明了溶液成分之间不存在干扰性化学相互作用,并且所测试的抗氧化剂的抗氧化能力是可加和的。与FRAP方法不同,CUPRAC试剂具有合理的选择性、稳定性,易于获取,并且对硫醇型氧化剂敏感。该反应在接近生理pH下进行,而不是FRAP方法中不切实际的酸性pH。