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Triplet-driven chemical reactivity of β-carotene and its biological implications

The endoperoxides of β-carotene (βCar-EPOs) are regarded as main products of the chemical deactivation of (1)O(2) by β-carotene, one of the most important antioxidants, following a concerted singlet-singlet reaction. Here we challenge this view by showing that βCar-EPOs are formed in the absence of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zbyradowski, Mateusz, Duda, Mariusz, Wisniewska-Becker, Anna, Heriyanto, Rajwa, Weronika, Fiedor, Joanna, Cvetkovic, Dragan, Pilch, Mariusz, Fiedor, Leszek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9072317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35513374
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-30095-z
Descripción
Sumario:The endoperoxides of β-carotene (βCar-EPOs) are regarded as main products of the chemical deactivation of (1)O(2) by β-carotene, one of the most important antioxidants, following a concerted singlet-singlet reaction. Here we challenge this view by showing that βCar-EPOs are formed in the absence of (1)O(2) in a non-concerted triplet-triplet reaction: (3)O(2) + (3)β-carotene → βCar-EPOs, in which (3)β-carotene manifests a strong biradical character. Thus, the reactivity of β-carotene towards oxygen is governed by its excited triplet state. βCar-EPOs, while being stable in the dark, are photochemically labile, and are a rare example of nonaromatic endoperoxides that release (1)O(2), again not in a concerted reaction. Their light-induced breakdown triggers an avalanche of free radicals, which accounts for the pro-oxidant activity of β-carotene and the puzzling swap from its anti- to pro-oxidant features. Furthermore, we show that βCar-EPOs, and carotenoids in general, weakly sensitize (1)O(2). These findings underlie the key role of the triplet state in determining the chemical and photophysical features of β-carotene. They shake up the prevailing models of carotenoid photophysics, the anti-oxidant functioning of β-carotene, and the role of (1)O(2) in chemical signaling in biological photosynthetic systems. βCar-EPOs and their degradation products are not markers of (1)O(2) and oxidative stress but of the overproduction of extremely hazardous chlorophyll triplets in photosystems. Hence, the chemical signaling of overexcitation of the photosynthetic apparatus is based on a (3)chlorophyll-(3)β-carotene relay, rather than on extremely short-lived (1)O(2).