Astaxanthin has excellent antioxidant properties and is widely used in food supplements. It has many isomers and their physical and chemical properties are also different. The team has been carrying out work on the source of astaxanthin, properties and functions for years. In this study, they tried a spectroscopic method to investigate the antioxidant activity of isomers of astaxanthin against singlet oxygen (1O2). Singlet oxygen is a kind of reactive oxygen species (ROS) with long life and strong oxidation capacity. In the past, studies on the antioxidant activity of astaxanthin did not specifically distinguish the active oxygen species and generally ignored the difference in antioxidant activity of astaxanthin’s isomers.
Based on previous research, scientists used methylene blue (MB) as a photosensitizer to generate 1O2, and used probe 1, 3-diphenyliso-benzofuran (DPBF) to detect 1O2 in the solution. The singlet oxygen quenching capacities of astaxanthin isomers were evaluated by comparing the absorption changes of DPBF at 410 nm under different astaxanthin treatment, and the quenching constants of astaxanthin isomers were compared with that of vitamin E.
The study found that the singlet oxygen quenching constant of astaxanthin was 3 orders of magnitude different from that of vitamin E. The 1O2 quenching capacities of the optical isomers of astaxanthin are almost identical in extracellular experiments. For the cis-trans geometric isomers of astaxanthin, the 1O2 quenching capacity of cis-astaxanthin was significantly higher than that of all-trans astaxanthin.
It offered a simple and facile spectroscopic method to assess the antioxidant activity of different forms of astaxanthin against singlet oxygen and reveals significant differences between geometric isomers, which provided a new basis for the practical application of astaxanthin in the food industry and the development of future biological functions.
Study finds differences in antioxidant activities of astaxanthin isomers