Twenty years ago, Porter et al. (J. Agric. Food Chem. 1989, 37, 615 - 624) put forward the polar paradox stating among others that apolar antioxidants are more active in emulsified media than their polar homologues. However, some recent results showing that not all antioxidants behave in the manner proposed by this hypothesis led us to investigate the relationship between antioxidant property and hydrophobicity. With a complete homologous series of chlorogenic acid esters (methyl, butyl, octyl, dodecyl, hexadecyl, octadecyl, and eicosyl), we observed in emulsified medium that antioxidant capacity increases as the alkyl chain is lengthened, with a threshold for the dodecyl chain, after which further chain extension leads to a drastic decrease in antioxidant capacity. The antioxidant capacity evaluation in emulsion was possible using a newly developed conjugated autoxidizable triene (CAT) assay, which allows the assessment of both hydrophilic and lipophilic antioxidants. The nonlinear behavior was mainly explained in terms of antioxidant location since it was found from partition analysis that the dodecyl ester presented the lowest concentration in the aqueous phase and also that the quantity of emulsifier drastically changes the partition of antioxidant. In addition, this nonlinear influence was connected to the so-called cutoff effect largely observed in studies using cultured cells. Taken together, these different results allow one to make the proposal of a new scenario of the behavior of phenolic compounds in emulsified systems with special emphasis on the micellization process. Finally, in the CAT system, the polar paradox appeared to be the particular case of a far more global nonlinear effect that was observed here.
The polar paradox predicts that hydrophobic antioxidants are more active in emulsions than their hydrophilic homologues, thus assuming a linear dependency between hydrophobicity and antioxidant capacity. In contrast, we formulate in this paper an alternative hypothesis assuming a possible nonlinear dependency. To verify this so-called "nonlinear hypothesis", the antioxidant capacity of a homologous series of rosmarinic acid and its alkyl esters (methyl, butyl, octyl, dodecyl, hexadecyl, octadecyl, and eicosyl) was evaluated using a newly developed conjugated autoxidizable triene (CAT) assay. It appeared that the antioxidant capacity increases as the alkyl chain is lengthened, with a maximum for the octyl chain, after which further chain extension leads to a collapse in antioxidant capacity. This nonlinear effect was discussed in relation to the "cutoff effect" generally observed in studies using cultured cells. This new hypothesis may provide a better understanding of the antioxidant behavior of phenolics in emulsion which is a key to develop new antioxidant strategies to protect lipid substrates from oxidation. Moreover, the lipophilization with medium chain appeared as a promising way to enhance the antioxidant capacity of phenolics since octyl rosmarinate was three times more effective than rosmarinic acid which is already one of the most powerful known phenolic antioxidant. Finally, this work paves the way for systematic investigation of the chain length effect to design new "phenolipids" in a rational fashion.
The hydrophobation of rosmarinic acid with saturated aliphatic primary alcohols of various chain lengths (methanol to eicosanol) was achieved via an acidcatalyzed esterification in the presence of a highly acidic sulfonic resin. The resulting alkyl rosmarinates were isolated, characterized and their global free radical scavenging activity was determined by the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl method in the stationary state. Only the dodecyl ester showed a stronger activity than rosmarinic acid.
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