tellurium has been researched along with chlorobenzene* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for tellurium and chlorobenzene
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Antioxidant profile of ethoxyquin and some of its S, Se, and Te analogues.
6-(Ethylthio)-, 6-(ethylseleno)-, and 6-(ethyltelluro)-2,2,4-trimethyl-1,2-dihydroquinoline-three heavier chalcogen analogues of ethoxyquin-were prepared by dilithiation of the corresponding 6-bromodihydroquinoline followed either by treatment with the corresponding diethyl dichalcogenide (sulfur derivative) or by insertion of selenium/tellurium into the carbon-lithium bond, oxidation to a diaryl dichalcogenide, borohydride reduction, and finally alkylation of the resulting areneselenolate/arenetellurolate. Ethoxyquin, its heavier chalcogen analogues, and the corresponding 6-PhS, 6-PhSe, and 6-PhTe derivatives were assayed for both their chain-breaking antioxidative capacity and their ability to catalyze reduction of hydrogen peroxide in the presence of a stoichiometric amount of a thiol reducing agent (thiol peroxidase activity). Ethoxyquin itself turned out to be the best inhibitor of azo-initiated peroxidation of linoleic acid in a water/chlorobenzene two-phase system. In the absence of N-acetylcysteine as a coantioxidant in the aqueous phase, it inhibited peroxidation as efficiently as alpha-tocopherol but with a more than 2-fold longer inhibition time. In the presence of 0.25 mM coantioxidant in the aqueous phase, the inhibition time was further increased by almost a factor of 2. This is probably due to thiol-mediated regeneration of the active antioxidant across the lipid-aqueous interphase. The ethyltelluro analogue 1d of ethoxyquin was a similarly efficient quencher of peroxyl radicals compared to the parent in the two-phase system, but less regenerable. Ethoxyquin was found to inhibit azo-initiated oxidation of styrene in the homogeneous phase (chlorobenzene) almost as efficiently (kinh = (2.0 +/- 0.2) x 106 M-1 s-1) as alpha-tocopherol with a stoichiometric factor n = 2.2 +/- 0.1. At the end of the inhibition period, autoxidation was additionally retarded, probably by ethoxyquin nitroxide formed during the course of peroxidation. The N-H bond dissociation enthalpy of ethoxyquin (81.3 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol) was determined by a radical equilibration method using 2,6-dimethoxyphenol and 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methylphenol as equilibration partners. Among the investigated compounds, only the tellurium analogues 1d and, less efficiently, 1g had a capacity to catalyze reduction of hydrogen peroxide in the presence of thiophenol. Therefore, analogue 1d is the only antioxidant which is multifunctional (chain-breaking and preventive) in character and which can a Topics: Antioxidants; Catalysis; Chemistry, Organic; Chlorobenzenes; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Ethoxyquin; Kinetics; Linoleic Acid; Models, Chemical; Reducing Agents; Selenium; Sulfur; Tellurium; Time Factors; Water | 2007 |
Diaryl tellurides as inhibitors of lipid peroxidation in biological and chemical systems.
Diaryl tellurides carrying electron-donating substituents in the para positions were found to efficiently inhibit peroxidation of rat hepatocytes, rat liver microsomes and a chlorobenzene solution of phosphatidylcholine. The most active compound in the microsomal assay, bis(4-dimethylaminophenyl) telluride, showed an IC50-value of 30 nM. This compound also caused a dose-dependent delay of the onset of the linear phase of microsomal peroxidation stimulated by iron/ADP/ascorbate. The peak oxidation potentials of the diaryl tellurides (0.50-1.14 V in MeCN) correlated linearly with the IC50-values in this assay, with a point of inflection around 0.85 V. In the hepatocyte system, all compounds showed similar protective activity. It is proposed that diaryl tellurides exert an antioxidative effect by deactivating both peroxides and peroxyl radicals under the formation of telluroxides. These oxides may regenerate the active divalent organotellurides upon exposure to a suitable reducing agent. Topics: Animals; Chlorobenzenes; Free Radicals; Lipid Peroxidation; Liver; Male; Microsomes, Liver; Phosphatidylcholines; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Selenium; Tellurium | 1994 |