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Antioxidant activity of NSAID hydroxamic acids. Acta pharmaceutica (Zagreb, Croatia) [Acta Pharm] Journal article

 
Končič MZ, Rajič Z, Petrič N, Zorc B 
Antioxidant activity of NSAID hydroxamic acids. [JOURNAL ARTICLE]
Acta Pharm 2009 Jun 1; 59(2):235-242.


In the present study, seven hydroxamic acid derivatives of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) (ibuprofen, fenoprofen, ketoprofen, indomethacin and diclofenac) were found to possess significant antioxidant, radical scavenging and metal chelating activities. The most active antioxidant and radical scavenger was N-methylhydroxamic acid of diclofenac (ANT = 88.0% and EC50 = 60.1 mug mL-1). The activity of the standard substance, butylated hydroxyanisole, in the two assays was ANT = 86.9% and EC50 = 18.8 mug mL-1, respectively. Ibuproxam was the strongest iron chelator among investigated hydroxamic acids (EC50 = 255.6 mug mL-1), yet significantly weaker than the standard substance, EDTA (EC50 = 29.1 mug mL-1). It seems that different mechanism is involved in metal chelating activity than in antioxidant and radical scavenging activity. Antioxidant and radical scavenging activities may be connected with conjugation of the nitrogen lone electron pair with the carbonyl group. On the other hand, more hydrophilic substances tend to be better iron chelators.



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