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Dive into the research topics where Adilson A. Freitas is active.

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Featured researches published by Adilson A. Freitas.


Pure and Applied Chemistry | 2009

Photochemistry of anthocyanins and their biological role in plant tissues

Frank H. Quina; Paulo F. Moreira; Carolina Vautier-Giongo; Daniel Rettori; Rita Rodrigues; Adilson A. Freitas; Palmira F. Silva; António L. Maçanita

Anthocyanins, the major red, purple, and blue pigments of plants, absorb visible as well as UV radiation and are effective antioxidants and scavengers of active oxygen species. In plant leaves, one of the functional roles proposed for anthocyanins is protection of the photosynthetic apparatus from the effects of excess incident visible or UV-B radiation and photooxidative stress. In essence, a photoprotective role requires that the excited singlet states of both complexed and uncomplexed anthocyanins deactivate back to the ground state so quickly that intersystem crossing, photoreaction, and diffusion-controlled quenching processes cannot compete. Studies of the photochemical properties of synthetic analogs of anthocyanins and of several naturally occurring anthocyanins show that this is indeed the case, uncomplexed anthocyanins decaying back to the ground state via fast (subnanosecond) excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) and anthocyanin-copigment complexes by fast (subpicosecond) charge-transfer-mediated internal conversion.


Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2007

A computational study of substituted flavylium salts and their quinonoidal conjugate-bases: S0 -> S1 electronic transition, absolute pKa and reduction potential calculations by DFT and semiempirical methods

Adilson A. Freitas; Karina Shimizu; Luís G. Dias; Frank H. Quina

The electronic transitions for flavylium cations and quinonoidal bases of 17 substituted flavylium salts have been studied at semiempirical and DFT (density functional theory) levels. Solvent effect on electronic spectra was included by Polarizable Continuum Model, PCM. We assigned longest-wavelength absorption maxima to HOMO ® LUMO transition. Both levels of theory gave good results for electronic transitions of flavylium cations whereas only TDDFT-PCM calculations could be used for electronic transitions of their quinonoidal bases. We also performed absolute pKa calculations of nine flavylium salts at DFT level. The pKa calculated values by our PCM parameterization gave excellent results with mean absolute deviation less than a half of one pKa unit. One-electron reduction potentials were carried out for 5 flavylium cations at DFT level. The theoretical results found were in good agreement with experimental values after adjustment for a systematic deviation.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Ultrafast Internal Conversion in a Model Anthocyanin–Polyphenol Complex: Implications for the Biological Role of Anthocyanins in Vegetative Tissues of Plants

Rita Rodrigues; Palmira Ferreira da Silva; Karina Shimizu; Adilson A. Freitas; Sergey A. Kovalenko; Nikolaus P. Ernsting; Frank H. Quina; António L. Maçanita

The red flavylium cations of anthocyanins form ground-state charge-transfer complexes with several naturally occurring electron-donor copigments, such as hydroxylated flavones and hydroxycinnamic or benzoic acids. Excitation of the 7-methoxy-4-methyl-flavylium-protocatechuic acid complex results in ultrafast (240 fs) internal conversion to the ground state of the complex by way of a low-lying charge-transfer state. Thus, both uncomplexed anthocyanins, whose excited state decays by fast (5-20 ps) excited-state proton transfer, and anthocyanin-copigment complexes have highly efficient mechanisms of deactivation that are consistent with the proposed protective role of anthocyanins against excess solar radiation in the vegetative tissues of plants.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015

Structural and aggregate analyses of (Li salt + glyme) mixtures: the complex nature of solvate ionic liquids.

Karina Shimizu; Adilson A. Freitas; Rob Atkin; Gregory G. Warr; Paul A. FitzGerald; Hiroyuki Doi; Soshi Saito; Kazuhide Ueno; Yasuhiro Umebayashi; Masayoshi Watanabe; José N. Canongia Lopes

The structure and interactions of different (Li salt + glyme) mixtures, namely equimolar mixtures of lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide, nitrate or trifluoroacetate salts combined with either triglyme or tetraglyme molecules, are probed using Molecular Dynamics simulations. structure factor functions, calculated from the MD trajectories, confirmed the presence of different amounts of lithium-glyme solvates in the aforementioned systems. The MD results are corroborated by S(q) functions derived from diffraction and scattering data (HEXRD and SAXS/WAXS). The competition between the glyme molecules and the salt anions for the coordination to the lithium cations is quantified by comprehensive aggregate analyses. Lithium-glyme solvates are dominant in the lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide systems and much less so in systems based on the other two salts. The aggregation studies also emphasize the existence of complex coordination patterns between the different species (cations, anions, glyme molecules) present in the studied fluid media. The analysis of such complex behavior is extended to the conformational landscape of the anions and glyme molecules and to the dynamics (solvate diffusion) of the bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide plus triglyme system.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2010

Polymeric scaffolds for enhanced stability of melanin incorporated in liposomes

Marli L. Moraes; Paulo J. Gomes; Paulo A. Ribeiro; Pedro Vieira; Adilson A. Freitas; Ralf Köhler; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; M. Manuela M. Raposo

The use of melanin in bioinspired applications is mostly limited by its poor stability in solid films. This problem has been addressed here by incorporating melanin into dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl glycerol (DPPG) liposomes, which were then immobilized onto a solid substrate as an LbL film. Results from steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence indicated an increased stability for melanin incorporated into DPPG liposomes. If not protected by liposomes, melanin looses completely its fluorescence properties in LbL films. The thickness of the liposome-melanin layer obtained from neutron reflectivity data was 4.1+/-0.2 nm, consistent with the value estimated for the phospholipid bilayer of the liposomes, an evidence of the collapse of most liposomes. On the other hand, the final roughness indicated that some of the liposomes had their structure preserved. In summary, liposomes were proven excellent for encapsulation, thus providing a suitable environment, closer to the physiological conditions without using organic solvents or high pHs.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Picosecond Dynamics of Proton Transfer of a 7-Hydroxyflavylium Salt in Aqueous–Organic Solvent Mixtures

Adilson A. Freitas; Frank H. Quina; António L. Maçanita

The intermediacy of the geminate base-proton pair (A*···H(+)) in excited-state proton-transfer (ESPT) reactions (two-step mechanism) has been investigated employing the synthetic flavylium salt 7-hydroxy-4-methyl-flavylium chloride (HMF). In aqueous solution, the ESPT mechanism involves solely the excited acid AH(+)* and base A* forms of HMF as indicated by the fluorescence spectra and double-exponential fluorescence decays (two species, two decay times). However, upon addition of either 1,4-dioxane or 1,2-propylene glycol, the decays become triple-exponential with a term consistent with the presence of the geminate base-proton pair A*···H(+). The geminate pair becomes detectable because of the increase in the recombination rate constant, k(rec), of (A*···H(+)) with increasing the mole fraction of added organic cosolvent. Because the two-step ESPT mechanism splits the intrinsic prototropic reaction rates (deprotonation of AH(+)*, k(d), and recombination, k(rec), of A*···H(+)) from the diffusion controlled rates (dissociation, k(diss), and formation, k(diff)[H(+)], of A*···H(+)), the experimental detection of the geminate pair provides a wealth of information on the proton-transfer reaction (k(d) and k(rec)) as well as on proton diffusion/migration (k(diss) and k(diff)).


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Femtosecond and Temperature-Dependent Picosecond Dynamics of Ultrafast Excited-State Proton Transfer in Water–Dioxane Mixtures

Adilson A. Freitas; Frank H. Quina; António L. Maçanita

Synthetic flavylium salts like the 7-hydroxy-4-methylflavylium (HMF) cation have been used as prototypes to study the chemistry and photochemistry of anthocyanins, the major group of water-soluble pigments in the plant kingdom. In this work, a combination of fluorescence upconversion with femtosecond time resolution and time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) with picosecond time resolution have been employed to investigate in details the excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) of HMF in water and in binary water/1,4-dioxane mixtures. TCSPC measurements as a function of temperature provide activation parameters for all of the individual rate constants involved in the proton transfer, including those for dissociation and recombination of the geminate excited base-proton pair (A*···H(+)) that can be detected in the water/dioxane mixtures (but not in water). Unlike the other rate constants, the deprotonation rate constant kd shows a non-Arrhenius dependence on temperature in both water and water/dioxane mixtures. At low temperatures kd is close to the dielectric relaxation rate of the solvent with a barrier of ca. 8 kJ mol(-1), suggesting that the solvent reorganization is the rate-limiting step. At higher temperatures (>30 °C) the proton transfer process is nearly barrierless and solvent-dependent. Fluorescence upconversion results in H2O, D2O, and water/dioxane mixtures confirm the two-step model for the ESPT of HMF and provide additional details of the early events prior to the onset of proton transfer, attributed to conformational relaxation and solvent reaccommodation around the initially formed excited state. The results are consistent with DFT calculations that indicate that charge redistribution occurs after rather than prior to the onset of the ESPT process.


Food Chemistry | 2015

Effect of water content on the acid–base equilibrium of cyanidin-3-glucoside

Isabel B. Coutinho; Adilson A. Freitas; António L. Maçanita; João C. Lima

Laser Flash Photolysis was employed to measure the deprotonation and reprotonation rate constants of cyanidin 3-monoglucoside (kuromanin) in water/methanol mixtures. It was found that the deprotonation rate constant kd decreases with decreasing water content, reflecting the lack of free water molecules around kuromanin, which may accommodate and stabilize the outgoing protons. On the other hand, the reprotonation rate constant, kp, increases with the decrease in water concentration from a value of kp = 2 × 10(10) l mol(-1) s(-1) in water up to kp = 6 × 10(10) l mol(-1) s(-1) at 5.6M water concentration in the mixture. The higher value of kp at lower water concentrations reflects the fact that the proton is not freely escaping the solvation shell of the molecule. The deprotonation rate constant decreases with decreasing water content, reflecting the lack of free water molecules around kuromanin that can accommodate the outgoing protons. Overall, the acidity constant of the flavylium cation decreases with the decrease in water concentration from pKa values of 3.8 in water to approximately 4.8 in water-depleted media, thus shifting the equilibrium towards the red-coloured form, AH(+), at low water contents. The presence, or lack, of water, will affect the colour shade (red to blue) of kuromanin. This is relevant for its role as an intrinsic food component and as a food pigment additive (E163).


Pure and Applied Chemistry | 2017

From vine to wine: photophysics of a pyranoflavylium analog of red wine pyranoanthocyanins

Adilson A. Freitas; Cássio P. da Silva; Gustavo Monteiro Silva; António L. Maçanita; Frank H. Quina

Abstract In the ground state, the p-methoxyphenyl-substituted pyranoflavylium cation I, prepared by the reaction of the 5,7-dihydroxy-4-methylflavylium cation with p-methoxybenzaldehyde, is a weak acid (pKa=3.7±0.1). In its lowest excited singlet state, I is a moderate photoacid (pKa*=0.67) in 30% methanol-water acidified with trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). In comparison to anthocyanins and 7-hydroxyflavylium cations, the photoacidity of I is much less pronounced and the rate of proton loss from the excited acid form of I much slower (by a factor of up to 100). In 50% ethanol:0.10 mol dm−3 HClO4, the excited state of the acid form of I undergoes fast (12 ps) initial relaxation (potentially in the direction of an intramolecular charge transfer state), followed by much slower (340 ps) adiabatic deprotonation to form the excited base. The excited base in turn exhibits a moderately fast relaxation (70 ps), consistent with solvent hydrogen-bond reorganization times, followed by slower but efficient decay (1240 ps) back to the ground state. As in uncomplexed anthocyanins and 7-hydroxyflavylium cations, the photophysical behavior of I points to excited state proton transfer as the dominant excited state deactivation pathway of pyranoanthocyanins, consistent with relatively good photostability of natural pyranoanthocyanins.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2018

Ground- and Excited-State Acidity of Analogs of Red Wine Pyranoanthocyanins,

Adilson A. Freitas; Cássio P. da Silva; Gustavo Monteiro Silva; António L. Maçanita; Frank H. Quina

Pyranoflavylium cations are synthetic analogs containing the same basic chromophore as the pyranoanthocyanins that form in red wine during maturation and are responsible for its final color. Determination of the ground‐ and excited‐state acidities for a series of eight substituted hydroxy pyranoflavylium cations shows that they are weak acids in the ground state (pKa ranging from 3.4 to 4.4 in aqueous buffer solution), but substantially more acidic in the first excited singlet state (pKa* ranging from ca. 0.2 to 0.7 in 30% methanol–water). Unlike the ground‐state acidities, which show no obvious trend with electronic effects of the substituents, the excited‐state pKa* values correlate well with Hammett sigma parameters for the substituents on the pyranoflavylium chromophore. This difference in the transmission of electronic effects between ground and excited state is reflected in the localization of the HOMO of the cation and conjugate base in distinct regions of the chromophore as compared to delocalization of the LUMO over the entire molecule. The current results provide further support for the conclusion that excited‐state proton transfer is the dominant deactivation pathway for the pyranoflavylium cation excited singlet state in aqueous or aqueous‐organic media and presumably for pyranoanthocyanins as well.

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Frank H. Quina

University of São Paulo

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António L. Maçanita

Technical University of Lisbon

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João C. Lima

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Karina Shimizu

University of São Paulo

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Karina Shimizu

University of São Paulo

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