Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1932990 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010 | 5 Pages |
In antioxidant competition assays, an antioxidant (A) and a detector compound (D) compete for a reactive species (R). In the evaluation of these assays, it is tacitly assumed that all of R is captured by either D or A. Due to the – by definition – high reactivity of R, unspecific reactions of R are likely to occur and neglecting these reactions will result in a systematic underestimation of antioxidant activity. It was shown that in the standard hydroxyl radical scavenging assay this was indeed the case; the inaccurate mathematical evaluation resulted in an underestimation of antioxidant activity of 25% in this competition assay. The systematic underestimation of antioxidant activity can be prevented by using an adjusted Stern–Volmer equation that takes into account that only part of R is captured by D or A.