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1.IntroductionRecently, a lot of experimental studies have demonstrated that free radicals play an important role on various diseases in human beings.1 Free radicals are molecules that contain unpaired electrons.2 The unpaired electron is highly reactive. It can either cause oxidative damage to the molecules or be passed from one molecule to another so as to turn the recipient into a free radical. In the case of lipid peroxidation, there is a chain reaction that involves damage and passing of radicals.3 In general, cellular macromolecules, such as proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids, are vulnerable to free radical damage. For example, oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol by free radicals leads to atherosclerosis.4 Removal or neutralization of the free radicals can, therefore, protect against cardiovascular diseases. It has also been reported that free radicals might underlie the aging process itself because low caloric intake that reduces the generation of free radicals has been shown to increase the life span in C. elegans 5 and others.6 Most free radicals in biological systems are derivatives of oxygen that are usually referred to as reactive oxygen species (ROSs). They primarily are produced by mitochondria and their damage is mainly to mitochondrial membranes and mitochondrial DNA. Between 1 and 5% of the oxygen used by mitochondrial to generate adenosine triphosphate results in the formation of superoxide radicals. Although mitochondria are the major source of free radicals, there are numerous other sources. For example, free radicals are released from white blood cells (neutrophils) associated with inflammation. Neutrophils use oxidative free radicals (superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl) to kill intruding bacteria. The lysosomal enzyme—myeloperoxidase—catalyzes the production of bacteriocidal hypochlorite from hydrogen peroxide and chloride ions. Free radicals are also generated by eicosanoids from arachidonic acid during ischemia-reperfusion injuries. Air pollution, tobacco smoking, and ultraviolet irradiation can produce free radicals that cause oxidative damage to lungs, blood vessels, and other body tissues. On the other hand, antioxidants are molecules that can neutralize free radicals by accepting or donating an electron to eliminate the unpaired condition. Typically, this means that the antioxidant molecule becomes a free radical in the process of neutralizing another free radical molecule. However, the antioxidant molecule will be a much less reactive free radical than the free radical neutralized. The antioxidant molecule may be very large, thereby allowing it to dilute the unpaired electron; it may be readily neutralized by another antioxidant molecule; or it may have another mechanism for terminating its free radical condition. Recent studies have shown that high dietary intake of carotenoids tremendously lowers the risk of various diseases.1 Carotenoid molecules such as beta carotene and lycopene are powerful antioxidants that usually accumulated in the human body through consumption of fruits and vegetables. These molecules play the role of scavengers for free radicals,7 singlet oxygen,8, 9 and other harmful ROSs10 that are formed during the biological and chemical processes in the cell. Carotenoids also have great promise for use as inhibitors of various cancers and precancers.11, 12 An inverse relationship between beta carotene intake and the incidence of certain type of cancers, such as lung and gastrointestinal tract cancers, has been observed.13 Despite evidence of the effects of carotenoids on the health of human beings, no knowledge about their neutralization processes has been available. It becomes, therefore, very essential to unfold the neutralization processes of carotenoids on free radicals. In this paper, we report our spectroscopic findings of the energy transfer process during the neutralization of singlet oxygen by beta carotene and lycopene. Our experimental results demonstrate that during the neutralization of singlet oxygen by beta carotene, the excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred directly to the first excited electronic state of beta carotene; whereas, the excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred to the ground excited vibronic state of lycopene, implying that lycopene is capable of more efficiently neutralizing singlet oxygen than beta carotene. Therefore, our findings not only provide the first direct experimental elucidation of energy transfer processes in such important biological systems but also help explain why lycopene is a more potent antioxidant than beta carotene in the neutralization of singlet oxygen. 2.Methods and MaterialsThe experimental technique—ultrafast Raman spectroscopy employed in this work has been described in detail elsewhere. 14, 15, 16, 17 As shown in Fig. 1 , the output of the second harmonic generation of a mode-locked Ti-sapphire laser is used as both the excitation and probing sources in the case of pump-probe experiments. In the single beam (pump only) experiments, our experimental results represent an average over the duration of the pulse width of the laser. The laser can provide a continuous pulse train of in repetition rate, at photon wavelengths ranging from 350 to , having a pulse width of about and with average power of about . One advantage of probing with Raman spectroscopy is that the Raman scattering signal is present only when the probing photons are present; as a result, the time resolution in ultrafast Raman spectroscopy is limited only by the pulse duration of the laser and not by the response time of the detection system. In addition, Stokes processes can provide information on both the ground and excited states; whereas, anti-Stokes processes reflect the very existence of the excited states. The Raman signal is collected and analyzed by a standard computer-controlled Raman system that includes a double spectrometer, a photomultiplier tube, and associated photon counting electronics. All the experimental data were taken at and with a laser operating at a 390-nm wavelength. Beta carotene, lycopene, and porphyrin samples used in this study were purchased from Aldrich Co. 3.Results and DiscussionsThe dynamics of beta carotene have been studied extensively in the literature. 18, 19, 20, 21 As depicted in Fig. 2 , absorption of a photon having a wavelength around brings the beta carotene from the ground electronic state to the second excited electronic state (excitation to the first excited electronic state from the ground electronic state by photons is forbidden because of the selection rule). The excited state relaxes to state on a timescale of about . 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 The excited vibronic state associated with thermalizes to its ground vibronic state within .21 The transition then occurs within a few picoseconds with the stretching motion as the major accepting mode.22, 27, 28 The excited beta carotene relaxed to its ground state within about . A typical Raman spectrum for beta carotene taken by the ultrafast laser when only the pump pulse is present is shown in Fig. 3a (after a suitable subtraction of the luminescence background on the Stokes side). There are no observable structures found on the anti-Stokes side of the spectrum. This is because the first excited electronic state is populated by the pump pulse about after the pump excitation, but the pulse duration of the excitation laser is about . On the other hand, the three profound Raman lines on the Stokes side come from scattering of light by the rocking motion of , the stretching motion of , and the stretching motion of , respectively, all of which are associated with the ground electronic state of beta carotene.20 Figure 3b shows a typical Raman spectrum for beta carotene taken by the ultrafast laser in the pump-probe configuration in which the time delay between the pump and probe is about . We have found that on the Stokes side of the spectrum, in addition to those appearing in the single beam excitation of Fig. 3a, there is an additional feature at around that is attributed to the scattering of light by the stretching motion of associated with the first excited electronic state of beta carotene.21, 29 This unique feature will be used later to justify unambiguously the direct involvement of electronic state in the neutralization of singlet oxygen molecules by beta carotene. The small structures observed on the anti-Stokes side indicate that there are sizable excited vibronic states associated with both the and present during the probing. Figure 4 shows a schematic diagram of how the free radicals—singlet oxygen molecules—are produced in our experiment. Absorption of a near uv photon brings the photosensitizer molecule—porphyrin—into the excited state .30, 31, 32 The excited porphyrin then undergoes an intersystem crossing to a triplet state with energy of 110 to on the timescale of nanoseconds. From the triplet state, the energy is transferred to the nearby oxygen molecules by turning them from a triplet ground state into an excited singlet state with excitation energy of , which happens on the timescale of a few milliseconds. The presence of excited singlet oxygen molecules in solution is usually detected by their luminescence at around . Figure 5 shows a typical luminescence spectrum detected when the porphyrin in air-saturated toluene solution is excited by our laser pulses. Figure 6a shows a Raman spectrum for a mixture of beta carotene with porphyrin in toluene and under about air pressure, that is, without the presence of oxygen molecules, taken with the pump pulse present only. We notice that the spectrum is strikingly similar to Fig. 3a in which only beta carotene is present. However, as the solution in Fig. 6a is air-saturated, the Raman spectrum, which is shown in Fig. 6b, mimics that of Fig. 3b in which a delayed probe pulse is also present. Apparently, the addition of oxygen molecules in the mixture causes the presence of Stokes as well as anti-Stokes signal at around in Fig. 6b, which provides21, 29 unambiguous evidence that the first excited vibronic state of beta carotene is populated during the energy transfer processes. Comparison of the relative intensities of versus on the anti-Stokes side between Figs. 3b and 6b indicates that intramolecular vibrational redistributions do depend on the mechanism of generation. We note that because the energy transfer between the triplet state of porphyrin and the nearby oxygen molecule occurs on the timescale of milliseconds,32 while the repetition rate of our excitation or probing laser is , we are exciting or probing under a quasi-steady-state condition in our current experimental configuration. It is this quasi-steady-state condition that enables us to detect the transient and therefore the intermediate states of energy transfer processes with a single–laser beam experiment. We notice that the first excited vibronic state of beta carotene can be populated through the relaxation of higher excited states in beta carotene. However, this possible scenario is unlikely, because it involves simultaneous relaxation of three or more singlet oxygen molecules. Another possible energy transfer pathway is that the excitation energy of singlet oxygen transfers partly to the vibronic states associated with the ground electronic state of beta carotene and partly to that associated with the first excited state . This is not possible considering the fact that in Fig. 6b nonequilibrium stretching mode is observed and its occupation number has been found to be about the same as that of and much larger than that of stretching modes. On the other hand, these experimental observations are consistent with what one would expect under the quasi-steady-state conditions when the excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred directly to the state. Therefore, the presence of Stokes as well as anti-Stokes Raman lines coming from the scattering of light by the stretching motion of at around 1800 and seen in Fig. 6b, provides concrete evidence that during the neutralization of singlet oxygen by beta carotene, the excitation energy of singlet oxygen molecules transfers primarily to the excited vibronic states associated with the first excited electronic state of beta carotene. As shown in Fig. 7 , because the energy difference between the and states of beta carotene is about ,33 in order for such an energy transfer to occur while conserving the energy, two singlet oxygen molecules (each of them has excess energy of about ) must be simultaneously losing their energy by relaxing to their ground triplet states with the excitation of a beta carotene molecule to its first excited vibronic state associated with . Figure 8 shows a Raman spectrum for a mixture of lycopene with porphyrin in air-saturated toluene solution, taken with the pump pulse present only. All the experimental parameters are kept the same except that beta carotene has been replaced by lycopene. The intriguing feature of this spectrum, when compared with Fig. 6b in which beta carotene is used, is the disappearance of structures on both Stokes and anti-Stokes sides. This observation provides direct evidence that the first excited state in lycopene is not involved in the energy transfer processes. On the other hand, a relatively large occupation number is detected for the stretching mode associated with the ground electronic state , suggesting that the excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred primarily to the ground excited vibronic state of lycopene. We notice that the full width at half maximum (FWHM) for Raman signals associated with is significantly wider for lycopene (Fig. 8) than for beta carotene [Fig. 6b]. This is because under the quasi-steady-state condition, significantly more higher vibronic modes are populated in lycopene (up to ) than in beta carotene . In addition, the peak has been found to be redshifted, as a result of the effect of anharmonicity of the vibrational mode. A proposed energy transfer process for a lycopene–single oxygen system based on our experimental results is depicted in Fig. 9 . Because an energy transfer process involving simultaneous deexcitation of two singlet oxygen molecules is much less likely than a process involving a single one, our findings provide a possible answer to the following question: Why is lycopene a more potent antioxidant than beta carotene in the neutralization of singlet oxygen?34, 35 We now address why beta carotene can be excited by a pair of singlet oxygen molecules, whereas lycopene can be excited by a singlet oxygen molecule. One likely explanation is that the pair of beta-ionone rings attached to both ends of beta carotene may be relevant, because it is known that their double bonds can be oxidized to form epoxides, see for example the case of the violaxanthin cycle. Another possible explanation is that when a pair of 1 fragments is formed in a beta carotene molecule by energy transfer from two , the 2 state of the beta carotene can be formed by fusion, because 1 in symmetry.36 4.ConclusionWe have studied energy transfer processes in the beta carotene–singlet oxygen and lycopene–singlet oxygen systems by using ultrafast Raman spectroscopy. Our experimental results provide concrete evidence that excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred primarily to the first excited electronic vibronic state of beta carotene, suggesting that the neutralization process involves simultaneous relaxation of two singlet oxygen molecules. On the other hand, the excitation energy of singlet oxygen is transferred primarily to the ground excited vibronic state of lycopene. These experimental results indicate that lycopene is capable of more efficiently neutralizing singlet oxygen than that of beta carotene. Therefore, our findings not only provide the first direct experimental elucidation of energy transfer processes in such important biological systems but also help explain why lycopene is a more potent antioxidant than beta carotene in the neutralization of singlet oxygen. AcknowledgmentsThis work is supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-0305147 and by Department of Defense Research Area Directorate II Science and Technology Objective C. 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