Abstract:
Carminic acid, an anthraquinone, is the main component of cochineal dye, an intensely
red substance obtained from the cochineal insect (Dactyloppius coccus Costa) grown on
the prickly pear cactus (Nopalea and Opuntia). Carminic acid possesses antioxidant,
antibiotic and antitumor properties. This study aimed to explore solvent microscopic
environment effect on the bioactivity of carminic acid. The absorption and fluorescence
emission spectra of carminic acid were recorded at 25 °C. The effects of methanol,
acetone, benzene, acetic acid, diethyl ether, 2-propanol, 1-butanol, dimethylsulfoxide
(DMSO), hexane, acetonitrile, chloroform, ethanol and distilled water on carminic acid’s
electrooptical properties were studied. These solvents were selected to cover a good range
of characteristics including refractive index, polarizability, hydrogen bonding capacity
and microscopic polarity. The spectral transitions were assigned and analysed to identify
the solute-solvent interaction mechanisms using the quantum approach of computational
biochemistry. A net bathochromic shift in the absorption spectra was observed and traced
to the phenomenon of prototropic tautomerism. Carminic acid’s red shift was found to
increase primarily by the influence of rising hydrogen bond acidity of its microscopic
environment. Solvents with higher dipolarisability induced a n-Π* electronic transition,
indicated by a blue shift effect. Kamlet-Taft analysis was used to determine that the
maximum absorption of carminic acid in gas phase was 271nm. Acetic acid and ethanol
showed the greatest effects on the qualitative electrooptical properties of carminic acid
with a 2.69% blue shift and a 1.422% red shift, respectively. Distilled water exhibited the
least effect on this characteristic with a blue shift of 0.03%. It was determined that the 3’,
5‘, 6’, 8’-Hydroxyl and 7’-glycopyranosyl groups are the main solubilizing agents on the
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carminic acid molecule while 9’, 10’-keto and 2’-carboxylic groups are the main loci of
blue-red qualitative electrooptical transformations. Acetic acid stabilised the highest ratios
of bioefficient carminic acid tautomers. The dipole moments of the excited states were
observed to be higher than those of the ground state using Lippert’s, Bakhshiev’s and
Chamma-Viallet’s equations, inferring a substantial redistribution of Π-electron densities
of carminic acid. Exciton splitting theory demonstrated that carminic acid aggregates lost
their molecular compaction with increasing solvent microscopic polarity. However, 1-
butanol and 2-propanol exhibited low molecular distance values suggesting that factors
other than solvent polarity influences aggregation in these systems. The combined
consideration of results present acetic acid as the prime solvent for the optimization of the
bioefficient tautomer ratio of the anthraquinone while distilled water had potential for its
optimal solubilisation.