Dendrimers as Color-Stabilizers of Pyranoanthocyanins: The Dye Concentration Governs the Host-Guest Interaction Mechanisms

ACS Appl Polym Mater. 2021 Mar 12;3(3):1457-1464. doi: 10.1021/acsapm.0c01321. Epub 2021 Mar 3.

Abstract

Anionic dendrimers have recently emerged as hosts (H) for the color stabilization of the flavylium cation of anthocyanin guests (G). The interaction with a promising, more hydrophobic pyranoanthocyanin illustrates how the structure and concentration of the dye modulate the host-guest interaction mechanisms. NMR and UV-vis titrations (host over guest, from G/H ratio 2089 to 45) showed that at relatively low dendrimer-to-dye concentrations, ion pairs at the dendrimer periphery prevail over dye encapsulation. This promotes the deaggregation of the dye, not previously observed with anthocyanins, and related to the more hydrophobic nature of this dye (deshielding of the dye 1H signals, higher T 2 relaxation times, constant diffusion coefficient). As the dendrimer concentration increases, the dye encapsulation, earlier unseen with structurally simpler flavylium dyes, becomes dominant (shielding and broadening of the dye 1H signals and lower T 2 and diffusion coefficient). The interaction parameters of the encapsulation process (K ∼ 4.51 × 104 M-1, n ∼ 150) indicate the binding of ca. one pyranoanthocyanin molecule by each sulfate terminal group. Our results provide insights into the ability of dendrimers to host structurally diverse pyranoflavylium-based dyes and how the structure of the latter modulates the range of interactions involved. The encapsulation ability of this dendrimer to such pH-sensitive dyes is envisioned for the host-guest sensing applications such as pH-responsive systems used for example in food smart packaging.