Tocopherols (vitamin E) function as inhibitors of lipid peroxidation in biomembranes by donating a hydrogen atom to the chain propagating lipid radicals, thus giving rise to chromanoxyl radicals of the antioxidant. We have shown that alpha-tocopherol homologs differing in the lengths of their hydrocarbon side chains (alpha-Cn) manifest strikingly different antioxidant potencies in membranes. The antioxidant activity of tocopherol homologs during (Fe2+ + ascorbate)- or (Fe2+ + NADPH)-induced lipid peroxidation in rat liver microsomes increased in the order alpha-tocopherol (alpha-C16) less than alpha-C11 less than alpha-C6 less than alpha-C1. Chromanoxyl radicals generated from alpha-tocopherol and its more polar homologs by an enzymatic oxidation system (lipoxygenase + linolenic acid) can be recycled in rat liver microsomes by NAD-PH-dependent electron transport or by ascorbate. The efficiency of recycling increased in the same order: alpha-tocopherol (alpha-C16) less than alpha-C11 less than alpha-C6 less than alpha-C1. Thus the high efficiency of regeneration of short-chain homologs of vitamin E may account for their high antioxidant potency.