Both the pro- and antiradical water soluble activity, toward DPPH¥, ROO¥, OH¥ radicals found in seven diet vegetables belonging to the Cichorium genus, and the effects of boiling, freezing, and freezedrying on such activities were investigated. The vegetables were three red cultivars of Cichorium intybus var. silvestre from three different areas of production, that is, chicory from Chioggia, Treviso, and Verona, C. intybus var. foliosum (Belgian chicory), C. endivia var. latifolium (escarole), C. endivia var. crispum (“crispa”), and a hybrid vegetable obtained by the cross between C. intybus var. silvestre and C. endivia var. latifolium (chicory from Castelfranco). The juices obtained by simple centrifugation of vegetables operating at 2 or 25 °C and submitted to the thermal technological treatments were assessed for antiradical activity using the DPPH¥ assay, the linoleic acid-â-carotene system, and the deoxyribose assay. In all three assays used, each vegetable juice was shown to possess antiradical activity; there was a significant level in the C. endivia and the Belgian chicories and higher levels in the red C. intybus vegetables and the hybrid vegetable. All juice behaviors in the linoleic acid-â- carotene system indicate that they also contain a thermally unstable component, which in a cold medium promptly promoted and accelerated linoleic acid peroxidation, therefore masking the presence of any thermally stable antiperoxyl radical components. The presence of these components, which efficiently protect linoleic acid from peroxidation, can be singled out only after inactivation by heating, or separation by dialysis, of the pro-oxidant components. Dialysis fractions showed that the prooxidant component has MW > 50000 Da and that the juices contain a number of antioxidant components which contribute to their antiradical activity.

Anti- and pro-oxidant water soluble activity of Cichorium genus vegetables and effect of thermal treatment

PAPETTI, ADELE;DAGLIA, MARIA;GAZZANI, GABRIELLA
2002-01-01

Abstract

Both the pro- and antiradical water soluble activity, toward DPPH¥, ROO¥, OH¥ radicals found in seven diet vegetables belonging to the Cichorium genus, and the effects of boiling, freezing, and freezedrying on such activities were investigated. The vegetables were three red cultivars of Cichorium intybus var. silvestre from three different areas of production, that is, chicory from Chioggia, Treviso, and Verona, C. intybus var. foliosum (Belgian chicory), C. endivia var. latifolium (escarole), C. endivia var. crispum (“crispa”), and a hybrid vegetable obtained by the cross between C. intybus var. silvestre and C. endivia var. latifolium (chicory from Castelfranco). The juices obtained by simple centrifugation of vegetables operating at 2 or 25 °C and submitted to the thermal technological treatments were assessed for antiradical activity using the DPPH¥ assay, the linoleic acid-â-carotene system, and the deoxyribose assay. In all three assays used, each vegetable juice was shown to possess antiradical activity; there was a significant level in the C. endivia and the Belgian chicories and higher levels in the red C. intybus vegetables and the hybrid vegetable. All juice behaviors in the linoleic acid-â- carotene system indicate that they also contain a thermally unstable component, which in a cold medium promptly promoted and accelerated linoleic acid peroxidation, therefore masking the presence of any thermally stable antiperoxyl radical components. The presence of these components, which efficiently protect linoleic acid from peroxidation, can be singled out only after inactivation by heating, or separation by dialysis, of the pro-oxidant components. Dialysis fractions showed that the prooxidant component has MW > 50000 Da and that the juices contain a number of antioxidant components which contribute to their antiradical activity.
2002
The Food Science/Nutrition category includes resources in food science covering topics such as food additives and contaminants, food chemistry and biochemistry, food microbiology, technology, engineering, processing, quality, and safety. Also covered are meat science, dairy science, and brewing. The closely related area of nutrition is also covered in this category, including general nutrition, nutrition and metabolism, nutrition science, nutritional biochemistry, and dietetics.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
50
16
4696
4704
Tematica Ex SIR: Attività antiradicalica di vegetali della dieta mediterranea e di caffè verde e tostato (Classif. Ex SIR:Articoli su riviste ISI )
VEGETABLES; ANTIOXIDANTS; PROOXIDANTS; LIPID PEROXIDATION; THERMAL TREATMENT
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jf020123y
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Papetti, Adele; Daglia, Maria; Gazzani, Gabriella
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/132366
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