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Dietary Antioxidant Synergy in foods Nooshin Moradi Food Chemistry 605
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Antioxidant Activity Principle of antioxidant activity: based on the availability of electrons to neutralize free radicals. Decrease the oxidative damage directly or indirectly In food application: lipid oxidation and prolong shelf life.
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Antioxidant Synergy Mixture of two or more antioxidant including: Purified compounds Crude extracts Cooperative action: greater AOX effect than the sum of individuals Regeneration Hypothesis
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AOX Capacity in vitro Expressed by the terms such as ability, activity, capacity, efficacy, parameter, potential, power, and reactivity. “Antioxidant Capacity” often means different things at different occasions and to different people: Capacity of antioxidant compound for scavenging free radicals Capacity of “antioxidation”
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Methods for determination of AOX capacity (AOC) 2, 2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH·) 2, 2-azinobis (3-ethyl-benzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid) (ABTS·) Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) Ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP) Oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) Simplicity, instrumentation required, biological relevance, mechanisms, endpoint, quantitation method, and potential for both lipophilic and hydrophilic
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AOX synergy in chemical and food models Lipid peroxidation was effectively inhibited by the combination of ascorbic acid and a-tocopherol Flavonols quercetin and quercetin-3-glucoside trigger a noticeable increase in antioxidant activity when mixed in solution with another flavonoid Antimicrobial effects of phenolic compounds against Staphylococcus aureus (binary combination of BHA and gallic acid)
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AOX synergy in tissue culture and clinical models Type of cells and type of antioxidant: different synergistic effect in Human liver HepG2 cells, HT29 cancerous cells, and rat H9c2 cells using raspberry and plant extract Rat and human study display some synergistic effect. However, no optimal model has been yet established to predict the AOX synergy of in vivo.
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Synergistic or Antagonistic? Flavonoid interactions trigger antagonistic and synergistic effects Strong antagonistic reaction when quercetin-3-glucoside was paired with five different anthocyanins (resulted in a considerable loss of antioxidant activity) Antagonistic interaction when myricetin was paired with quercetin, in a ratio 1:1. (The activity significantly lower than the sum of the individual values) Antagonistic effect: BHA and carvacrol or thymol against Staphylococcus aureus Some antioxidants in combination act in a regenerating manner, with either the stronger regenerating the weaker (antagonistic effect) or the weaker regenerating the stronger (synergistic effect)
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AOX potency of a compound Structural features: Ortho-dihydroxy structure in the B-ring 3- and 5-OH Nature of the radical and its specific reaction mechanism
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Factors affecting prediction of AOX synergy in chemical models Analytical methods (consistency and standardization) Experimental condition (Concentration and volume ratio of the individual AOX, AOX composition, solvent, test medium, and solubility) Great variability in chemical tests and hardly relevant to biological systems
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Factors affecting AOX capacity in vivo Bioavailability Biotransformation: Enzymatic conjugation Food matrices: bioavailability of anthocyanins varies markedly depending on food matrices Partial pressures of oxygen: good radical-trapping antioxidant behavior of beta-carotene (found in most tissues under physiological conditions)
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AOX synergy in chemical, biological, and food systems Controversial and confusing on the nature and properties of AOX mixtures because of their complexity found in vivo and their different distribution patterns in human tissues and cells. No simple relationship has been recognized to transfer chemical models and food systems to in vivo situation
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Capacity and efficacy of AOX in vivo Capacity and efficacy of antioxidants in vivo : Assessing the effect of antioxidant compounds and materials on the level of oxidation in biological fluids and tissues Reliable biomarkers: oxidation products of lipids, DNA, strand breaks of DNA
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References Cuvelier, Marie-Elisabeth, Vincent Bondet, and Claudette Berset. "Behavior of phenolic antioxidants in a partitioned medium: structure—Activity relationship." Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society 77.8 (2000): 819-824. Fernández-Álvarez, Laura, et al. "Binary combinations of BHA and other natural and synthetic phenolics: Antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and antioxidant capacity." Food Control 42 (2014): 303-309. Hidalgo, Maria, Concepción Sánchez-Moreno, and Sonia de Pascual-Teresa. "Flavonoid–flavonoid interaction and its effect on their antioxidant activity."Food Chemistry 121.3 (2010): 691-696. Niki, Etsuo. "Assessment of antioxidant capacity in vitro and in vivo." Free Radical Biology and Medicine 49.4 (2010): 503-515. Prior, Ronald L., Xianli Wu, and Karen Schaich. "Standardized methods for the determination of antioxidant capacity and phenolics in foods and dietary supplements." Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 53.10 (2005): 4290-4302. Wang, Sunan, and Fan Zhu. "Dietary Antioxidant Synergy in Chemical and Biological Systems." Critical reviews in food science and nutrition just-accepted (2015): 00-00. Wang, Sunan, et al. "Synergistic, additive, and antagonistic effects of food mixtures on total antioxidant capacities." Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 59.3 (2011): 960-968.
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