Measurement of Antioxidant Activity and Capacity (eBook, PDF)
Recent Trends and Applications
Redaktion: Apak, Resat; Shahidi, Fereidoon; Capanoglu, Esra
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Measurement of Antioxidant Activity and Capacity (eBook, PDF)
Recent Trends and Applications
Redaktion: Apak, Resat; Shahidi, Fereidoon; Capanoglu, Esra
- Format: PDF
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A comprehensive reference for assessing the antioxidant potential of foods and essential techniques for developing healthy food products Measurement of Antioxidant Activity and Capacity offers a much-needed resource for assessing the antioxidant potential of food and includes proven approaches for creating healthy food products. With contributions from world-class experts in the field, the text presents the general mechanisms underlying the various assessments, the types of molecules detected, and the key advantages and disadvantages of each method. Both thermodynamic (i.e. efficiency of…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781119135364
- Artikelnr.: 54242383
- Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781119135364
- Artikelnr.: 54242383
?]azino?]bis(3?]ethylbenzothiazoline?]6?]sulfonic acid)/ TroloxR?]Equivalent Antioxidant Capacity) radical scavenging mixed?]mode assay 117 Antonio Cano and Marino B. Arnao 7.1 Introduction 117 7.2 Use of ABTS as a sensor of antioxidant activity: the TEAC assay 119 7.3 Advantages and disadvantages 125 7.4 TEAC assay in hyphenated and high?]throughput techniques 126 7.5 TEAC in pure compounds 128 7.6 TEAC in foods 130 7.7 Future perspectives 134 References 135 8 DPPH (2,2?]di(4?]tert?]octylphenyl)?]1?]picrylhydrazyl) radical scavenging mixed?]mode colorimetric assay(s) 141 Nikolaos Nenadis and Maria Z. Tsimidou 8.1 Overview 141 8.2 Characteristics of the DPPH radical 142 8.3 The concept behind the development of the DPPH
colorimetric assay 144 8.4 How can antioxidants scavenge the DPPH
? 144 8.5 The evolution of ideas on the underlying mechanism 145 8.6 The DPPH
colorimetric assay(s) 152 8.7 Toward the standardization of a DPPH
assay to address structure-activity relationship issues 154 8.8 Toward the establishment of a DPPH
assay for regulatory and market needs 158 8.9 Concluding remarks - A la recherche du temps perdu 160 References 161 9 Biomarkers of oxidative stress and cellular?]based assays of indirect antioxidant measurement 165 Cheng Yang, Fereidoon Shahidi, and Rong Tsao 9.1 Introduction 165 9.2 Oxidative stress 166 9.3 Biomarkers of oxidative stress 169 9.4 Cell?]based assays of indirect antioxidant measurement 175 9.5 Conclusion 180 References 181 10 Nanotechnology?]enabled approaches for the detection of antioxidants by spectroscopic and electrochemical methods 187 Ryan T. Rauhut, Gonca Bulbul, and Silvana Andreescu 10.1 Introduction 187 10.2 Spectroscopic nano?]based approaches for antioxidant detection 190 10.3 Electrochemical detection 195 10.4 Conclusions and future research needs 200 Acknowledgments 200 References 204 11 Novel methods of antioxidant assay combining various principles 209 Takayuki Shibamoto 11.1 Introduction 209 11.2 Lipid peroxidation and formation of primary and secondary oxidation products 210 11.3 Use of gas chromatography for antioxidant assays 211 11.4 Novel gas chromatographic antioxidant assays 213 11.5 Conclusion 218 References 218 12 Physico?]chemical principles of antioxidant action, including solvent and matrix dependence and interfacial phenomena 225 Katarzyna Jodko?]Piorecka, Jakub Cedrowski, and Grzegorz Litwinienko 12.1 Introduction 225 12.2 Mechanism and kinetics of peroxidation 226 12.3 Initiation of lipid peroxidation chains 227 12.4 Antioxidants 232 12.5 How to recognize a good chain?]breaking antioxidant 234 12.6 Determination of reactivity of a CBA towards peroxyl radicals 236 12.7 Basic mechanisms of antioxidant action 247 12.8 Interfacial phenomena - studies in heterogeneous lipid systems 252 12.9 Effect of temperature 265 Acknowledgments 267 References 267 13 Evaluation of antioxidant activity/capacity measurement methods for food products 273 Esra Capanoglu, Senem Kamiloglu, Gulay Ozkan, and Resat Apak 13.1 Introduction 273 13.2 Antioxidant assay selection for different food products 276 13.3 General conclusions and future perspectives 281 References 283 14 Antioxidants in oxidation control 287 Fereidoon Shahidi and Priyatharini Ambigaipalan 14.1 Introduction 287 14.2 Oxidation 287 14.3 Antioxidants 288 14.4 Synthetic antioxidants 289 14.5 Natural antioxidants 289 14.6 Tocols 290 14.7 Ascorbic acid 291 14.8 Carotenoids 292 14.9 Polyphenols 295 14.10 Bioavailability of phenolic antioxidants 307 14.11 Structural and other modification of phenolic antioxidants 308 14.12 Protein?]derived antioxidants 309 14.13 Phospholipids 309 14.14 Other antioxidants 310 References 310 15 Kinetic matching approach for rapid assessment of endpoint antioxidant capacity 321 Luis M. Magalhaes, Ines I. Ramos, Luisa Barreiros, Salette Reis, and Marcela A. Segundo 15.1 Introduction 321 15.2 Kinetic matching strategy 323 15.3 Expression of results as common standard 323 15.4 Application to samples 324 15.5 Conclusion 329 Acknowledgments 329 References 330 Index 333
?]azino?]bis(3?]ethylbenzothiazoline?]6?]sulfonic acid)/ TroloxR?]Equivalent Antioxidant Capacity) radical scavenging mixed?]mode assay 117 Antonio Cano and Marino B. Arnao 7.1 Introduction 117 7.2 Use of ABTS as a sensor of antioxidant activity: the TEAC assay 119 7.3 Advantages and disadvantages 125 7.4 TEAC assay in hyphenated and high?]throughput techniques 126 7.5 TEAC in pure compounds 128 7.6 TEAC in foods 130 7.7 Future perspectives 134 References 135 8 DPPH (2,2?]di(4?]tert?]octylphenyl)?]1?]picrylhydrazyl) radical scavenging mixed?]mode colorimetric assay(s) 141 Nikolaos Nenadis and Maria Z. Tsimidou 8.1 Overview 141 8.2 Characteristics of the DPPH radical 142 8.3 The concept behind the development of the DPPH
colorimetric assay 144 8.4 How can antioxidants scavenge the DPPH
? 144 8.5 The evolution of ideas on the underlying mechanism 145 8.6 The DPPH
colorimetric assay(s) 152 8.7 Toward the standardization of a DPPH
assay to address structure-activity relationship issues 154 8.8 Toward the establishment of a DPPH
assay for regulatory and market needs 158 8.9 Concluding remarks - A la recherche du temps perdu 160 References 161 9 Biomarkers of oxidative stress and cellular?]based assays of indirect antioxidant measurement 165 Cheng Yang, Fereidoon Shahidi, and Rong Tsao 9.1 Introduction 165 9.2 Oxidative stress 166 9.3 Biomarkers of oxidative stress 169 9.4 Cell?]based assays of indirect antioxidant measurement 175 9.5 Conclusion 180 References 181 10 Nanotechnology?]enabled approaches for the detection of antioxidants by spectroscopic and electrochemical methods 187 Ryan T. Rauhut, Gonca Bulbul, and Silvana Andreescu 10.1 Introduction 187 10.2 Spectroscopic nano?]based approaches for antioxidant detection 190 10.3 Electrochemical detection 195 10.4 Conclusions and future research needs 200 Acknowledgments 200 References 204 11 Novel methods of antioxidant assay combining various principles 209 Takayuki Shibamoto 11.1 Introduction 209 11.2 Lipid peroxidation and formation of primary and secondary oxidation products 210 11.3 Use of gas chromatography for antioxidant assays 211 11.4 Novel gas chromatographic antioxidant assays 213 11.5 Conclusion 218 References 218 12 Physico?]chemical principles of antioxidant action, including solvent and matrix dependence and interfacial phenomena 225 Katarzyna Jodko?]Piorecka, Jakub Cedrowski, and Grzegorz Litwinienko 12.1 Introduction 225 12.2 Mechanism and kinetics of peroxidation 226 12.3 Initiation of lipid peroxidation chains 227 12.4 Antioxidants 232 12.5 How to recognize a good chain?]breaking antioxidant 234 12.6 Determination of reactivity of a CBA towards peroxyl radicals 236 12.7 Basic mechanisms of antioxidant action 247 12.8 Interfacial phenomena - studies in heterogeneous lipid systems 252 12.9 Effect of temperature 265 Acknowledgments 267 References 267 13 Evaluation of antioxidant activity/capacity measurement methods for food products 273 Esra Capanoglu, Senem Kamiloglu, Gulay Ozkan, and Resat Apak 13.1 Introduction 273 13.2 Antioxidant assay selection for different food products 276 13.3 General conclusions and future perspectives 281 References 283 14 Antioxidants in oxidation control 287 Fereidoon Shahidi and Priyatharini Ambigaipalan 14.1 Introduction 287 14.2 Oxidation 287 14.3 Antioxidants 288 14.4 Synthetic antioxidants 289 14.5 Natural antioxidants 289 14.6 Tocols 290 14.7 Ascorbic acid 291 14.8 Carotenoids 292 14.9 Polyphenols 295 14.10 Bioavailability of phenolic antioxidants 307 14.11 Structural and other modification of phenolic antioxidants 308 14.12 Protein?]derived antioxidants 309 14.13 Phospholipids 309 14.14 Other antioxidants 310 References 310 15 Kinetic matching approach for rapid assessment of endpoint antioxidant capacity 321 Luis M. Magalhaes, Ines I. Ramos, Luisa Barreiros, Salette Reis, and Marcela A. Segundo 15.1 Introduction 321 15.2 Kinetic matching strategy 323 15.3 Expression of results as common standard 323 15.4 Application to samples 324 15.5 Conclusion 329 Acknowledgments 329 References 330 Index 333