| Literature DB >> 30126204 |
Dubravka Vitali Čepo1, Kristina Radić2, Sanja Jurmanović3, Mario Jug4, Marija Grdić Rajković5, Sandra Pedisić6, Tihomir Moslavac7, Petra Albahari8.
Abstract
Waste remaining after the production of olive oil (olive pomace) is known to contain significant amounts of phenolic compounds that exert different types of biological activities, primarily acting as antioxidants. In this work, a sustainable approach that combines ultrasound-assisted extraction with food-grade solvents and encapsulation with different types of cyclodextrins was used to prepare olive pomace-based polyphenol rich extracts that were tested as antioxidants in various chemical, food, and biological model systems. Encapsulation with cyclodextrins had a significant positive impact on the chemical composition of obtained extracts and it positively affected their antioxidant activity. Observed effects can be explained by an increased content of polyphenols in the formulations, specific physical properties of encapsulated compounds improving their antioxidant activity in complex food/physiological environment, and enhanced interaction with natural substrates. Depending on the applied model, the tested samples showed significant antioxidant protection in the concentration range 0.1⁻3%. Among the investigated cyclodextrins, hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and randomly methylated-β-cyclodextrin encapsulated extracts showed particularly good antioxidant activity and were especially potent in oil-in-water emulsion systems (1242 mg/g and 1422 mg/g of Trolox equivalents, respectively), showing significantly higher antioxidant activity than Trolox (reference antioxidant). In other models, they provided antioxidant protection comparable to commonly used synthetic antioxidants at concentration levels of 2⁻3%.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant activity; cyclodextrin encapsulation; inhibition of DNA scission; liposome model; meat model; olive pomace; β-carotene linoleate model
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30126204 PMCID: PMC6222651 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23082070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Contents of main phenolic compounds in DOPE.
| Hydroxytyrosol Derivatives (mg/100 g) | Phenolic Acids (mg/100 g) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hydoxytyrosol | 51.26 ± 0.40 A | 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid | 3.72 ± 0.47 A |
| Tyrosol | 88.67 ± 1.17 B | vanillic acid | 2.16 ± 0.13 B |
| Oleuropein | 16.29 ± 0.39 C | homovanillic acid | 1.25 ± 0.12 C |
| 0.33 ± 0.058 D | |||
All tests were performed in triplicate (n = 3); results are means ± SD of parallel tests. For each group of compounds, means in a column followed by different letters (from A to D) are significantly different at p < 0.05.
Impact of cyclodextrins on the content of hydroxytyrosol derivatives and chemical antioxidant activity of olive pomace extracts.
| nDOPE | hpDOPE | ramDOPE | bDOPE | gDOPE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hydroxytyrosol (mg/kg) | 513.1 ± 4.77 A | 716.8 ± 16.97 B | 663.6 ± 39.03 B | 497.4 ± 5.67 A | 527.1 ± 12.87 A |
| Tyrosol (mg/kg) | 870.1 ± 35.07 A | 715.7 ± 19.92 B | 950.9 ± 7.61 C | 804.9 ± 0.33 AC | 777.7 ± 7.65 BC |
| Oleuropein (mg/kg) | 166.0 ± 7.45 A | 249.4 ± 5.93 B | 157.6 ± 12.96 A | 171.4 ± 1.00 A | 226.8 ± 10.19 B |
| HTD (mg/100 g) | 1549.2 ± 22.9 A | 1682 ± 8.9 B | 1772.1 ± 44.4 B | 1473 ± 4.3 A | 1531 ± 30.7 A |
| TRC (mg/g GAE) | 39.24 ± 0.042 A | 50.97 ± 0.516 B | 53.16 ± 0.164 C | 44.21 ± 0.878 D | 42.71 ± 0.45 D |
| IC50 against DPPH (g/L) | 1.65 ± 0.129 A | 1.039 ± 0.129 B | 1.032 ± 0.094 B | 1.175 ± 0.007 B | 1.429 ± 0.083 A |
| TEAC (mg/g TE) | 12.86 ± 0.419 A | 15.44 ± 0.133 B | 17.07 ± 0.51 C | 14.00 ± 0.33 A | 12.71 ± 0.24 A |
| ORAC (mg/kg TE) | 152.8 ± 5.06 AB | 166.5 ± 7.51 A | 165.8 ± 6.34 A | 142.7 ± 10.21 B | 162.8 ± 10.24 A |
Results are expressed as means ± standard deviations of four parallel investigations (n = 4). Different letters in the same row indicate significant difference at p < 0.05. HTD-hydroxytyrosol derivatives (sum of hydroxytyrosol, tyrosol, and oleuropein); GAE-gallic acid equivalents; TRC: total reducing capacity; DPPH-2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl; TE-Trolox equivalents; TEAC: Trolox equivalent antioxidant activity; ORAC: oxygen radical activity test; nDOPE-native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE-extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated β-cyclodextrin; bDOPE: extract prepared with β-cyclodextrin; gDOPE: extract prepared with γ-cyclodextrin.
Figure 1Antioxidant activity of DOPE in oil. (a): Rancimat induction period; (b): Peroxide value of safflower oil during storage with 0.1% DOPE; (c): Peroxide value of safflower oil during storage with 0.3% DOPE. nDOPE-native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE-extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated β-cyclodextrin; BHA: Butylhydroxyanisol; PG: Propyl-gallate.
Figure 2Oxidative stability of minced meat during storage at 4 °C and accelerate stability testing. (a): Oxidative stability during storage at 4 °C; (b): Inhibition of meat lipid peroxidation during accelerated testing in relation to concentration of antioxidant; (c): Antioxidant activity against meat lipid peroxidation during accelerated stability testing expressed as IC50. nDOPE-native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE-extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated β-cyclodextrin; BHA: butylhydroxyanisol; IC50: Half maximal inhibitory concentration. Different letters above data bars indicate significant difference (p ≤ 0.05).
Figure 3Antioxidant activity of DOPE in the β-carotene emulsion model system. (a): β-carotene absorbance inhibition ratio during 120 min incubation; (b): antioxidant activity expressed as IC50. nDOPE-native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE-extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated β-cyclodextrin; BHA: butylhydroxyanisol; IC50: half maximal inhibitory concentration. Columns (in Figure 3b) marked with different letters belong to different statistical groups (p < 0.05)
Figure 4Inhibition of plasmid DNA strand scission and antioxidant activity of DOPE in liposome membrane model. (a): supercoiled (native) form of plasmid pBR322 DNA in electrophoresis gel after incubation with AAPH with or without the presence of antioxidants; (b): antioxidant activity against antioxidant activity against plasmid DNA strand scission expressed as IC50; (c): antioxidant activity of DOPE in liposome membrane model system. nDOPE-native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE-extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated β-cyclodextrin; BHA: butylhydroxyanisol; IC50: half maximal inhibitory concentration; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. Different letters above data bars indicate significant difference (p ≤ 0.05).
Scheme 1Flowchart of the experimental design (preparation of extracts and analyses). HTD-hydroxytyrosol derivatives; nDOPE: native dry olive pomace extract; hpDOPE: extract prepared with hydroxypropyl-βcyclodextrin; ramDOPE-extract prepared with randomly methylated βcyclodextrin; bDOPE: extract prepared with βcyclodextrin; gDOPE: extract prepared with γ-cyclodextrin.