Assays comprising three probes for different mechanisms of antioxidant activity in food products have been modified to allow better comparison of the contributions of the different mechanisms to antioxidant capacity (AOC). Incorporation of a common format for oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP), and iron(II) chelating activity (ICA) assays using 96-well microplates provides a comprehensive and high-throughput assessment of the antioxidant capacity of food extracts. The methods have been optimized for aqueous extracts and validated in terms of limit of quantification (LoQ), linearity, and precision (repeatability and intermediate reproducibility). In addition, FRAP and ORAC assays have been validated to assess AOC for lipophilic extracts. The relative standard deviation of repeatability of the methods ranges from 1.2 to 6.9%, which is generally considered to be acceptable for analytical measurement of AOC by in vitro methods. Radical scavenging capacity, reducing capacity, and iron chelating properties of olive mill wastewaters (OMWW), oregano, and parsley were assessed using the validated methods. OMWW showed the highest radical scavenging and reducing capacities, determined by ORAC and FRAP assays, respectively, followed by oregano and parsley. The ability to chelate Fe (2+) was, in decreasing order of activity ( p > 0.05) parsley congruent with oregano > OMWW. Total phenol content, determined by the Folin-Ciocalteu method, correlated to the radical scavenging and reducing capacities of the samples but not to their chelating properties. Results showed that the optimized high-throughput methods provided a comprehensive and precise determination of the AOC of lipophilic and hydrophilic food extracts in vitro.
The antioxidant activity of oregano, parsley, olive mill wastewaters (OMWW), Trolox, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) was evaluated in bulk oils and oil-in-water (o/w) emulsions enriched with 5% tuna oil by monitoring the formation of hydroperoxides, hexanal, and t-t-2,4-heptadienal in samples stored at 37 degrees C for 14 days. In bulk oil, the order of antioxidant activity was, in decreasing order (p < 0.05), OMWW > oregano > parsley > EDTA > Trolox. The antioxidant activity in o/w emulsion followed the same order except that EDTA was as efficient an antioxidant as OMWW. In addition, the total phenolic content, the radical scavenging properties, the reducing capacity, and the iron chelating activity of OMWW, parsley, and oregano extracts were determined by the Folin-Ciocalteau, oxygen radical absorbance capacity, ferric reducing antioxidant power, and iron(II) chelating activity assays, respectively. The antioxidant activity of OMWW, parsley, and oregano in food systems was related to their total phenolic content and radical scavenging capacity but not to their ability to chelate iron in vitro. OMWW was identified as a promising source of antioxidants to retard lipid oxidation in fish oil-enriched food products.
Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFA) have various positive biological effects. Fish oil represents a major source of LC-PUFA; therefore it is extensively used to enrich food products as, for example, infant formulae, dairy products and fruit juices. However, in the presence of oxygen and metals, LC-PUFA readily degrade, producing off-flavors and decreasing the nutritional value of the product. The deterioration of sensory properties (taste and odor) can be easily perceived by the consumer, due to the formation of volatile compounds that are formed by decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides, also known as primary oxidation products. In this study, we used the headspace solid-phase microextraction-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry technique (HS-SPME-GC/MS) to characterize and quantify volatile compounds in a food matrix supplemented with fish oil. We demonstrated that the HS-SPME-GC/MS method is a valuable tool to monitor lipid oxidation at early stages. We identified t-2-hexenal and c-4-heptenal as possible oxidation markers during the storage of milk enriched with 5% of cod oil.
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