1. Effects of pomegranate seed oil and fermented juice polyphenols fraction in different solvents on copper-induced LDL oxidation
- Author
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Matthias W. Beckmann, Christian Löhberg, Jawid Faisi, Inge Hoffmann, Amir Fattahi, Michael G. Schrauder, Nathalie Raffel, and Ralf Dittrich
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,antioxidant ,Pomegranate seed oil ,General Chemical Engineering ,chemistry.chemical_element ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,Fraction (chemistry) ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,LDL ,functional food ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,lipid oxidation ,punica granatum ,Food science ,POMEGRANATE SEED ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,lcsh:TP368-456 ,POMEGRANATE SEED OIL ,Chemistry ,food and beverages ,General Chemistry ,Copper ,Supercritical fluid ,lcsh:Food processing and manufacture ,Unsaponifiable ,Polyphenol ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Fermentation ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Food Science - Abstract
Effects of pomegranate seed oils extracted with supercritical fluid or cold press methods (SFE-PSO and CP-PSO), unsaponifiable (N), and fermented juice polyphenols (W) fractions of pomegranate as well as olive oil and alpha-tocopherol, as pure or in different solvents were evaluated on preventing copper-induced LDL oxidation. The results showed addition of pure SFE-PSO, CP-PSO, N fractions, and olive oil had no significant effect on LDL oxidation. Also using various solvents did not help in the term of extending the oxidation lag phase. However, adding 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 3 µL of the W solution in EtOH could delay the lag phase 103.5, 145.9, 200, and 199.1 min, respectively. There was no synergistic effect between W and N on inhibiting the oxidation. It can be concluded that polyphenolic fraction of pomegranate juice can act as antiatherogenic supplementation and natural preservative for meat and fatty foods through direct inhibition of LDL oxidation.
- Published
- 2018
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