Extraction and Characterization of Antioxidant Peptides from Fruit Residues
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Antioxidant Peptides in Fruit Residues
3. Obtaining Antioxidant Proteins and Peptides from Fruit Residues
4. Techniques Used in the Extraction and Purification of Proteins
4.1. Solid–Liquid Conventional Extraction
4.2. Ultrasound-Assisted Extraction of Proteins
4.3. Pressurized Liquid Extraction
4.4. Extraction Using Deep Eutectic Solvents
4.5. Microwave-Assisted Extraction
4.6. Extraction Using Pulsed Electric Field (PEF) and High Voltage Electrical Discharge (HVED)
4.7. Extraction and Purification Using Nanomaterials
5. Methods Used for the Release of Antioxidant Peptides
6. Evaluation of Antioxidant Activity of Peptides
7. Peptide Fractionation
8. Peptide Identification
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Residue | Extracting Media | Extraction Conditions | Protein Purification Conditions | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|
SOLID–LIQUID CONVENTIONAL EXTRACTION | ||||
Tomato seeds | NaCl (1.5%, pH 11.5) | DGS: extracting medium at ratio 1:10 (w/v); stirring (room temperature and 1 h) | Centrifugation and precipitation at pH 4.0 | [21,43] |
Tomato seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 7.5–1.5) | 1 g of DGS and 82 mL water; stirring (50 °C and 50 h) | Centrifugation and filtration | [37,41] |
Tomato seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 7.5) | DGS: extracting medium at ratio 1:82.81 (30 °C and 50 h) | Centrifugation and precipitation at pH 3.9 | [42] |
Watermelon seeds | Alkali (0.8%) | DGS: extracting medium at ratio 1:30 (40 °C and 30 min) | Precipitation at pH 4.5 | [52] |
Watermelon seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 12.0) | DGS: extracting medium at ratio 1:10 (w/v); stirring (1 h); 2 additional extractions after centrifugation | Precipitation at pH 4.0 | [48,50] |
Jujube seeds | (I) Water; (II) 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5); (III) 0.6 M NaCl (0.1% HCl); and (IV) acetic acid (5%) | (I and II) 1.5 g ground seeds and 20 mL solvent; stirring (4 °C and 2 h); (III) Idem at ground seeds:solvent 1:3 (w/v); and (IV) 5 g and 20 mL solvent. Shaking overnight (80 rpm) | (I, II, and III) Precipitation with (NH₄)₂SO₄ and dialysis (24 h, 4 °C); (IV) filtration and precipitation with acetone | [45] |
Chinese cherry seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 10.0) | DGS: extracting medium at 1:20 (w/v); stirring (40 °C and 40 min) | Filtration and precipitation at pH 3.84 | [55] |
African breadfruit seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 9.0) | DGS: extracting medium at ratio 1:10 (w/v); stirring (30 min at room temperature) | Precipitation at pH 4.5 | [56] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo) seeds | NaOH aq. (pH 10.0) | DGS | Precipitation at pH 5.0 | [57,61] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo) oil cake | NaOH aq. (pH 10.0) | DGS | Filtration and precipitation at pH 5.0 | [58,62] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo) oil cake | NaOH aq. (pH 10.0) | Defatted oil cake: extracting media at ratio 1:10 (w/v) | Precipitation at pH 5.0 | [59] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo) oil cake | NaOH aq. (pH 11.0) | DGS: extracting medium at 1:30 (w/v); stirring (50 °C and 1.5 h) | Precipitation at pH 5.3 | [60] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita moschata), watermelon, and bottle gourd seeds | Tris HCl (pH 8.0) | 200 mg of DGS and 50 mL buffer (1 h) | Centrifugation and precipitation with acetone | [32] |
Bottle gourd seeds | 50 mM phosphate buffer (10 mM EDTA, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT, and 1% SDS) | Sample: extracting medium at ratio 1:3 (w/v) (3 times) | Filtration and precipitation with chilled ethanol | [30] |
Wax gourd seed | 20 mM phosphate buffer (pH 6.5, 5.0 mM EDTA, and 10 mM DTT) (buffer I) and phosphate (2.0 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, urea 4 M, and 2% Triton X 100) (buffer II) | 500 g of DGS and buffer I, 3 h; centrifugation and 2nd extraction under same conditions; centrifugation and 3rd extraction with buffer II and centrifugation | Dialysis, centrifugation, and filtration | [44] |
Jujube seeds | Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) | 1.5 g of ground seeds and 50 mM buffer (2 h) | Centrifugation, precipitation with (NH₄)₂SO₄ (4 °C), centrifugation, and dialysis | [46] |
Milled rapeseed | 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5, 750 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, and 0.3% Na₂O₅S₂) | 0.1 g/L (room temperature, 1 h) | Centrifugation | [23] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita moschata) seeds | Osborne method: (1) water; (2) Tris-HCl (5% NaCl); (3) isopropanol (55%); and (4) acetic acid (0.2 N) | 150 mg of DGS and 10 mL extracting medium (60 min). Next extractions at extracting medium:sample ratio 7:1 | (I, II, and III) Centrifugation and precipitation with acetone | [20] |
Muskmelon seeds | Osborne method: (1) water; (2) NaCl (5%); (3) NaOH (0.1 M); and (4) ethanol (70%) | 100 g of DGS and 500 mL extracting medium (60 min) | (I) Centrifugation; (II) centrifugation and dialysis; (III) precipitation at pH 4.0; and (IV) evaporation at 40 °C | [47] |
Bottle gourd seeds | Osborne method: (1) water; (2) Tris-HCl (100 mM, pH 8.1, 0.5 M NaCl); (3) isopropanol (55%); and (4) acetic acid (0.2 N) | 8 g of DGS and 60 mL extracting medium (60 min). Next extractions at extracting medium:sample ratio 7:1 | (I, II, III, and IV) Centrifugation and precipitation with acetone | [31] |
Watermelon seeds | Osborne method | - | - | [49] |
ULTRASOUND-ASSISTED EXTRACTION | ||||
Pomegranate peel | 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 0.5%, SDS, and 0.25% DTT) | 150 mg milled peel and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 1 min) | Evaporation and precipitation with cold acetone | [3] |
Peach, plum, apricot, cherry, and olive seeds | 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 0.5% SDS, and 0.5% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 1 min) | Precipitation with cold acetone | [11,13] |
Plum seeds | 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 1% SDS, and 0.25% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 1 min) | Precipitation with cold acetone and filtration | [14,35] |
Olive and peach seeds | 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 0.5% SDS, and 0.5% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 5 min) | Precipitation with cold acetone | [16] |
Olive seeds | 125 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 1% SDS, and 0.1% DTT) | 30 mg milled seeds and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 5 min) | Precipitation with cold acetone | [17] |
Plum and peach seeds | 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) and 15 mM NaCl (buffer I)50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) and 15 mM NaCl and 1% SDS and 25 mM DTT (buffer II) | 200 mg DGS and 10 mL of buffer I or II (10 min) and shaking (overnight) | Evaporation and precipitation with cold acetone | [29] |
Cherry seeds | 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5, 1% SDS, and 0.5% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 5 min) | Precipitation with cold acetone | [33] |
PRESSURIZED LIQUID EXTRACTION | ||||
Pomegranate peel | Ethanol (70% (v/v)) | 2 g ground dried peels and 8 g sand (1500 psi; 120 °C; static extraction time, 3 min; extraction time, 12 min; static cycles, 1) | Evaporation and precipitation with cold ethanol | [25] |
EXTRACTION USING DEEP EUTECTIC SOLVENTS | ||||
Pomegranate peel | Choline chloride:AA:H₂O in 1:1:10 molar ratio | 150 mg dried peels and 5 mL extracting medium (HIFU, 11 min, and 30%) | Evaporation and precipitation with cold ethanol | [25] |
ULTRASOUND–MICROWAVE SYNERGISTIC EXTRACTION | ||||
Pumpkin (Cucurbita moschata) seeds | PEG 200-choline chloride at 3:1 molar ratio | Microwave-assisted extraction (6 min, 120 W); ultrasound-assisted extraction (30 min, 240 W); water bath extraction (43 °C and 60 min); ultrasound–microwave synergistic extraction (28%, 28 g /L, 140 W, 43 °C and 4 min) | Isoelectric point precipitation; ethanol precipitation; centrifugation; centrifugation, isoelectric point precipitation, and ethanol precipitation | [64] |
EXTRACTION USING PULSED ELECTRIC FIELD (PEF) AND HIGH VOLTAGE ELECTRICAL DISCHARGE (HVED) | ||||
Olive seeds | Water | Sample: extracting medium at ratio 10 (w/w); pretreatment with HVED, PEF, and ultrasound; extraction (2 min and 150 rpm) | - | [34] |
Rapeseed press-cake | Water | Sample: extracting medium at ratio 20 (v/w); HVED (240 kJ/kg) | - | [24] |
Mango peels | I and II) Water; III) water (pH 11.0); IV) water and water (pH 11.0) | 300 g of sample at ratio 1/10 (w/v); (I) PEF (13.3 kV/cm, 0.5 Hz); (II) HVED (40 kV/cm, 0.5 Hz); (III) aqueous extraction (20–60 °C and pH = 2.5, 6.0, 11.0); (IV) PEF; and (I) and aqueous extraction (50 °C, pH 6.0, and 3 h) | - | [26] |
Papaya peels | (I and II) Water; (III) water (pH 11.0); (IV) water and water (pH 11.0) | 300 g sample at ratio 1:10 (w/v); (I) PEF (13.3 kV/cm, 0,5 Hz); (II) HVED (40 kV/cm, 0.5 Hz); (III) aqueous extraction (20–60 °C, pH = 2.5, 6.0, 11.0); (IV) PEF; and (I) aqueous extraction (50 °C, pH 7.0, and 3 h) | - | [54] |
METHODS USING NANOMATERIALS | ||||
Plum seeds | 100 mM Tris–HCl buffer (pH 7.5, 1% SDS, and 0.25% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 1 min) | 3G carboxylate-terminated dendrimers at pH 1.8 (30 min) | [74] |
Plum seeds | 100 mM Tris–HCl buffer (pH 7.5, 1% SDS, and 0.25% DTT) | 30 mg DGS and 5 mL buffer using HIFU (30%, 1 min) | 2G dimethylamino-terminated dendrimers at pH 7.5 (30 min) | [75] |
Plum seeds | - | 3G single wall carbon nanotubes functionalized with sulphonate-terminated carbosilane dendrimers at pH 7.5 with shaking (1 h) | Ultrafiltration | [76] |
Peach seeds | - | 2G gold nanoparticles coated with carbosilane dendrimers with carboxylate groups at pH 2.5 with shaking (2 h) | Ultrafiltration | [77] |
Fruit Residue | Enzyme/Microorganisms | Buffer (pH) | Temperature (°C) | Time (h) | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
RELEASE OF PEPTIDES BY MICROBIAL FERMENTATION | |||||
Tomato seed | Lactobacillus plantarum | — | 37 | 24 | [36] |
Tomato seed | Water kefir microbial mixture | — | 37 | 24 | [37,41] |
Tomato seed | Bacillus subtilis | — | 40 | 20 | [38] |
Tomato seed | Bacillus subtilis | — | 37 | 24 | [39,40] |
RELEASE OF PEPTIDES BY ENZYMATIC DIGESTION | |||||
Pumpkin oil cake | Alcalase | Tris-HCl (0.1 M and pH 8.0) | 50 | 1 | [58] |
Flavourzyme | 1 | ||||
Alcalase and flavourzyme | 2 | ||||
Pumpkin oil cake | Alcalase | Phosphate (pH 8.0) | 50 | 0–2.5 | [62] |
Flavourzyme | Phosphate (pH 7.0) | 50 | |||
Pepsin | Phosphate (pH 3.0) | 37 | |||
Pumpkin oil cake | Alcalase | Tris-HCl (pH 9.0) | 50 | 3.5 | [59] |
Trypsin | Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) | 35 | 5 | ||
Pumpkin seed | Acid protease | pH 2.5 | 50 | 5 | [60] |
Pumpkin meal | Alcalase | pH 8.0 | 55 | 5 | [63] |
Flavourzyme | pH 7.0 | 50 | |||
Protamex | pH 6.5 | 50 | |||
Neutrase | pH 7.0 | 50 | |||
Peach, plum, apricot, and olive seeds | Pepsin and pancreatin | pH 2.0 and pH 8.0 | 37 | 3 | [11] |
Apricot seeds | Alcalase | Borate (5 mM and pH 8.5) | 50 | 4 | [11] |
Thermolysin | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 4 | |||
Flavourzyme | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.5) | 8 | |||
Plum seeds | Alcalase | Borate (5 mM and pH 8.5) | 50 | 3 | [14,35] |
Thermolysis | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 50 | 4 | ||
Flavourzyme | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.0) | 50 | 7 | ||
Protease P | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.5) | 40 | 24 | ||
Apricot seeds | Alkaline and flavor proteases | - | - | - | [27] |
Peach seeds | Alcalase | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 50 | 4 | [28] |
Thermolysin | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 50 | 4 | ||
Flavourzyme | Ammonium bicarbonate (5 mM and pH 6.5) | 50 | 3 | ||
Protease P | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.5) | 40 | 7 | ||
Cherry seeds | Alcalase | Borate (pH 8.5) | 50 | 7 | [33] |
Thermolysin | Phosphate (pH 8.0) | ||||
Flavourzyme | Bicarbonate (pH 6.0) | ||||
Chinese cherry seeds | Alcalase and Neutrase | Water (pH 7.5) | 50 | 2 | [55] |
Olive and peaches seeds | Alcalase | Borate (5 mM and pH 8.5) | 50 | 4 | [16] |
Olive seeds | Alcalase | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 50 | 2 | [17] |
Thermolysin | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | ||||
Flavourzyme | Ammonium bicarbonate (5 mM and pH 6.0) | ||||
Trypsin | Tris-HCl (5 mM and pH 9.0) | ||||
Neutrase | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.0) | ||||
Tomato seeds | Alcalase | Phosphate (pH 8.0) | 50 | 0.5–3 | [43] |
Tomato seeds | Alcalase | Phosphate (pH 8.0) | 50 | 2.3 | [21] |
Milled rapeseed | Pepsin | Phosphate (0.1 M and pH 2.0) | 40 | 3 | [23] |
Trypsin | Phosphate (0.1 M and pH 7.0) | 40 | 3 | ||
Alcalase | Phosphate (0.1 M and pH 7.0) | 50 | 3 | ||
Subtilisin | Phosphate (0.1 M and pH 8.0) | 60 | 3 | ||
Thermolysin | Phosphate (0.1 M and pH 8.0) | 60 | 24 | ||
Jujube seeds | Papain | Tris-HCl (50 mM and pH 6.5–7.5) | 65 | 1.5 | [45,46] |
Alcalase | Tris-HCl (50 mM and pH 6.5–8.5) | 60 | |||
Protease P | Tris-HCl (50 mM and pH 7.5) | 37 | |||
Muskmelon seeds | Pepsin and Trypsin | pH 2.0 and pH 7.0 | 37 | 6 | [47] |
Pumpkin (Cucurbita moschata), watermelon, and bottle gourd seeds | Trypsin | Tris-HCl (50 mM and pH 7.5) | - | 4 | [32] |
Watermelon seeds | Alcalase | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 60 | 5 | [48,50] |
Trypsin | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 8.0) | 37 | |||
Pepsin | Glycine (5 mM and pH 2.2) | 37 | |||
Watermelon seeds | Alcalase | pH 8.5 | 55 | 3 | [51] |
Watermelon seeds | Papain | — | — | — | [52] |
Pepsin | pH 2.4 | 37 | 3 | ||
Protease | — | — | — | ||
Pancreatin | — | — | — | ||
Trypsin | — | — | — | ||
Chymotrypsin | — | — | — | ||
Watermelon seeds | Alcalase | NaOH aq. (pH 9.0) | 50 | 0.8 | [53] |
African breadfruit seeds | Trypsin, pepsin, and pancreatin | Water | - | [56] | |
Date palm seeds | Alcalase | pH 8.0 | 50 | 1 | [65,66] |
Flavourzyme | pH 7.0 | 2 | |||
Thermolysin | pH 8.0 | 3 | |||
Pomegranate peel | Alcalase | Borate (5 mM and pH 9.0) | 50 | 2 | [3] |
Thermolysin | Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.5) | 70 | 1 | ||
Pomegranate peel | Alcalase Thermolysin | Borate (5–10 mM and pH 9.0) Phosphate (5 mM and pH 7.5) or borate (100 mM and pH 7.5) | 50 70 | 2 1 | [25] |
Assay | Methodology | Refs. |
---|---|---|
EVALUATION OF THE CAPACITY TO SCAVENGE FREE RADICALS AND OXIDANT SPECIES | ||
Scavenging effect on hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) radicals | Measurement of the reduction in the absorbance of a H₂O₂ solution at 230 nm after incubation with potential antioxidants. | [20,31,48] |
Scavenging effect on ABTS (2,2’-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) radicals | ABTS radicals that absorb at 734 nm are produced by the reaction of ABTS with potassium persulfate. The method evaluates the reduction in the absorbance of ABTS radicals due to the presence of potential antioxidants. | [3,11,14,16,17,20,24,25,28,31,33,34,35,36,37,41,42,45,46,49,51,52,54,55,58,62,65] |
Scavenging effect on nitric oxide (NO) radicals | Nitric oxide radicals are formed from nitroprusside and the incubation of formed nitric oxide radicals with a Griess reagent (1% sulphanilamide, 2% H3PO4, and 0.1% naphthylethylene diamine dihydrochloride) results in nitrite ions. Nitrite ions can be measured by the formation of a compound that absorbs at 546 nm. The scavenging of nitric oxide radicals by potential antioxidants reduces nitrite ion formation and their absorbance at 546 nm. | [20,31,49] |
Scavenging effect on DPPH (1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl) radicals | Measurement of the decrease in the absorption of DPPH radicals at 515–517 nm when potential antioxidants are added. | [14,17,20,21,26,27,30,31,34,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,51,52,53,54,55,56,59,60,61,63,65] |
EVALUATION OF THE CAPACITY TO INHIBIT OXIDATION REACTIONS | ||
Inhibition of formation of superoxide (O²⁻) radicals | The assay measures the rate of pyrogallol autooxidation in presence and absence of potential antioxidants at 320–420 nm. | [50,55] |
Inhibition of formation of hydroxyl (OH•) radicals | Hydroxyl radicals are generated by the oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ in the presence of H₂O₂. The presence of Fe2+ is monitored by the formation of a complex with 1,10-phenanthroline that absorbs at 536 nm. The presence of potential antioxidants inhibits the oxidation of Fe2+ and results in an absorbance increase. | [3,11,14,16,17,25,27,28,33,35,47,55,65] |
Oxygen radical antioxidant capacity (ORAC) | The method is based on the oxidation of fluorescein by reactive oxygen species (ROS) resulting from the radical initiator 2,2’-azobis(2-methylpropionamidine) dihydrochloride. The inhibition of fluorescein oxidation by the presence of potential antioxidants is measured from the increase in fluorescence intensity. | [51,65] |
EVALUATION OF THE REDUCING POWER | ||
Ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP) | Measures the ability of potential antioxidants to reduce Fe³⁺ from the ferricyanide complex to Fe²⁺-complex. Formation of Fe²⁺-complex is measured at 700 nm. | [14,16,20,27,28,30,31,33,35,38,39,40,45,46,47,49,50,52,56,58,62,63,65] |
Ammonium phosphomolybdenum | The method evaluates the capacity of potential antioxidants to reduce Mo⁶⁺ to Mo⁵⁺. Presence of Mo⁵⁺ is monitored by the subsequent formation of a green phosphor/Mo⁵⁺ complex that absorbs at 695–65 nm. | [20,21,30,31,59] |
EVALUATION OF THE METAL QUELATION ACTIVITY | ||
Ferrous ion chelation activity (FICA) | Ferrozine reacts with Fe²⁺ to form a complex that absorbs at 562 nm. In the presence of chelating agents, the complex is disrupted, resulting in a decrease in absorption at 562 nm. | [45,46,52,53,59,61,63,65] |
Cuprous ion chelation activity (CICA) | Reaction of pyrocatechol and Cu²⁺ results in a substance that absorbs at 632 nm. The presence of a metal chelator disrupts this molecule and reduces the absorbance. | [47] |
EVALUATION OF THE CAPACITY TO INHIBIT LIPIDS AND LIPOPROTEINS OXIDATION | ||
Ferric thiocyanate | Primary products resulting from the oxidation of linoleic acid are incubated with EtOH, ammonium thiocyanate, and FeCl₂, leading to the formation of Fe(SCN)²⁺ that absorbs at 500 nm. Presence of potential antioxidants results in the inhibition of linoleic acid oxidation and the reduction of absorption. | [14,16,17,28,33,35,44,49,56,63] |
Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) | The presence of secondary oxidation products formed during oxidation of linoleic acid is measured by the reaction of one of them, the malondialdehyde, with SDS, acetic acid, and TBA at 532 nm. The presence of potential antioxidants reduces this absorbance. | [20,23,31,32,44,53,57,66] |
β-carotene linoleate | It measures the ability of potential antioxidants to decrease the oxidative bleaching of β-carotene in an oil-in-water emulsion. The reaction is monitored by measuring the absorbance at 470 nm immediately after the addition of a potential antioxidant. | [66] |
Inhibition of Cu²⁺-induced low-density lipoprotein (LDL) peroxidation | This assay measures the peroxidation induced by cupric sulfate in LDL. Presence of potential antioxidants results in the inhibition of the oxidation and the reduction of the absorbance of conjugated dienes at 344 nm. | [66] |
EVALUATION OF THE CAPACITY TO INHIBIT DNA OXIDATION | ||
Supercoiled-to-Nicked-Circular-Conversion (SNCC) | Oxidation of supercoiled DNA into nicked circular DNA in the presence of Cu²⁺ and H₂O₂ is monitored by measuring the fluorescent intensity of ethidium-stained nicked circular DNA. The presence of a potential antioxidant inhibits this reaction, and the signal corresponding to the oxidized form of DNA decreases. | [30] |
Inhibition of peroxyl and hydroxyl radical-induced supercoiled strands scission | Strand scission of supercoiled DNA is measured in the presence of peroxyl and hydroxyl radicals. After incubation, DNA is separated by gel electrophoresis, and the intensity of supercoiled DNA bands in the presence and absence of potential antioxidant are compared. | [66] |
EVALUATION OF THE CAPACITY TO INHIBIT OXIDATIVE DAMAGE INDUCED IN CELLS | ||
2’, 7’-dichloro-dihydro-fluorescein diacetate (DCFH-DA) fluorescent probe | Oxidative stress in cells is induced by the addition of a strong oxidant (H₂O₂ or other peroxide). DCFH-DA fluorescence probe, added to cell culture, reacts with ROS to produce fluorescent DCF that is measured at an λexcitation of 488 nm and an λemission of 585 and 530 nm. The presence of a potential antioxidant inhibits ROS generation and DCF signal decreases. | [16,51] |
Intracellular concentration of Ca²⁺ determination | Intracellular Ca²⁺ is measured with fluorescent dye Fura-2 AM. Fura-2AM is cleaved by intracellular esterase, and the resulting Fura-2 can bind to Ca²⁺ and cause strong fluorescence under a 330–350 nm excitation light. Fluorescence intensity decreases in H₂O₂-damaged cells treated with potential antioxidants. | [51] |
Acridine orange/ethidium bromide (AO/EB) fluorescent staining | Cell membrane damage is measured by evaluating the staining of DNA with EB or AO using an inverted fluorescence microscope. The presence of potential antioxidants will reduce the number of red cells resulting from the staining with EB and will increase the number of green cells resulting from the staining with AO. | [51] |
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Olivares-Galván, S.; Marina, M.L.; García, M.C. Extraction and Characterization of Antioxidant Peptides from Fruit Residues. Foods 2020, 9, 1018. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9081018
Olivares-Galván S, Marina ML, García MC. Extraction and Characterization of Antioxidant Peptides from Fruit Residues. Foods. 2020; 9(8):1018. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9081018
Chicago/Turabian StyleOlivares-Galván, Saúl, María Luisa Marina, and María Concepción García. 2020. "Extraction and Characterization of Antioxidant Peptides from Fruit Residues" Foods 9, no. 8: 1018. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9081018
APA StyleOlivares-Galván, S., Marina, M. L., & García, M. C. (2020). Extraction and Characterization of Antioxidant Peptides from Fruit Residues. Foods, 9(8), 1018. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9081018