Topic Editors

1. Department of Food Science, ARO Volcani Center, Bet Dagan P.O. Box 6, Israel
2. Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science and Nutrition, Faculty of Agriculture Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot P.O. Box 12, Israel
Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9112102, Israel

Oxidative Stress and Diet: The Health Implications of Advanced Glycation and Lipid Oxidation End-Products

Abstract submission deadline
31 January 2026
Manuscript submission deadline
31 March 2026
Viewed by
224

Topic Information

Dear Colleagues,

Activation of oxygen to reactive oxygen species (ROS) is the primordial process for initiation in foods of oxidized dietary proteins, lipids, and glycation/lipid-oxidation end-products (AGEs/ALEs). Lipid and protein oxidation is one of the major degradative processes responsible for losses in food safety and quality. The oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids and reducing sugars results in significant generation of dietary ALEs and AGEs, which are in part cytotoxic and genotoxic compounds. The gastrointestinal tract is constantly exposed to dietary oxidized food compounds; following digestion, a small proportion of them is absorbed into the lymph or directly into the bloodstream. After ingestion of oxidized fats and proteins, animals and humans have been shown to have increased amounts of lipophilic carbonyl and electrophilic compounds in their blood and urine. Oxidized cholesterol in the diet was found to be a source of oxidized lipoproteins in human serum. Some dietary ALEs/AGEs, which are absorbed from the gut into the circulatory system, appear to act as harmful chemicals that activate an inflammatory response that affects not only the circulatory system but also organs such as the liver, kidney, lung, and the gut itself. We believe that repeated consumption of oxidized fat and proteins as a part of one’s diet poses a chronic threat to human health. High concentrations of dietary antioxidants could prevent lipid oxidation and ALE/AGE generation not only in foods but also in certain gastrointestinal conditions and thereby potentially decrease their absorption from the gut. This could explain the health benefits of diets containing large amounts of dietary antioxidants such as those present in fruits and vegetables or products such as red wine or tea consumed during a meal.

Prof. Dr. Joseph Kanner
Prof. Dr. Ron Kohen
Topic Editors

Keywords

  • lipid oxidation
  • reactive oxygen species
  • pro-oxidants
  • dietary antioxidants
  • gastrointestinal tract
  • organs

Participating Journals

Journal Name Impact Factor CiteScore Launched Year First Decision (median) APC
Antioxidants
antioxidants
6.0 10.6 2012 16.9 Days CHF 2900 Submit
Cancers
cancers
4.5 8.0 2009 17.4 Days CHF 2900 Submit
Gastroenterology Insights
gastroent
1.5 2.8 2009 34 Days CHF 1600 Submit
Life
life
3.2 4.3 2011 17.8 Days CHF 2600 Submit
Nutrients
nutrients
4.8 9.2 2009 13.5 Days CHF 2900 Submit

Preprints.org is a multidiscipline platform providing preprint service that is dedicated to sharing your research from the start and empowering your research journey.

MDPI Topics is cooperating with Preprints.org and has built a direct connection between MDPI journals and Preprints.org. Authors are encouraged to enjoy the benefits by posting a preprint at Preprints.org prior to publication:

  1. Immediately share your ideas ahead of publication and establish your research priority;
  2. Protect your idea from being stolen with this time-stamped preprint article;
  3. Enhance the exposure and impact of your research;
  4. Receive feedback from your peers in advance;
  5. Have it indexed in Web of Science (Preprint Citation Index), Google Scholar, Crossref, SHARE, PrePubMed, Scilit and Europe PMC.

Published Papers

This Topic is now open for submission.
Back to TopTop