2-2--azino-di-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline)-6-sulfonic-acid has been researched along with 4-hydroxyphenylethanol* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for 2-2--azino-di-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline)-6-sulfonic-acid and 4-hydroxyphenylethanol
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Phenols and the antioxidant capacity of Mediterranean vegetables prepared with extra virgin olive oil using different domestic cooking techniques.
Potato, tomato, eggplant and pumpkin were deep fried, sautéed and boiled in Mediterranean extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), water, and a water/oil mixture (W/O). We determined the contents of fat, moisture, total phenols (TPC) and eighteen phenolic compounds, as well as antioxidant capacity in the raw vegetables and compared these with contents measured after cooking. Deep frying and sautéing led to increased fat contents and TPC, whereas both types of boiling (in water and W/O) reduced the same. The presence of EVOO in cooking increased the phenolics identified in the raw foods as oleuropein, pinoresinol, hydroxytyrosol and tyrosol, and the contents of vegetable phenolics such as chlorogenic acid and rutin. All the cooking methods conserved or increased the antioxidant capacity measured by DPPH, FRAP and ABTS. Multivariate analyses showed that each cooked vegetable developed specific phenolic and antioxidant activity profiles resulting from the characteristics of the raw vegetables and the cooking techniques. Topics: Antioxidants; Benzothiazoles; Chlorogenic Acid; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Cluster Analysis; Cooking; Cucurbita; Dietary Fats; Furans; Iridoid Glucosides; Iridoids; Lignans; Multivariate Analysis; Olive Oil; Phenols; Phenylethyl Alcohol; Rutin; Solanum lycopersicum; Solanum melongena; Solanum tuberosum; Sulfonic Acids; Vegetables | 2015 |
New lipophilic tyrosyl esters. Comparative antioxidant evaluation with hydroxytyrosyl esters.
New lipophilic esters of tyrosol, a naturally occurring phenol with interesting biological properties, have been synthesized in good yields by a chemoselective procedure, using lipase from Candida antarctica or p-toluenesulfonic acid as catalysts. Their antioxidant activities have been evaluated by the Rancimat test in lipophilic food matrices, as well as by FRAP and ABTS assays in methanolic solutions, and compared with those of previously synthesized hydroxytyrosyl esters. Free tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol, butylhydroxytoluene, and alpha-tocopherol were used as standards. All methods used for the antioxidant activity evaluation emphasized the high influence of the ortho-diphenolic structure on the antioxidant capacity, tyrosol and its derivatives being less active than hydroxytyrosol and its analogues and even less than BHT and alpha-tocopherol. In addition, the Rancimat test revealed a lower activity for ester derivatives than for their respective reference compounds (HTy or Ty), in agreement with the polar paradox. On the other hand, FRAP and ABTS methods reported an opposite behavior between the synthetic esters and their respective references. Thus, hydroxytyrosyl esters were more active than HTy, whereas tyrosyl esters were less active than Ty. The length and nature of the acyl side chain did not seem to play an important role in the antioxidant activity of either the hydroxytyrosyl or tyrosyl ester series, since no significant differences were observed among them. Topics: Antioxidants; Benzenesulfonates; Benzothiazoles; Candida; Drug Stability; Esters; Ferric Compounds; Lipase; Phenylethyl Alcohol; Structure-Activity Relationship; Sulfonic Acids | 2008 |