linoleic-acid and arzanol

linoleic-acid has been researched along with arzanol* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for linoleic-acid and arzanol

ArticleYear
Evaluation of the antioxidant and cytotoxic activity of arzanol, a prenylated alpha-pyrone-phloroglucinol etherodimer from Helichrysum italicum subsp.microphyllum.
    Chemico-biological interactions, 2007, Jan-30, Volume: 165, Issue:2

    Various phenolics and (mero)terpenoids from Helichrysum italicum subsp. microphyllum, a plant endemic to Sardinia, were investigated for their capacity to inhibit non-enzymatic lipid peroxidation. These compounds were studied in simple in vitro systems, under conditions of autoxidation and of iron (EDTA)-mediated oxidation of linoleic acid at 37 degrees C. Arzanol, a pyrone-phloroglucinol etherodimer, and helipyrone, a dimeric pyrone, showed antioxidant activity, and could protect linoleic acid against free radical attack in assays of autoxidation and EDTA-mediated oxidation. Methylarzanol, as well as the sesquiterpene alcohol rosifoliol, showed a decreased, but still significant, protective effect against linoleic acid oxidation. Arzanol and helipyrone were also tested in an assay of thermal (140 degrees C) autoxidation of cholesterol, where arzanol showed significant antioxidant activity. The cytotoxicity of arzanol was further evaluated in VERO cells, a line of fibroblasts derived from monkey kidney. Arzanol, at non-cytotoxic concentrations, showed a strong inhibition of TBH-induced oxidative stress in VERO cells. The results of the present work suggest that the natural compound arzanol exerts useful antioxidant properties in different in vitro systems of lipid peroxidation.

    Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Cell Survival; Chlorocebus aethiops; Cholesterol; Dimerization; Fibroblasts; Free Radical Scavengers; Helichrysum; Linoleic Acid; Lipid Peroxidation; Oxidation-Reduction; Phloroglucinol; Plant Extracts; Pyrones; Vero Cells

2007