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217,302
result(s) for
"antioxidant"
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Correction: Bioprospecting of fungal endophytes from Oroxylum indicum (L.) Kurz with antioxidant and cytotoxic activity
2024
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264673.].
Journal Article
Correction: Hibiscus sabdariffa: Genetic variability, seasonality and their impact on nutritional and antioxidant properties
2023
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261924.].[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261924.].
Journal Article
Correction: Peretz, E.; Musa, S. Design, Synthesis, and Characterization of Novel Cannabidiol-Based Derivatives with Potent Antioxidant Activities. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2024, 25, 9579
2025
In the original publication, there was a mistake in Figure 5D as published [...]
Journal Article
Methods of measurement and evaluation of natural antioxidant capacity/activity (IUPAC Technical Report)
by
Apak, Reşat
,
Gorinstein, Shela
,
Schaich, Karen M.
in
2,2'-azinobis-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)(ABTS)/Trolox-equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC)
,
2,2-di(4
,
antioxidant capacity/activity
2013
The chemical diversity of natural antioxidants (AOXs) makes it difficult to
separate, detect, and quantify individual antioxidants from a complex
food/biological matrix. Moreover, the total antioxidant power is often more
meaningful to evaluate health beneficial effects because of the cooperative
action of individual antioxidant species. Currently, there is no single
antioxidant assay for food labeling because of the lack of standard
quantification methods. Antioxidant assays may be broadly classified as the
electron transfer (ET)- and hydrogen atom transfer (HAT)-based assays. The
results obtained are hardly comparable because of the different mechanisms,
redox potentials, pH and solvent dependencies, etc. of various assays. This
project will aid the identification and quantification of properties and mutual
effects of antioxidants, bring a more rational basis to the classification of
antioxidant assays with their constraints and challenges, and make the results
more comparable and understandable. In this regard, the task group members
convey their own experiences in various methods of antioxidants measurement.
Journal Article
A Study of the Chemical Composition, Antioxidant Potential, and Acute Toxicity of Bulgarian ITanacetum vulgare/I L. Essential Oil
2023
Common tansy (Tanacetum vulgare L.) is a plant with medicinal properties that has traditionally been used in folk medicine for its anthelmintic, antispasmodic, and choleretic effects, for the treatment of diarrhea and digestive problems, and externally, as an insecticide in veterinary practices. In the current study, we investigated, for the first time, the chemical profile and antioxidant activity of essential oil from a wild population of T. vulgare L. growing in Bulgaria. Common tansy essential oil (EO), which is rich in bicyclic monoterpenes, was obtained using hydrodistillation and characterized by using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Thirty-seven compounds were identified in Bulgarian tansy EO. Among the major constituents were oxygenated monoterpenes, including compounds such as camphor (25.24%), trans-chrysantenyl acetate (18.35%), cis-verbenol (10.58%), thujone (6.06%), eucaliptol (5.99%), and α-campholenal (5.98%). The analysis results identified the essential oil from T. vulgare L. grown in the western Rhodope Mountains of Bulgaria as the camphor chemotype. Furthermore, its antioxidant activity was analyzed using the oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) method and was found to be 605.4 ± 49.3 µmol TE/mL. The essential oil was also tested for single-dose acute toxicity on Wistar rats and was found to be non-toxic by oral administration. The mean lethal dose by intraperitoneal administration was LD[sub.50] i.p. = 14.9 g/kg body weight. The results of the conducted study can serve as a basis for the evaluation and subsequent exploration of other pharmacotherapeutic effects of the essential oil obtained from the inflorescences of the Bulgarian species T. vulgare L.
Journal Article
Chemical Composition, Preliminary Toxicity, and Antioxidant Potential of IPiper marginatum/I Sensu Lato Essential Oils and Molecular Modeling Study
2023
The essential oils (OEs) of the leaves, stems, and spikes of P. marginatum were obtained by hydrodistillation, steam distillation, and simultaneous extraction. The chemical constituents were identified and quantified by GC/MS and GC-FID. The preliminary biological activity was determined by assessing the toxicity of the samples to Artemia salina Leach larvae and calculating the mortality rate and lethal concentration (LC[sub.50]). The antioxidant activity of the EOs was determined by the DPPH radical scavenging method. Molecular modeling was performed using molecular docking and molecular dynamics, with acetylcholinesterase being the molecular target. The OES yields ranged from 1.49% to 1.83%. The EOs and aromatic constituents of P. marginatum are characterized by the high contents of (E)-isoosmorhizole (19.4–32.9%), 2-methoxy-4,5-methylenedioxypropiophenone (9.0–19.9%), isoosmorhizole (1.6–24.5%), and 2-methoxy-4,5-methylenedioxypropiophenone isomer (1.6–14.3%). The antioxidant potential was significant in the OE of the leaves and stems of P. marginatum extracted by SD in November (84.9 ± 4.0 mg TE·mL[sup.−1]) and the OEs of the leaves extracted by HD in March (126.8 ± 12.3 mg TE·mL[sup.−1]). Regarding the preliminary toxicity, the OEs of Pm-SD-L-St-Nov and Pm-HD-L-St-Nov had mortality higher than 80% in concentrations of 25 µg·mL[sup.−1]. This in silico study on essential oils elucidated the potential mechanism of interaction of the main compounds, which may serve as a basis for advances in this line of research.
Journal Article