• Title of article

    Impact of lipid oxidation-derived aldehydes and ascorbic acid on the antioxidant activity of model melanoidins

  • Author/Authors

    Kitryt?، نويسنده , , Vaida and Adams، نويسنده , , An and Venskutonis، نويسنده , , Petras Rimantas and De Kimpe، نويسنده , , Norbert، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    1273
  • To page
    1283
  • Abstract
    As the heat-induced formation of antioxidants throughout the Maillard reaction is known, this study was undertaken to evaluate the impact of lipid oxidation-derived aldehydes and ascorbic acid in Maillard model systems on the resulting antioxidant activity. For this purpose, various fractions of melanoidin-like polycondensation products were obtained from mixtures of amino acids (glycine, lysine, arginine) and lipid oxidation-derived aldehydes (hexanal, (E)-2-hexenal), in the presence or absence of glucose or ascorbic acid. All fractions showed a significant radical scavenging capacity (DPPH assay) and ferric reducing power (FRAP assay). The activity varied according to the composition of the model system tested, although some similar trends were discovered in both assays applied. The presence of lipid oxidation products in the browning products augmented the antioxidant activity in specific cases. For instance, the combined presence of arginine, hexanal and glucose in heated model systems resulted in a significantly higher antioxidant capacity. With an exception of ascorbic acid-containing model systems, melanoidin-like polycondensation products possessed significantly stronger antioxidant activities than the corresponding unheated initial reactant mixtures. Water-soluble high molecular weight (>12 kDa) and nonsoluble fractions comprised the major part of the antioxidants derived from amino acid/lipid oxidation product model systems, with or without glucose or ascorbic acid.
  • Keywords
    antioxidant activity , Maillard reaction , lipid oxidation , DPPH , FRAP , Melanoidin-like polycondensation products
  • Journal title
    Food Chemistry
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Food Chemistry
  • Record number

    1970617