Antioxidant activity of capsinoids

Auteur(s) :
Appendino G., Ballero M., Casu V., Delana M., Dessi MA., Paccagini S., De Rosa LA.
Date :
Déc, 2002
Source(s) :
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry. #50:25 p7396-7401
Adresse :
ROSA A,UNIV CAGLIARI,DEPT BIOL SPERIMENTALE SEZ PATOL SPERIMENTALE;CITTADELLA UNIV,SS 554,KM 4-5;I-09042 CAGLIARI, ITALY. [email protected]

Sommaire de l'article

Hot peppers are a good source of dietary antioxidants, encompassing, apart from widespread compounds (flavonoids, phenolic acids, carotenoids, vitamin A, ascorbic acid, tocopherols), also specific constituents such as the pungent capsaicinoids (capsaicin, dihydrocapsaicin, and related analogues). We have shown that capsinoids also show remarkable antioxidant activity. These benign analogues of capsaicin could protect linoleic acid against free radical attack in simple in vitro systems, inhibiting both its autoxidation and its iron- or EDTA-mediated oxidation. These properties were retained in some simple synthetic analogues (vanillyl nonanoate and its dimerization products). Capsiate, dihydrocapslate, and their analogues were devoid of pro-oxidant activity and showed a highly significant antioxidant activity in all systems investigated. Vanillyl nonanoate, a simple capsinoid mimic, was also tested on cell cultures for cytotoxic activity and the capacity to inhibit FeCl3-induced oxidation.

Source : Pubmed
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