Chicken model for studying dietary antioxidants reveals that apple (cox’s orange)/broccoli (brassica oleracea l. var. italica) stabilizes erythrocytes and reduces oxidation of insoluble muscle proteins and lipids in cooked liver

Auteur(s) :
Jensen SK., Nielsen JH., Stagsted J., Steffensen CL., Young JF.
Date :
Août, 2002
Source(s) :
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry. #50:18 p5058-5062
Adresse :
YOUNG JF,DANISH INST AGR SCI,RES CTR FOULUM DEPT ANIM PROD QUAL;POB 50;DK-8830 TJELE, [email protected]

Sommaire de l'article

A chicken model for studying the effects of antioxidants in the diet on oxidative status was set up. Chickens fed a semi-synthetic diet low in antioxidants showed a remarkable decrease in erythrocyte stability toward H2O2 or 2,2'-azobis (2-amidinopropane) dihydrochloride (AAPH), but increases in catalase activity in liver, carbonyls in insoluble muscle proteins, and enhanced lipid oxidation in heat-treated liver samples compared to that of conventionally fed chickens. Thus, this chicken model proved to be more susceptible to oxidative changes than conventionally fed chickens, reflecting a low antioxidative defense. Supplementing this low antioxidant diet with 10% apple/broccoli mixture counteracted these changes, except for activity of catalase in the liver and AAPH-induced lysis of erythrocytes. Supplementation with 10% sweet corn only reduced the carbonyl content in insoluble proteins. However, neither low antioxidant diet nor vegetable supplements affected selected antioxidative enzymes or oxidative stability of lipids in heat-treated muscle tissue.

Source : Pubmed
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