Publication | Closed Access
Mechanisms of Antioxidants in the Oxidation of Foods
657
Citations
118
References
2009
Year
Food ChemistryDifferent Antioxidant MechanismsFood FunctionPolyphenolicsFood Bioactive CompoundBiochemistrySinglet OxygenMedicineLipid PeroxidationBioactive CompoundsMetabolismPharmacologyLow ConcentrationFood SafetyOxidative StressHealth Sciences
ABSTRACT: Antioxidants delay or inhibit lipid oxidation at low concentration. Tocopherols, ascorbic acid, carotenoids, flavonoids, amino acids, phospholipids, and sterols are natural antioxidants in foods. Antioxidants inhibit the oxidation of foods by scavenging free radicals, chelating prooxidative metals, quenching singlet oxygen and photosensitizers, and inactivating lipoxygenase. Antioxidants show interactions, such as synergism (tocopherols and ascorbic acids), antagonism (α‐tocopherol and caffeic acid), and simple addition. Synergism occurs when one antioxidant is regenerated by others, when one antioxidant protects another antioxidant by its sacrificial oxidation, and when 2 or more antioxidants show different antioxidant mechanisms.
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