21 results on '"Smeriglio Antonella"'
Search Results
2. Citrus Pomace as a Source of Plant Complexes to Be Used in the Nutraceutical Field of Intestinal Inflammation.
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Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Braghini, Maria Rita, Piccione, Michela, De Stefanis, Cristiano, Mandrone, Manuela, Chiocchio, Ilaria, Poli, Ferruccio, Imbesi, Martina, Alisi, Anna, Smeriglio, Antonella, and Trombetta, Domenico
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ELECTROSPRAY ionization mass spectrometry ,PROTON magnetic resonance ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,METABOLITES ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance - Abstract
This study aims to recover the main by-product of Citrus fruits processing, the raw pomace, known also as pastazzo, to produce plant complexes to be used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Food-grade extracts from orange (OE) and lemon (LE) pomace were obtained by ultrasound-assisted maceration. After a preliminary phytochemical and biological screening by in vitro assays, primary and secondary metabolites were characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (
1 H-NMR) and liquid chromatography coupled to diode array detection and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC-DAD-ESI-MS) analyses. The intestinal bioaccessibility and antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties were investigated by in vitro simulated gastro-intestinal digestion followed by treatments on a lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line (Caco-2). The tight junctions-associated structural proteins (ZO-1, Claudin-1, and Occludin), transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER), reactive oxygen species (ROS)-levels, expression of some key antioxidant (CAT, NRF2 and SOD2) and inflammatory (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, IL-8) genes, and pNFkB p65 nuclear translocation, were evaluated. The OE and LE digesta, which did not show any significant difference in terms of phytochemical profile, showed significant effects in protecting against the LPS-induced intestinal barrier damage, oxidative stress and inflammatory response. In conclusion, both OE and LE emerged as potential candidates for further preclinical studies on in vivo IBD models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. The Influence of Pedo-Climatic Conditions on the Micromorphological, Phytochemical Features, and Biological Properties of Leaves of Saponaria sicula Raf.
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Cornara, Laura, Malaspina, Paola, Betuzzi, Federica, Di Gristina, Emilio, D'Arrigo, Manuela, Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Trombetta, Domenico, and Smeriglio, Antonella
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TOLUIDINE blue ,PHYTOCHEMICALS ,PLANT polyphenols ,CALCIUM oxalate ,SEA level ,POLYPHENOLS ,PLANT species - Abstract
Saponaria sicula Raf. grows in Sicily, Sardinia, and Algeria on limestone cliffs and volcanic sands 1300–2500 m above sea level. The aim of the present study was to investigate how the pedo-climatic conditions influence the micromorphological, phytochemical, and biological properties of Sicilian S. sicula leaves collected in the Madonie Mountains (SsM) and on Etna Mt (SsE). Micromorphological investigations revealed that leaves from SsM had a higher amount of calcium oxalate druses in the mesophyll and a more intense blue–green staining with Toluidine blue O, indicating a higher content of polyphenols. These data were confirmed by phytochemical analyses carried out on hydroalcoholic extracts, which showed a higher content of total phenols (8.56 ± 0.57 g GAE/100 g DE) and flavonoids (6.09 ± 0.17 g RE/100 g DE) in SsM. Sixty-four compounds were identified by LC-DAD-ESI-MS analysis with propelargonidin dimer as the most abundant compound (10.49% and 10.19% in SsM and SsE, respectively). The higher polyphenol content of SsM leaves matches also with their biological activity, identifying SsM extract as the strongest plant complex (IC
50 2.75–477.30 µg/mL). In conclusion, the present study experimentally demonstrates that not only climatic differences but also soil characteristics affect the micromorphological, phytochemical, and biological features of this plant species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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4. Xanthophyll-Rich Extract of Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin as New Photoprotective Cosmeceutical Agent: Safety and Efficacy Assessment on In Vitro Reconstructed Human Epidermis Model.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Lionti, Joseph, Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Burlando, Bruno, Cornara, Laura, Grillo, Federica, Mastracci, Luca, and Trombetta, Domenico
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PHAEODACTYLUM tricornutum , *EPIDERMIS , *FLUORESCENCE microscopy , *SOLAR radiation , *XANTHOPHYLLS , *MARINE ecology - Abstract
The nutritional and health properties of algae make them perfect functional ingredients for nutraceutical and cosmeceutical applications. In this study, the Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin (Phaeodactylaceae), a pleiomorphic diatom commonly found in marine ecosystems, was investigated. The in vitro culture conditions used favoured the fusiform morphotype, characterized by a high accumulation of neutral lipids, as detected by fluorescence microscopy after BODIPY staining. These data were confirmed by HPLC-DAD-APCI-MS/MS analyses carried out on the ethanolic extract (PTE), which showed a high content of xanthophylls (98.99%), and in particular of fucoxanthin (Fx, 6.67 g/100 g PTE). The antioxidant activity (ORAC, FRAP, TEAC and β-carotene bleaching) and photostability of PTE and Fx against UVA and UVB rays were firstly evaluated by in vitro cell-free assays. After this, phototoxicity and photoprotective studies were carried out on in vitro reconstructed human epidermidis models. Results demonstrated that PTE (0.1% Fx) and 0.1% Fx, both photostable, significantly (p < 0.05) reduce oxidative and inflammatory stress markers (ROS, NO and IL-1α), as well as cytotoxicity and sunburn cells induced by UVA and UVB doses simulating the solar radiation, with an excellent safety profile. However, PTE proved to be more effective than Fx, suggesting its effective and safe use in broad-spectrum sunscreens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Synergistic Combination of Citrus Flavanones as Strong Antioxidant and COX-Inhibitor Agent.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Iraci, Nunzio, Denaro, Marcella, Mandalari, Giuseppina, Giofrè, Salvatore Vincenzo, and Trombetta, Domenico
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GLUTATHIONE ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,FLAVANONES ,CITRUS ,ANTI-inflammatory agents ,REACTIVE oxygen species ,ARACHIDONIC acid - Abstract
Recently, we demonstrated that a Citrus flavanone mix (FM) shows antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity, even after gastro-duodenal digestion (DFM). The aim of this study was to investigate the possible involvement of the cyclooxygenases (COXs) in the anti-inflammatory activity previously detected, using a human COX inhibitor screening assay, molecular modeling studies, and PGE2 release by Caco-2 cells stimulated with IL-1β and arachidonic acid. Furthermore, the ability to counteract pro-oxidative processes induced by IL-1β was evaluated by measuring four oxidative stress markers, namely, carbonylated proteins, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances, reactive oxygen species, and reduced glutathione/oxidized glutathione ratio in Caco-2 cells. All flavonoids showed a strong inhibitory activity on COXs, confirmed by molecular modeling studies, with DFM, which showed the best and most synergistic activity on COX-2 (82.45% vs. 87.93% of nimesulide). These results were also corroborated by the cell-based assays. Indeed, DFM proves to be the most powerful anti-inflammatory and antioxidant agent reducing, synergistically and in a statistically significant manner (p < 0.05), PGE2 release than the oxidative stress markers, also with respect to the nimesulide and trolox used as reference compounds. This leads to the hypothesis that FM could be an excellent antioxidant and COX inhibitor candidate to counteract intestinal inflammation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. The Essential Oil of Citrus lumia Risso and Poit. 'Pyriformis' Shows Promising Antioxidant, Anti-Inflammatory, and Neuromodulatory Effects.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Alloisio, Susanna, Barbieri, Raffaella, Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Malaspina, Paola, Burlando, Bruno, Cornara, Laura, and Trombetta, Domenico
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CITRUS , *ESSENTIAL oils , *NEURAL circuitry , *MICROSCOPY , *SCANNING electron microscopy , *VISIBLE spectra - Abstract
Citrus lumia Risso and Poit. 'Pyriformis' are horticultural varieties of Citrus lumia Risso. The fruit is very fragrant and pear-shaped, with a bitter juice, a floral flavor, and a very thick rind. The flavedo shows enlarged (0.74 × 1.16 mm), spherical and ellipsoidal secretory cavities containing the essential oil (EO), visible using light microscopy, and more evident using scanning electron microscopy. The GC-FID and GC-MS analyses of the EO showed a phytochemical profile characterized by the predominance of D-limonene (93.67%). The EO showed interesting antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities (IC50 0.07–2.06 mg/mL), as evaluated by the in vitro cell-free enzymatic and non-enzymatic assays. To evaluate the effect on the neuronal functional activity, the embryonic cortical neuronal networks grown on multi-electrode array chips were exposed to non-cytotoxic concentrations of the EO (5–200 µg/mL). The spontaneous neuronal activity was recorded and the mean firing rate, mean burst rate, percentage of spikes in a burst, mean burst durations and inter-spike intervals within a burst parameter were calculated. The EO induced strong and concentration-dependent neuroinhibitory effects, with IC50 ranging between 11.4–31.1 µg/mL. Furthermore, it showed an acetylcholinesterase inhibitory activity (IC50 0.19 mg/mL), which is promising for controlling some of the key symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases such as memory and cognitive concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Pedoclimatic Conditions Influence the Morphological, Phytochemical and Biological Features of Mentha pulegium L.
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Cornara, Laura, Sgrò, Federica, Raimondo, Francesco Maria, Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Mastracci, Luca, D'Angelo, Valeria, Germanò, Maria Paola, Trombetta, Domenico, and Smeriglio, Antonella
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ANTIOXIDANTS ,MINTS (Plants) ,CHORIOALLANTOIS ,FLOWER petals ,SCANNING electron microscopy ,COLLECTION & preservation of plant specimens - Abstract
In this study, Mentha pulegium leaves and flowers harvested in three different Sicilian areas were investigated from a micromorphological, phytochemical and biological point of view. Light and scanning electron microscopy showed the presence of spherocrystalline masses of diosmin both in the leaf epidermal cells and in thin flower petals. Two different chemotypes were identified (I, kaempferide/rosmarinic acid; II, jaceidin isomer A). Phytochemical screening identified plant from collection site II as the richest in total phenolics (16.74 g GAE/100 g DE) and that from collection site I as the richest in flavonoids (46.56 g RE/100 g DE). Seventy-seven metabolites were identified both in flower and leaf extracts. Plant from site II showed the best antioxidant (0.90–83.72 µg/mL) and anti-inflammatory (27.44–196.31 µg/mL) activity expressed as half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC
50 ) evaluated by DPPH, TEAC, FRAP, ORAC, BSA denaturation and protease inhibition assays. These data were also corroborated by in vitro cell-based assays on lymphocytes and erythrocytes. Moreover, plant of site II showed the best antiangiogenic properties (IC50 33.43–33.60 µg/mL) in vivo on a chick chorioallantoic membrane. In conclusion, pedoclimatic conditions influence the chemotype and the biological activity of M. pulegium, with chemotype I showing the most promising biological properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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8. Punica granatum Peel and Leaf Extracts as Promising Strategies for HSV-1 Treatment.
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EL-Aguel, Asma, Pennisi, Rosamaria, Smeriglio, Antonella, Kallel, Imen, Tamburello, Maria Pia, D'Arrigo, Manuela, Barreca, Davide, Gargouri, Ahmed, Trombetta, Domenico, Mandalari, Giuseppina, and Sciortino, Maria Teresa
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POMEGRANATE ,VIRAL genes ,VIRAL DNA ,HERPES simplex ,VIRAL proteins ,GALLIC acid - Abstract
Punica granatum is a rich source of bioactive compounds which exhibit various biological effects. In this study, pomegranate peel and leaf ethanolic crude extracts (PPE and PLE, respectively) were phytochemically characterized and screened for antioxidant, antimicrobial and antiviral activity. LC-PDA-ESI-MS analysis led to the identification of different compounds, including ellagitannins, flavonoids and phenolic acids. The low IC
50 values, obtained by DPPH and FRAP assays, showed a noticeable antioxidant effect of PPE and PLE comparable to the reference standards. Both crude extracts and their main compounds (gallic acid, ellagic acid and punicalagin) were not toxic on Vero cells and exhibited a remarkable inhibitory effect on herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) viral plaques formation. Specifically, PPE inhibited HSV-1 adsorption to the cell surface more than PLE. Indeed, the viral DNA accumulation, the transcription of viral genes and the expression of viral proteins were significantly affected by PPE treatment. Amongst the compounds, punicalagin, which is abundant in PPE crude extract, inhibited HSV-1 replication, reducing viral DNA and transcripts accumulation, as well as proteins of all three phases of the viral replication cascade. In contrast, no antibacterial activity was detected. In conclusion, our findings indicate that Punica granatum peel and leaf extracts, especially punicalagin, could be a promising therapeutic candidate against HSV-1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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9. Anti-Inflammatory and Wound Healing Properties of Leaf and Rhizome Extracts from the Medicinal Plant Peucedanum ostruthium (L.) W. D. J. Koch.
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Danna, Cristina, Bazzicalupo, Miriam, Ingegneri, Mariarosaria, Smeriglio, Antonella, Trombetta, Domenico, Burlando, Bruno, and Cornara, Laura
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MEDICINAL plants ,HEALING ,EXTRACTS ,ANTI-inflammatory agents ,NATIONAL parks & reserves - Abstract
Peucedanum ostruthium (L.) W. D. J. Koch (Apiaceae) is a worldwide perennial herb native to the mountains of central Southern Europe. The rhizome has a long tradition in popular medicine, while ethnobotanical surveys have revealed local uses of leaves for superficial injuries. To experimentally validate these uses, plant material was collected in the Gran Paradiso National Park, Aosta Valley, Italy, and the rhizome and leaves were micromorphologically and phytochemically characterized. Polyphenol-enriched hydroalcoholic rhizome and leaf extracts, used in cell-free assays, showed strong and concentration-dependent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. In vitro tests revealed cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase inhibition by the leaf extract, while the rhizome extract induced only lipoxygenase inhibition. MTT assays on HaCaT keratinocytes and L929 fibroblasts showed low cytotoxicity of extracts. In vitro scratch wound test on HaCaT resulted in a strong induction of wound closure with the leaf extract, while the effect of the rhizome extract was lower. The same test on L929 cells showed similar wound closure induction with both extracts. The results confirmed the traditional medicinal uses of the rhizome as an anti-inflammatory and wound healing remedy for superficial injuries but also highlighted that the leaves can be exploited for these purposes with equal or superior effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Wound-healing activity of Algerian Lavandula stoechas and Mentha pulegium extracts: from traditional use to scientific validation.
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Baali, Faiza, Boumerfeg, Sabah, Boudjelal, Amel, Denaro, Marcella, Ginestra, Giovanna, Baghiani, Abderrahmane, Righi, Nadjat, Deghima, Amirouche, Benbacha, Faycel, Smeriglio, Antonella, and Trombetta, Domenico
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MINTS (Plants) ,LAVENDERS ,WOUND healing ,FLAVONOLS ,FLAVONES ,PHENOLIC acids ,CANDIDA albicans ,PLANT polyphenols - Abstract
The aim of the present study has been to evaluate the antioxidant, antimicrobial and wound healing activity of Algerian Lavandula stoechas and Mentha pulegium methanol extracts (LE and ME, respectively) in order to scientifically validate their traditional use. After a preliminary phytochemical screening, a polyphenol profile characterization was carried out by RP-LC-DAD-ESI-MS/MS analysis. Antioxidant activity was evaluated by different in vitro assays such as DPPH, TEAC, FRAP and ORAC whereas antimicrobial activity was carried out against representative standard ATCC and clinical Gram-positive and Gram-negative strains as well as against Candida albicans. The wound healing activity of ointments containing 5% and 10% of LE and ME was investigated on Wistar albino rats. Different polyphenol classess (flavones, flavonols and phenolic acids) were identified with rosmarinic acid that was the most abundant compound in both extracts (5658.40 and 1201.35 mg/100 g of LE and ME, respectively). LE and ME have strong antioxidant activity, whereas they showed antimicrobial activity only against S. aureus. However, both 5% and 10% LE and ME ointments significantly accelerated the wound healing process in comparison with negative control, providing a scientific rationale for the traditional use of L. stoechas and M. pulegium aerial parts in the treatment of wounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Opuntia ficus-indica (L.) Mill. fruit as source of betalains with antioxidant, cytoprotective, and anti-angiogenic properties.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Bonasera, Serena, Germanò, Maria Paola, D'Angelo, Valeria, Barreca, Davide, Denaro, Marcella, Monforte, Maria Teresa, Galati, Enza Maria, and Trombetta, Domenico
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The aim of this work was to investigate the phytochemical profile and biological properties of different colours of betalain cactus pear extracts, evaluating their antioxidant, cytoprotective, and anti-angiogenic properties by cell-free, cell-based, and in vivo assays. A QuEChERS extraction method followed by RP-LC-DAD-MS/MS analysis showed that indicaxanthin and betanin were the main compounds (≥94.32% and ≥96.95%, respectively). Orange cactus pear extracts exert the best antioxidant activity in all assays carried out, in particular into ORAC (17,352.55 ± 987.407 mg trolox equivalents/100 g dry weight) and β-carotene bleaching (60.35%) assays. The red ones, instead, showed the best cytoprotective activity decreasing the cell mortality, LDH, and Caspase-3 release ranging from 4.0 to 55%. According to antioxidant results, the orange cactus pear extracts showing also the highest anti-angiogenic activity (IC50 19.31 μg/ml), followed by the red (IC50 23.55 μg/ml) and the yellow ones (IC50 33.97 μg/ml). In light of the results and correlation analysis, the behaviour of these molecules varies a lot according to their structure and physicochemical features and synergistic activity between betalain classes may be postulated; so the plant complex could be of greater interest compared with the isolated molecules for potential nutraceutical and pharmaceutical uses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Characterization of Polyphenols and Evaluation of Antioxidant Activity of Finola Hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) Seed Oil
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Galati, Enza Maria, Monforte, Maria Teresa, Favazzi, G., D'Angelo, V., and Circosta, Clara
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Cannabis sativa L., Polyphenols, Finola Hemp Seed Oil, Antioxidant Activity, Flavonoids ,Flavonoids ,Polyphenols ,Antioxidant Activity ,Finola Hemp Seed Oil ,Cannabis sativa L - Published
- 2015
13. Antioxidant Properties of Finola Hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) Seed Oil
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Galati, Enza Maria, Monforte, Maria Teresa, Gaia, Favazzi, and Circosta, Clara
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Cannabis sativa L., cold-pressed Finola seed oil, antioxidant activity ,antioxidant activity ,Cannabis sativa L ,cold-pressed Finola seed oil - Published
- 2015
14. Evaluation of antioxidant, antiinflammatory, and gastroprotective properties of Rubus fruticosus L. fruit juice.
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Monforte, Maria Teresa, Smeriglio, Antonella, Germanò, Maria Paola, Pergolizzi, Simona, Circosta, Clara, and Galati, Enza Maria
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THERAPEUTIC use of antioxidants ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANTI-inflammatory agents ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,FRUIT ,RATS ,PLANT extracts ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
The juice of R. fruticosus (RFJ) fruits grown in Sicily was analysed for polyphenol compounds and tested to evaluate in vitro antioxidant and in vivo antiinflammatory and gastroprotective effects. RFJ, containing mainly anthocyanins, such as cyanidin derivatives, significant amounts of phenolic acids, and smaller amounts of flavonoids, showed significant antioxidant activity in DPPH (2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical) (4,147.194 ± 17.199 mg trolox equivalent [TE]/100 ml), TE antioxidant capacity (8,312.444 ± 43.055 mg TE/100 ml), ferric reducing antioxidant power (2,177.830 ± 21.015 mg TE/100 ml), oxygen radical absorbance capacity (95,377.674 ± 616.194 μmol TE/100 ml juice), and β-carotene bleaching (72% ± 4.58) assay. In vivo studies showed that RFJ inhibit significantly the carrageenan-induced paw oedema (63-71%) in rats and possess antiinflammatory effects particularly significant in association with phenylbutazone (94-96%). In addition, RFJ pretreatment was able to prevent the ethanol-induced ulcerogenic effect in rats. All in vivo results were corroborated by histopathological observations and are in good agreement with antioxidant activity, confirming the relationships between biological effects observed and radical scavenging properties of RFJ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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15. Cyanidin-3-O-galactoside in ripe pistachio (Pistachia vera L. variety Bronte) hulls: Identification and evaluation of its antioxidant and cytoprotective activities.
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Bellocco, Ersilia, Barreca, Davide, Laganà, Giuseppina, Calderaro, Antonella, El Lekhlifi, Zineb, Chebaibi, Salima, Smeriglio, Antonella, and Trombetta, Domenico
- Abstract
Anthocyanidins, compounds with several health promoting properties, are able to influence a broad range of biological processes. In the present work we identified cyanidin-3- O -galactoside in ripe pistachio hulls, which represented the most abundant compound (>96%), and we performed a deep analysis of its antioxidant and cytoprotective activities against tert -butyl hydroperoxide induced toxicity on human lymphocytes. Cyanidin-3- O -galactoside showed strong antioxidant activity in ORAC, DPPH • , ABTS •+ , FRAP and O 2 •− assays, clearly superior to synthetic antioxidants BHT, BHA and Trolox, while no activity was detected with H 2 O 2 . Moreover, in the concentration range 0.1–10 µM, cyanidin-3- O -galactoside was found able to counteract cytotoxic effects of tert -butyl hydroperoxide decreasing or completely avoiding cell death, LDH release, caspase 3 activation and DNA damages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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16. Polyphenolic Compounds and Antioxidant Activity of Cold-Pressed Seed Oil from Finola Cultivar of Cannabis sativa L.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Galati, Enza M., Monforte, Maria T., Lanuzza, Francesco, D'Angelo, Valeria, and Circosta, Clara
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The aim of this study was to characterize the polyphenolic compounds and antioxidant activity of cold-pressed seed oil from Finola cultivar of industrial hemp (Cannabis sativa L.). Several methodologies have been employed to evaluate the in vitro antioxidant activity of Finola hempseed oil (FHSO) and both lipophilic (LF) and hydrophilic fractions (HF). The qualitative and quantitative composition of the phenolic fraction of FHSO was performed by HPLC analyses. From the results is evident that FHSO has high antioxidative activity, as measured by DPPH radical (146.76 mmol of TE/100 g oil), inhibited β-carotene bleaching, quenched a chemically generated peroxyl radical in vitro and showed high ferrous ion chelating activity. Reactivity towards 2,2'-azino-bis (3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) radical cation and ferric-reducing antioxidant power values were 695.2 µmol of TE/100g oil and 3690.6 µmol of TE/100 g oil respectively. FHSO contains a significant amount of phenolic compounds of which 2780.4 mg of quercetin equivalent/100 g of total flavonoids. The whole oil showed higher antioxidant activity compared with LF and HF. Our findings indicate that the significant antioxidant properties shown from Finola seed oil might generally depend on the phenolic compounds, especially flavonoids, such as flavanones, flavonols, flavanols and isoflavones. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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17. Characterization of Ingredients Incorporated in the Traditional Mixed-Salad of the Capuchin Monks.
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Cornara, Laura, Ambu, Gabriele, Alberto, Alex, Trombetta, Domenico, and Smeriglio, Antonella
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EDIBLE wild plants ,SALADS ,CHICORY ,PHYTOCHEMICALS ,PROANTHOCYANIDINS ,MONKS ,BIOACTIVE compounds ,SEVENTEENTH century - Abstract
Recipes on the composition of the "salad of the monks" (Capuchin monks) have been reported in Italy since the 17th century. Different wild edible plants were highly regarded as an important ingredient of this mixed salad. Among these, some species played a key role for both their taste and nutritional properties: Plantago coronopus L. (PC), Rumex acetosa L., Cichorium intybus L., and Artemisia dracunculus L. In the present study, the micromorphological and phytochemical features as well as the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties of extracts of these fresh and blanched leaves, were investigated. The extracts obtained by blanched leaves, according to the traditionally used cooking method, showed the highest content of bioactive compounds (total phenols 1202.31–10,751.88 mg GAE/100 g DW; flavonoids 2921.38–61,141.83 mg QE/100 g DW; flavanols 17.47–685.52 mg CE/100 g DW; proanthocyanidins 2.83–16.33 mg CyE/100 g DW; total chlorophyll 0.84–1.09 mg/g FW; carbohydrates 0.14–1.92 g/100 g FW) and possess the most marked antioxidant (IC
50 0.30–425.20 µg/mL) and anti-inflammatory activity (IC50 240.20–970.02 µg/mL). Considering this, our results indicate that increased consumption of the investigated plants, in particular of PC, raw or cooked briefly, could provide a healthy food source in the modern diet by the recovery and enhancement of ancient ingredients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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18. New Insights on Euphorbia dendroides L. (Euphorbiaceae): Polyphenol Profile and Biological Properties of Hydroalcoholic Extracts from Aerial Parts.
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Smeriglio, Antonella, Denaro, Marcella, Trombetta, Domenico, Ragusa, Salvatore, and Circosta, Clara
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EUPHORBIA ,CHLOROGENIC acid ,PHYTOCHEMICALS ,EUPHORBIACEAE ,ARTEMIA ,EXTRACTS ,PHENOLIC acids ,ANTI-inflammatory agents - Abstract
Euphorbia dendroides L. is a rounded shrub commonly found in the Mediterranean area well-known, since ancient times, for its traditional use. The aim of the present study was to investigate the phytochemical profile as well as the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties of flower (FE), leaf (LE), fruit (FrE), and branch (BE) hydroalcoholic extracts. For this purpose, a preliminary phytochemical screening followed by RP-LC-DAD-ESI-MS analysis, as well as several in vitro cell-free colorimetric assays, were carried out. Moreover, the toxicity of the extracts was investigated by the brine shrimp lethality assay. All extracts showed a high content of polyphenols, in particular phenolic acids (chlorogenic acid 0.74–13.80 g/100 g) and flavonoids (rutin 0.05–2.76 g/100 g and isovitexin 8.02 in BE). All the extracts showed strong and concentration-dependent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity with, on average, the following order of potency: FE, LE, FrE, and BE. Interestingly, all the extracts investigated did not show any toxicity on Artemia salina. Moreover, the only LD
50 found (BE, 8.82 mg/mL) is well above the concentration range, which has been shown the biological properties. Considering this, this study offers the first evidence of the possible use of the polyphenol extracts from the aerial parts of E. dendroides as promising antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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19. Phlomis crinita Cav. From Algeria: A source of bioactive compounds possessing antioxidant and wound healing activities.
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Baali, Faiza, Boudjelal, Amel, Smeriglio, Antonella, Righi, Nadjat, Djemouai, Nadjette, Deghima, Amirouche, Bouafia, Zineb, and Trombetta, Domenico
- Subjects
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WOUND healing , *PATIENT safety , *TANNINS , *COLORIMETRY , *FLAVONOIDS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *IN vivo studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PLANT extracts , *MICE , *FLOWERS , *ANTIOXIDANTS , *ANIMAL experimentation , *PHENOLS , *LIQUID chromatography , *ELECTROSPRAY ionization mass spectrometry , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FLUORIMETRY - Abstract
Phlomis crinita Cav. (Lamiaceae), locally known as "El Khayata" or "Kayat El Adjarah", is traditionally used in Algeria for its wound-healing properties. Investigate, for the first time, the phytochemical profile, safety, antioxidant and wound-healing activities of the flowering tops methanolic extract of P. crinita (PCME) collected from Bouira Province in the North of Algeria. Preliminary phytochemical assays were carried out on PCME to quantify the main classes of bioactive compounds, such as total phenols, flavonoids, and tannins. An in-depth LC-DAD-ESI-MS analysis was carried out to elucidate the phytochemical profile of this plant species. Antioxidant activity was investigated by several colorimetric and fluorimetric assays (DPPH, TEAC, FRAP, ORAC, β-carotene bleaching and ferrozine assay). The acute oral toxicity of PCME (2000 mg/kg b.w.) was tested in vivo on Swiss albino mice, whereas the acute dermal toxicity and wound-healing properties of the PCME ointment (1–5% PCMO) were tested in vivo on Wistar albino rats. Biochemical and histological analyses were carried out on biological samples. The phytochemical screening highlighted a high content of phenolic compounds (175.49 ± 0.8 mg of gallic acid equivalents/g of dry extract), mainly flavonoids (82.28 ± 0.44 mg of quercetin equivalents/g of dry extract). Fifty-seven compounds were identified by LC-DAD-ESI-MS analysis, belonging mainly to the class of flavones (32.27%), with luteolin 7-(6″-acetylglucoside) as the most abundant compound and phenolic acids (32.54%), with salvianolic acid C as the most abundant compound. A conspicuous presence of phenylethanoids (15.26%) was also found, of which the major constituent is forsythoside B. PCME showed a strong antioxidant activity with half-inhibitory activity (IC 50) ranging from 1.88 to 37.88 μg/mL and a moderate iron chelating activity (IC 50 327.44 μg/mL). PCME appears to be safe with Lethal Dose 50 (LD 50) ≥ 2000 mg/kg b.w. No mortality or toxicity signs, including any statistically significant changes in body weight gain and relative organs' weight with respect to the control group, were recorded. A significant (p < 0.001) wound contraction was observed in the 5% PCMO-treated group with respect to the untreated and petroleum jelly groups between 8 and 20 days, whereas no statistically significant results were observed at the two lower doses (1 and 2% PCMO). In addition, the 5% PCMO-treated group showed a statistically significant (p < 0.05) wound healing activity with respect to the reference drug-treated group, showing, at the end of the study, the highest wound contraction percentage (88.00 ± 0.16%). PCME was safe and showed strong antioxidant and wound-healing properties, suggesting new interesting pharmaceutical applications for P. crinita based on its traditional use. [Display omitted] • Phlomis crinita Cav. is traditionally used in Algeria as a wound-healing remedy. • P. crinita flowering tops methanolic extract (PCME) is rich in bioactive compounds. • PCME exerts strong in vitro antioxidant activity and in vivo wound-healing activity. • PCME appears to be safe with a Lethal Dose 50 (LD 50) ≥ 2000 mg/kg body weight. • This study scientifically validates the traditional Algerian use of P. crinita. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Food flavonols: Nutraceuticals with complex health benefits and functionalities.
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Barreca, Davide, Trombetta, Domenico, Smeriglio, Antonella, Mandalari, Giuseppina, Romeo, Orazio, Felice, Maria Rosa, Gattuso, Giuseppe, and Nabavi, Seyed Mohammad
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FLAVONOLS , *STRUCTURE-activity relationships , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *BIOACTIVE compounds , *FLAVONOIDS , *FUNCTIONAL foods , *MYRICETIN - Abstract
Flavonols are one of the most promising class of bioactive compounds belonging to the broad family of the flavonoids, characterized by a unique set of features in their basic chemical skeleton and several specific substitutions in selected position of the rings A, B and C. This interesting class of phytochemicals includes compounds such as quercetin, kaempferol, myricetin, rhamnetin, morin, fisetin, galagin, azaleatin and their respective glycosyl derivatives. They have been identified in several foods and provide them great health benefits. This review updates and integrates, in a critical fashion, the current knowledge on flavonols as food sources, chemical features, structure-activity relationships, bioavailability and health benefits (from preclinical and clinical studies), focusing on both in vitro and in vivo reports. Dietary flavonols are bioavailable molecules in human with impressive health benefits (such as antioxidation, cardioprotection, antibacterial, antiviral and anticancer activity) and the process of metabolization also produces compounds with remarkable bioactivities just like the corresponding precursors. Their inclusion into human diet is highly recommended for their unquestionable health promoting properties, being excellent nutraceuticals as well as ingredients for good functional food. [Display omitted] • Food flavonols are nutraceuticals with remarkable biological applications. • Basic skeleton of flavonols has characteristic features for their functionality. • Some foods in the human diet are very rich source of flavonols. • Flavonols have promising anticancer, antimicrobial, antioxidant and antiviral properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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21. Evaluation of the nutraceutical, antioxidant and cytoprotective properties of ripe pistachio (Pistacia vera L., variety Bronte) hulls.
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Barreca, Davide, Laganà, Giuseppina, Leuzzi, Ugo, Smeriglio, Antonella, Trombetta, Domenico, and Bellocco, Ersilia
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PISTACHIO , *FUNCTIONAL foods , *ANTIOXIDANTS , *CYTOPROTECTION , *ORGANIC solvents , *HIGH performance liquid chromatography , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Every year tons of pistachio hulls are separated and eliminated, as waste products, from pistachio seeds. In this study the hulls of ripe pistachios were extracted with two organic solvents (ethanol and methanol) and characterized for phenolic composition, antioxidant power and cytoprotective activity. RP-HPLC-DAD-FLU separation enabled us to identify 20 derivatives, including and by far the most abundant gallic acid, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, protocatechuic acid, naringin, eriodictyol-7- O -glucoside, isorhamnetin-7- O -glucoside, quercetin-3- O -rutinoside, isorhamnetin-3- O -glucoside and catechin. Methanol extraction gave the highest yields for all classes of compounds and presented a higher scavenging activity in all the antioxidant assays performed. The same was found for cytoprotective activity on lymphocytes, lipid peroxidation and protein degradation. These findings highlight the strong antioxidant and cytoprotective activity of the extract components, and illustrate how a waste product can be used as a source of nutraceuticals to employ in manufacturing industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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