Differential accumulation of flavonoids and hydroxycinnamates in leaves of <i>Ligustrum vulgare</i> under excess light and drought stress• The differential accumulation of various polyphenols, particularly of flavonoids and hydroxycinnamates, was studied in leaves of Ligustrum vulgare exposed to increasing sunlight under well watered or drought-stress conditions. • Light- and drought-induced changes in leaf polyphenol concentrations were normalized to the CO2 assimilation rate. The functional roles of flavonoids and hydroxycinnamates were analysed through tissue localization using multispectral fluorescence microimaging, and through efficiencies to scavenge superoxide radicals (O2−) and to screen UV wavelengths. • Clear effects of light and water treatments on leaf polyphenol concentrations were not observed, as the CO2 assimilation rate varied according to sunlight and water availability. However, biosynthesis of quercetin 3-O-rutinoside, luteolin 7-O-glucoside and echinacoside, which were efficient O2− scavengers, increased sharply in response to solar radiation. By contrast, carbon for the synthesis of p-coumaric acid and monohydroxyflavones, efficient UV screeners but poor O2− scavengers, did not vary depending on light treatments. Flavonoids accumulated in both the adaxial epidermis and the palisade tissue because of sunlight irradiance, whereas echinacoside occurred largely in abaxial tissues. • We hypothesize that flavonoids may serve antioxidant functions in response to excess light and drought stress, and that a coordinate control system between hydroxycinnamate and flavonoid pathways operated in L. vulgare exposed to excess light.
Polyphenolic Content in Olive Oil Waste Waters and Related Olive SamplesNádia Mulinacci, Annalisa Romani, Carlotta Galardi et al.|Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry|2001 The production of olive oil yields a considerable amount of waste water, which is a powerful pollutant and is currently discarded. Polyphenols and other natural antioxidants, extracted from olives during oil extraction process, partially end up in the waste waters. Experimental and commercial olive oil waste waters from four Mediterranean countries were analyzed for a possible recovering of these biologically interesting constituents. Identification and quantitation of the main polyphenols were carried out by applying HPLC-DAD and HPLC-MS methods. Representative samples of ripe olives were also analyzed at the same time to correlate, if possible, their polyphenolic profiles with those of the corresponding olive oil waste waters. The results demonstrate that Italian commercial olive oil waste waters were the richest in total polyphenolic compounds with amounts between 150 and 400 mg/100 mL of waste waters. These raw, as yet unused, matrices could represent an interesting and alternative source of biologically active polyphenols.
Antioxidant Activity of Galloyl Quinic Derivatives Isolated from P. lentiscus LeavesThe antioxidant properties of galloyl quinic derivatives isolated from Pistacia lentiscus L. leaves have been investigated by means of Electron Paramagnetic Resonance spectroscopy (EPR) and UV-Vis spectrophotometry. Antioxidant properties have been also estimated using the biologically relevant LDL test. The scavenger activities of gallic acid, 5-O-galloyl, 3,5-O-digalloyl, 3,4,5-O-trigalloyl quinic acid derivatives, have been estimated against 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical, superoxide (O2) radical, and hydroxyl (OH) radical. On the whole, the scavenger activity raised as the number of galloyl groups on the quinic acid skeleton increased. The half-inhibition concentrations (IC50) of di- and tri-galloyl derivatives did not exceed 30 microM for all the tested free radicals. All the tested metabolites strongly reduced the oxidation of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), following a trend similar to that observed for the scavenger ability against OH radical.
Polyphenols in greenhouse and open-air-grown lettuceEvaluation of Antioxidant Effect of Different Extracts of<i>Myrtus communis</i>L.Oxidative stress is involved in the pathogenesis of numerous diseases. Nevertheless, no optimal natural antioxidant has been found for therapeutics, therefore polyphenol antioxidants have been looked for in myrtle leaves, a plant that in folk medicine has been used as anti-inflammatory drug. Antioxidant-rich fractions were prepared from myrtle (Myrtus communis L.) leaves liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) with different solvents. All myrtle extracts were very rich in polyphenols. In particular, hydroalcoholic extracts contain galloyl-glucosides, ellagitannins, galloyl-quinic acids and flavonol glycosides; ethylacetate extract and aqueous residues after LLE are enriched in flavonol glycosides and hydrolysable tannins (galloyl-glucosides, ellagitannins, galloyl-quinic acids), respectively. Qualitative and quantitative analysis for the single unidentified compound was also performed. Human LDL exposed to copper ions was used to evaluate the antioxidant activity of the myrtle extracts. Addition of these extracts did not affect the basal oxidation of LDL but dose-dependently decreased the oxidation induced by copper ions. Moreover, the myrtle extracts reduce the formation of conjugated dienes. The antioxidant effect of three myrtle extracts decreased in the following order: hydroalcoholic extracts, ethylacetate and aqueous residues after LLE. The extracts had the following IC50: 0.36, 2.27 and 2.88 microM, when the sum of total phenolic compounds was considered after the correction of molecular weight based on pure compounds. Statistical analysis showed a significant difference among hydroalcoholic extracts vs. the ethylacetate and aqueous residues after LLE. These results suggest that the myrtle extracts have a potent antioxidant activity mainly due to the presence of galloyl derivatives.