articleComprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food SafetySep 16, 2009Closed access

Mechanisms of Antioxidants in the Oxidation of Foods

Food & Nutrition · The Ohio State University

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Abstract

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…

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674
total citations
FWCI
6.80
Percentile
100%
References
154
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Antioxidant
  • Chemistry
  • Ascorbic acid
  • Carotenoid
  • Lipid oxidation
  • Food science
  • Caffeic acid
  • Singlet oxygen
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