Food Chem Toxicol
December 2010
Grape skin extracts of Riesling Vitis vinifera L. grapes from conventionally or organically managed cultivars were compared on the basis of their phenolic content, antioxidant capacity, antimicrobial and antimutagenic properties and pesticide loads. Promising results on their biological properties suggest that those extracts would be valuable as food preservatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChinese purple corn extracts ( Zea mays L., Zhuozhou, Hebei, China) (EZPC) were selected among five Chinese purple corn hybrids due to their higher anthocyanin content, and their thermal stability was evaluated. The total anthocyanin content and total phenolic content of EZPC were 304.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-pressure/high-temperature properties of vitamins in food are important with respect to the new pressure-assisted thermal sterilization method utilizing pressure-induced adiabatic temperature changes. Riboflavin, thiamin, and thiamin monophosphate (TMP) stabilities were assayed in the temperature range from 25 to 100 degrees C under normal pressure (0.1 MPa) and high pressure (600 MPa) in acetate-buffered (pH 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrude brain homogenates of terminally diseased hamsters infected with the 263 K strain of scrapie (PrP Sc) were heated and/or pressurized at 800 MPa at 60 degrees C for different times (a few seconds or 5, 30, 120 min) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) of different pH and concentration. Prion proteins were analyzed on immunoblots for their proteinase K (PK) resistance, and in hamster bioassays for their infectivity. Samples pressurized under initially neutral conditions and containing native PrP Sc were negative on immunoblots after PK treatment, and a 6-7 log reduction of infectious units per gram was found when the samples were pressurized in PBS of pH 7.
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