Agnese Taticchi
University of Perugia
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Featured researches published by Agnese Taticchi.
Inflammopharmacology | 2009
Maurizio Servili; Sonia Esposto; Roberto Fabiani; Stefania Urbani; Agnese Taticchi; F. Mariucci; Roberto Selvaggini; Gianfrancesco Montedoro
Abstract.Hydrophilic phenols are the most abundant natural antioxidants of virgin olive oil (VOO), in which, however, tocopherols and carotenes are also present. The prevalent classes of hydrophilic phenols found in VOO are phenolic alcohols and acids, flavonoids, lignans and secoiridoids. Among these substances the last two classes include the most concentrate phenols of VOO. Secoiridoids, like aglycone derivatives of oleuropein, demethyloleuropein and ligstroside, are present in olive fruit as most abundant VOO phenolic antioxidants. Several important biological properties (antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, chemopreventive and anti-cancer) and the characteristic pungent and bitter tasty properties have been attributed to VOO phenols. Relationships between polyphenols activities and their chemical structures are discussed in this paper.
International Journal of Cancer | 2005
Chris I. R. Gill; Adele Boyd; Emily McDermott; Mark J. McCann; Maurizio Servili; Roberto Selvaggini; Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Gianfrancesco Montedoro; Hugh McGlynn; Ian Rowland
The traditional Mediterranean diet is thought to represent a healthy lifestyle; especially given the incidence of several cancers including colorectal cancer is lower in Mediterranean countries compared to Northern Europe. Olive oil, a central component of the Mediterranean diet, is believed to beneficially affect numerous biological processes. We used phenols extracted from virgin olive oil on a series of in vitro systems that model important stages of colon carcinogenesis. The effect the extract on DNA damage induced by hydrogen peroxide was measured in HT29 cells using single cell microgel‐electrophoresis. A significant anti‐genotoxic linear trend (p = 0.011) was observed when HT29 cells were pre‐incubated with olive oil phenols (0, 5, 10, 25, 50, 75, 100 μg/ml) for 24 hr, then challenged with hydrogen peroxide. The olive oil phenols (50, 100 μg/ml) significantly (p = 0.004, p = 0.002) improved barrier function of CACO2 cells after 48 hr as measured by trans‐epithelial resistance. Significant inhibition of HT115 invasion (p < 0.01) was observed at olive oil phenols concentrations of 25, 50, 75, 100 μg/ml using the matrigel invasion assay. No effect was observed on HT115 viability over the concentration range 0, 25, 50 75, 100 μg/ml after 24 hr, although 75 and 100 μg/ml olive oil phenols significantly inhibited HT115 cell attachment (p = 0.011, p = 0.006). Olive oil phenols had no significant effect on metastasis‐related gene expression in HT115 cells. We have demonstrated that phenols extracted from virgin olive oil are capable of inhibiting several stages in colon carcinogenesis in vitro.
International Journal of Cancer | 2008
Yumi Zuhanis Has-Yun Hashim; Ian Rowland; Hugh McGlynn; Maurizio Servili; Roberto Selvaggini; Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Gianfrancesco Montedoro; Leena Kaisalo; Kristiina Wähälä; Chris I. R. Gill
Studies in human, animal and cellular systems suggest that phenols from virgin olive oil are capable of inhibiting several stages in carcinogenesis, including metastasis. The invasion cascade comprises cell attachment to extracellular matrix components or basement membrane, degradation of basement membrane by proteolytic enzymes and migration of cells through the modified matrix. In the present study, we investigated the effect of phenolics extracted from virgin olive oil (OVP) and its main constituents: hydroxytyrosol (3,4‐dihydroxyphenylethanol), tyrosol (p‐hydroxyphenylethanol), pinoresinol and caffeic acid. The effects of these phenolics were tested on the invasion of HT115 human colon carcinoma cells in a Matrigel invasion assay. OVP and its compounds showed different dose‐related anti‐invasive effects. At 25 μg/ml OVP and equivalent doses of individual compounds, significant anti‐invasive effects were seen in the range of 45–55% of control. Importantly, OVP, but not the isolated phenolics, significantly reduced total cell number in the Matrigel invasion assay. There were no significant effects shown on cell viability, indicating the reduction of cell number in the Matrigel invasion assay was not due to cytotoxicity. There were also no significant effects on cell attachment to plastic substrate, indicating the importance of extracellular matrix in modulating the anti‐invasive effects of OVP. In conclusion, the results from this study indicate that phenols from virgin olive oil have the ability to inhibit invasion of colon cancer cells and the effects may be mediated at different levels of the invasion cascade.
Natural Product Reports | 2008
Hassan K. Obied; Paul D. Prenzler; Danielle Ryan; Maurizio Servili; Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Kevin Robards
The genus Olea contains the economically important European olive tree (Olea europaea L.). This species is also of chemotaxonomic interest because of the presence of various phenol-conjugated oleosidic secoiridoids or oleosides. The chemistry of these phenolic oleosides is diverse and complicated, and it is only in recent years that attention has been given to their biosynthesis and the biotransformations during the processing and storage of olive products. Many questions regarding these processes remain unanswered, and yet these have significant impact on the quality and value of olive products such as olive oil.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Maurizio Servili; Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Stefania Urbani; Roberto Selvaggini; Gianfrancesco Montedoro
The sensory and health properties of virgin olive oil (VOO) are highly related to its volatile and phenolic composition. Oxygen control in the pastes during malaxation may be a new technological parameter to regulate enzymatic activities, such as polyphenoloxidase, peroxidase, and lipoxygenase, which affect the phenolic and volatile composition of VOO. In this work, we monitored CO2 and O2 concentrations during industrial-scale olive paste malaxation with various initial O2 concentrations within the malaxer headspace. Results show that the O2 concentration in the malaxer headspace did not affect CO2 production during processing, whereas a strong influence was observed on the changes of the phenolic composition of olive pastes and VOOs, with high correlation coefficient for the total phenols (R = 0.94), especially for oleuropein and demethyloleuropein derivatives (R = 0.81). In contrast, aroma production during malaxation was minimally affected by the O2 concentration in the malaxer headspace.
Antioxidants | 2013
Maurizio Servili; Beatrice Sordini; Sonia Esposto; Stefania Urbani; Gianluca Veneziani; Ilona Di Maio; Roberto Selvaggini; Agnese Taticchi
Over the last few decades, multiple biological properties, providing antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, chemopreventive and anti-cancer benefits, as well as the characteristic pungent and bitter taste, have been attributed to Extra Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO) phenols. In particular, growing efforts have been devoted to the study of the antioxidants of EVOO, due to their importance from health, biological and sensory points of view. Hydrophilic and lipophilic phenols represent the main antioxidants of EVOO, and they include a large variety of compounds. Among them, the most concentrated phenols are lignans and secoiridoids, with the latter found exclusively in the Oleaceae family, of which the drupe is the only edible fruit. In recent years, therefore, we have tackled the study of the main properties of phenols, including the relationships between their biological activity and the related chemical structure. This review, in fact, focuses on the phenolic compounds of EVOO, and, in particular, on their biological properties, sensory aspects and antioxidant capacity, with a particular emphasis on the extension of the product shelf-life.
BMC Plant Biology | 2012
Fiammetta Alagna; Roberto Mariotti; Francesco Panara; Silvia Caporali; Stefania Urbani; Gianluca Veneziani; Sonia Esposto; Agnese Taticchi; Adolfo Rosati; Rosa Rao; Gaetano Perrotta; Maurizio Servili; Luciana Baldoni
BackgroundOlive (Olea europaea L.) fruits contain numerous secondary metabolites, primarily phenolics, terpenes and sterols, some of which are particularly interesting for their nutraceutical properties. This study will attempt to provide further insight into the profile of olive phenolic compounds during fruit development and to identify the major genetic determinants of phenolic metabolism.ResultsThe concentration of the major phenolic compounds, such as oleuropein, demethyloleuropein, 3–4 DHPEA-EDA, ligstroside, tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol, verbascoside and lignans, were measured in the developing fruits of 12 olive cultivars. The content of these compounds varied significantly among the cultivars and decreased during fruit development and maturation, with some compounds showing specificity for certain cultivars. Thirty-five olive transcripts homologous to genes involved in the pathways of the main secondary metabolites were identified from the massive sequencing data of the olive fruit transcriptome or from cDNA-AFLP analysis. Their mRNA levels were determined using RT-qPCR analysis on fruits of high- and low-phenolic varieties (Coratina and Dolce d’Andria, respectively) during three different fruit developmental stages. A strong correlation was observed between phenolic compound concentrations and transcripts putatively involved in their biosynthesis, suggesting a transcriptional regulation of the corresponding pathways. OeDXS, OeGES, OeGE10H and OeADH, encoding putative 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-P synthase, geraniol synthase, geraniol 10-hydroxylase and arogenate dehydrogenase, respectively, were almost exclusively present at 45 days after flowering (DAF), suggesting that these compounds might play a key role in regulating secoiridoid accumulation during fruit development.ConclusionsMetabolic and transcriptional profiling led to the identification of some major players putatively involved in biosynthesis of secondary compounds in the olive tree. Our data represent the first step towards the functional characterisation of important genes for the determination of olive fruit quality.
International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2011
Maurizio Servili; Carlo Giuseppe Rizzello; Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Stefania Urbani; Francesco Mazzacane; I. Di Maio; Roberto Selvaggini; Marco Gobbetti; R. Di Cagno
Functional milk beverages (FMB100 and FMB200) fortified with phenolic compounds (100 and 200mg/l) extracted from olive vegetable water, and fermented with γ-amino butyric acid (GABA)-producing (Lactobacillus plantarum C48) and autochthonous human gastro-intestinal (Lactobacillus paracasei 15N) lactic acid bacteria were manufactured. A milk beverage (MB), without addition of phenolic compounds, was used as the control. Except for a longer latency phase of FMB200, the three beverages showed an almost similar kinetic of acidification, consumption of lactose and synthesis of lactic acid. Apart from the beverage, Lb. plantarum C48 showed a decrease of ca. Log 2.52-2.24 cfu/ml during storage. The cell density of functional Lb. paracasei 15N remained always above the value of Log 8.0 cfu/ml. During fermentation, the total concentration of free amino acids markedly increased without significant (P > 0.05) differences between beverages. The concentration of GABA increased during fermentation and further storage (63.0 ± 0.6-67.0 ± 2.1mg/l) without significant (P > 0.05) differences between beverages. After fermentation, FMB100 and FMB200 showed the same phenolic composition of the phenol extract from olive vegetable water but a different ratio between 3,4-DHPEA and 3,4-DHPEA-EDA. During storage, the concentrations of 3,4-DHPEA-EDA, p-HPEA and verbascoside of both FMB100 and FMB200 decreased. Only the concentration of 3,4-DHPEA increased. As shown by SPME-GC-MS analysis, diactetyl, acetoin and, especially, acetaldehyde were the main volatile compounds found. The concentration of phenolic compounds does not interfere with the volatile composition. Sensory analyses based on triangle and paired comparison tests showed that phenolic compounds at the concentrations of 100 or 200mg/l were suitable for addition to functional milk beverages.
Food Chemistry | 2000
Maurizio Servili; Roberto Selvaggini; Agnese Taticchi; Alberto Luigi Begliomini; Gianfrancesco Montedoro
Abstract Tomato juice contains volatile compounds that are originally detected in fruit, such as terpenes, and others that are originated during processing by lipoxygenase activity, carotenoid co-oxidation and Maillard reaction that can be activated during the thermal treatments. This paper reports the analysis of the volatile compounds of tomato juice sampled by solid phase microextraction (SPME) and the optimization of the blanching parameters in tomato juice, using the volatile compounds as markers. One hundred and ninety volatile compounds, including ketones, aldehydes, alcohols, esters, ethers, hydrocarbons, sulfur, nitrogen and oxygen compounds, phenols, oxygen-containing heterocyclic compounds, free acids and lactones, were identified or tentatively identified by the GC–MS technique. The thermal treatment mainly modifies saturated and unsaturated C6 alcohols and aldehydes, esters, ketones and carotenoid derivatives. The optimal conditions for the blanching, selected by response surface modelling (RSM), were 67°C for 24 min and 86°C for 3.5 min for the cold break and the hot break treatments, respectively.
Food Chemistry | 2013
Agnese Taticchi; Sonia Esposto; Gianluca Veneziani; Stefania Urbani; Roberto Selvaggini; Maurizio Servili
The effect of the malaxation temperature under sealed conditions on the qualitative and quantitative composition of the phenolic compounds in virgin olive oils produced from four Italian cultivars was assessed for two atmospheric conditions. In both cases, the results show a positive relationship between temperature and the concentration of the derivatives of the secoiridoid aglycones; the effect of the temperature on the oxidoreductases that promote oxidation (polyphenoloxidase and peroxidase) was investigated to determine their optimal temperatures and thermal stability. While olive peroxidase (POD) showed the highest activity at 37°C and high stability in the temperature range tested, polyphenoloxidase (PPO) exhibited the optimum activity at approximately 50°C, but showed low stability at 40°C, with a large variation in stability according to the olive cultivar. These results may contribute to an understanding of the increase in the phenol concentration found in virgin olive oils obtained following higher temperatures of malaxation.