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Dive into the research topics where Ceferino Carrera is active.

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Featured researches published by Ceferino Carrera.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2012

Ultrasound assisted extraction of phenolic compounds from grapes

Ceferino Carrera; Ana Ruiz-Rodríguez; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

A new ultrasound-assisted extraction method was developed for the determination of phenolic compounds present in grapes. Several extraction variables including extraction temperature (0-75°C), output amplitude (20, 50 and 100%), duty cycle (0.2 s, 0.6 s and 1 s), the quantity of sample (0.5-2 g), and the total extraction time (3-15 min) were evaluated. One of the most widely used extraction methods of polyphenol extraction has been used as reference method. Three parameters were compared: total amount of phenolic compounds, total amount of anthocyanins and total amount of tannic components. The resulting method produced similar or higher recoveries for these three parameters; however a much shorter extraction time was needed: 6 min (ultrasound assisted extraction method) instead of 60 min (reference method). Analytical properties for the new method were established, including limit of detection, limit of quantification, repeatability and reproducibility. The developed method was applied to two different types of grapes in different ripening degree.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2007

Plant biocommunicators: their phytotoxicity, degradation studies and potential use as herbicide models

Francisco A. Macías; Alberto Oliveros-Bastidas; David Marín; Ceferino Carrera; Nuria Chinchilla; José M. G. Molinillo

The development of new bioactive molecules with potential application in pharmacology and agriculture by using natural products as templates has been a widely used approach in the recent years. Focusing our attention in phytochemicals with potential application in agriculture, allelochemicals (natural plant toxins) have been deeply researched with the main purpose of finding phytotoxic substances to use as new herbicidal templates. The development of new analytical methodologies, improved bioassay techniques and a complete understanding of the allelopathic phenomenon will provide new tools for natural herbicide models development, in the context of the new approaches to integrated pest management. A deeper knowledge of the release and assimilation of allelochemicals, and the degradation phenomena associated to them will aid to discover new chemical structures with potential utility, in addition to a better understanding on the ecological interactions mediated by phytochemicals. The research on these topics, made with promising allelochemicals such as benzoxazinones and their degradation derivatives, the improvements on analytical design, the degradation mechanisms elucidation and the novel bioassay techniques recently developed, are revised herein.


Food Chemistry | 2017

Optimization of the ultrasound-assisted extraction of anthocyanins and total phenolic compounds in mulberry (Morus nigra) pulp.

Estrella Espada-Bellido; Marta Ferreiro-González; Ceferino Carrera; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso; Gerardo F. Barbero

New ultrasound-assisted extraction methods for the determination of anthocyanins and total phenolic compounds present in mulberries have been developed. Several extraction variables, including methanol composition (50-100%), temperature (10-70°C), ultrasound amplitude (30-70%), cycle (0.2-0.7s), solvent pH (3-7) and solvent-solid ratio (10:1.5-20:1.5) were optimized. A Box-Behnken design in conjunction with a response surface methodology was employed to optimize the conditions for the maximum response based on 54 different experiments. Two response variables were considered: total anthocyanins and total phenolic compounds. Extraction temperature and solvent composition were found to be the most influential parameters for anthocyanins (48°C and 76%) and phenolic compounds (64°C and 61%). The developed methods showed high reproducibility and repeatability (RSD<5%). Finally, the new methods were successfully applied to real samples in order to investigate the presence of anthocyanins and total phenolic compounds in several mulberry jams.


Ultrasonics Sonochemistry | 2015

Ultrasound-assisted extraction of amino acids from grapes

Ceferino Carrera; Ana Ruiz-Rodríguez; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

Recent cultivar techniques on vineyards can have a marked influence on the final nitrogen content of grapes, specifically individual amino acid contents. Furthermore, individual amino acid contents in grapes are related to the final aromatic composition of wines. A new ultrasound-assisted method for the extraction of amino acids from grapes has been developed. Several extraction variables, including solvent (water/ethanol mixtures), solvent pH (2-7), temperature (10-70°C), ultrasonic power (20-70%) and ultrasonic frequency (0.2-1.0s(-)(1)), were optimized to guarantee full recovery of the amino acids from grapes. An experimental design was employed to optimize the extraction parameters. The surface response methodology was used to evaluate the effects of the extraction variables. The analytical properties of the new method were established, including limit of detection (average value 1.4mmolkg(-)(1)), limit of quantification (average value 2.6mmolkg(-)(1)), repeatability (average RSD=12.9%) and reproducibility (average RSD=15.7%). Finally, the new method was applied to three cultivars of white grape throughout the ripening period.


Food Chemistry | 2017

Multiresponse optimization of a UPLC method for the simultaneous determination of tryptophan and 15 tryptophan-derived compounds using a Box-Behnken design with a desirability function

Widiastuti Setyaningsih; Irfan E. Saputro; Ceferino Carrera; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

A Box-Behnken design was used in conjunction with multiresponse optimization based on the desirability function to carry out the simultaneous separation of tryptophan and 15 derivatives by Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography. The gradient composition of the mobile phase and the flow rate were optimized with respect to the resolution of severely overlapping chromatographic peaks and the total run time. Two different stationary phases were evaluated (hybrid silica and a solid-core-based C18 column). The methods were validated and a suitable sensitivity was found for all compounds in the concentration range 1-100μgL-1 (R2>0.999). High levels of repeatability and intermediate precision (CV less than 0.25% and 1.7% on average for the retention time and the signal area, respectively) were obtained. The new method was applied to the determination tryptophan and its derivatives in black pigmented glutinous and non-glutinous rice grain samples.


Molecules | 2014

A New Solid Phase Extraction for the Determination of Anthocyanins in Grapes

Marta Ferreiro-González; Ceferino Carrera; Ana Ruiz-Rodríguez; Gerardo F. Barbero; Jesús Ayuso; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

A method for the concentration and cleaning of red grape extracts prior to the determination of anthocyanins by UPLC-DAD has been developed. This method is of special interest in the determination of phenolic maturity as it allows the analysis of the anthocyanins present in grapes. Several different SPE cartridges were assessed, including both C-18- and vinylbenzene-based cartridges. C-18-based cartridges presented a very low retention for the glucosylated anthocyanidins while vinylbenzene-based cartridges showed excellent retention for these compounds. The optimized method involves the initial conditioning of the cartridge using 10 mL of methanol and 10 mL of water, followed by loading of up to 100 mL of red grape extract. Ten mL of water was used in the washing step and anthocyanins were subsequently eluted using 1.5 mL of acidified methanol at pH 2. This method simplifies the determination of individual anthocyanins as, on the one hand, it cleans the sample of interference and, on the other hand, it increases the concentration to up to 25:1.5. The developed method has been validated with a range of different grapes and it has also been tested as a means of determining the different anthocyanins in grapes with different levels of maturity.


Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2016

Evolution of Capsaicinoids in Peter Pepper (Capsicum annuum var. annuum) During Fruit Ripening

Gerardo F. Barbero; Ana Carolina de Aguiar; Ceferino Carrera; Ángel Olachea; Marta Ferreiro-González; Julian Martínez; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

The evolution of individual and total contents of capsaicinoids present in Peter peppers (Capsicum annuum var. annuum) at different ripening stages has been studied. Plants were grown in a glasshouse and the new peppers were marked in a temporal space of ten days. The extraction of capsaicinoids was performed by ultrasound‐assisted extraction with MeOH. The capsaicinoids nordihydrocapsaicin (n‐DHC), capsaicin, dihydrocapsaicin, homocapsaicin, and homodihydrocapsaicin were analyzed by ultraperformance liquid chromatography (UHPLC)‐fluorescence and identified by UHPLC‐Q‐ToF‐MS. The results indicate that the total capsaicinoids increase in a linear manner from the first point of harvest at ten days (0.283 mg/g FW) up to 90 days, at which point they reach a concentration of 1.301 mg/g FW. The evolution as a percentage of the individual capsaicinoids showed the initial predominance of capsaicin, dihydrocapsaicin, and n‐DHC. Dihydrocapsaicin was the major capsaicinoid up to day 50 of maturation. After 50 days, capsaicin became the major capsaicinoid as the concentration of dihydrocapsaicin fell slightly. The time of harvest of Peter pepper based on the total capsaicinoids content should be performed as late as possible. In any case, harvesting should be performed before overripening of the fruit is observed.


Molecules | 2017

Tryptophan Levels during Grape Ripening: Effects of Cultural Practices

Ana Ruiz-Rodríguez; Ceferino Carrera; Widiastuti Setyaningsih; Gerardo F. Barbero; Marta Ferreiro-González; Miguel Palma; Carmelo G. Barroso

Some cultural practices that are carried out during the grape ripening period are associated with vine stress, including leaf removal, grape bunch removal, and vegetable cover crops. Additionally, several nitrogen and sulfur supplements have also been used directly on leaves during the last stage of the ripening period. In the work described here, five different cultural practices and the reference were applied in three replicates in the same vineyard. The evolution of tryptophan levels was evaluated from just after grape veraison until the harvest date. In some cases, certain specific treatments were also evaluated after the regular harvest date. The cultural techniques that involved the application of nitrogen led to higher levels of tryptophan at the harvest day when compared to other cultural techniques. It was also found that the application of nitrogen without sulfur had a faster effect on the level of tryptophan. It was established that a period of around 20 days is needed for the grapes to show clear differences in tryptophan levels after the application of nitrogen.


Pest Management Science | 2015

Structure–activity relationship studies of the phytotoxic properties of the diterpenic moiety of breviones

Ceferino Carrera; Nuria Chinchilla; Frank R. Fronczek; Juan Galindo; Francisco A. Macías

BACKGROUND Brevianes are a family of bioactive meroterpenoids originally described in fungi of the family Penicillium. These compounds have attracted a great deal of interest not only because of their unusual skeleton, suggesting a mixed mevalonate and polyketide biogenetic pathway, and their unusual oxa-spiro ring fused to an α-pyrone, but also because of the bioactivities shown by many members of this family. RESULTS During the course of a project aimed at the total synthesis of natural breviones A to E, the authors were able to synthesise the diterpenic moiety of brevianes and abeo-brevianes. As a result, a collection of 25 compounds were synthesised and tested for bioactivity by two different bioassays. The bioassays used were etiolated wheat coleoptiles (Triticum aestivum) and seedlings in petri dishes. The plant species tested in the seedling bioassay were the commercial dicots lettuce and cress and the monocot weeds Echinochloa crus-galli and Lolium rigidum. CONCLUSIONS The results clearly show that expanded phenanthrene-like compounds corresponding to the diterpenic moiety of abeo-brevianes are more selective towards E. crus-galli in comparison with L. rigidum. Such selectivity can reach up to one order of magnitude (200-fold) and makes some of the compounds good candidates as leads for the development of more specific herbicides.


Biological Sciences in Space | 2003

Allelopathy as a new strategy for sustainable ecosystems development

Francisco A. Macías; David Marín; Alberto Oliveros-Bastidas; Rosa M. Varela; Ana M. Simonet; Ceferino Carrera; José M. G. Molinillo

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