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Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety | 2017

Mechanisms of Oxidative Processes in Meat and Toxicity Induced by Postprandial Degradation Products: A Review

Camelia Papuc; Gheorghe Valentin Goran; Corina Predescu; Valentin Nicorescu

Antioxidant system loss after slaughtering, reactive species production, cell disruption, contact with oxygen and light, heme and nonheme iron, and irradiation starts up mainly by 2 related oxidative processes: lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation. Products generated in these processes are responsible for meat quality loss, and some of them are suspected to be toxic to humans. This review article is focused on reactive species implicated in oxidative processes in meat, on lipid peroxidation mechanisms, heme protein, and nonheme protein oxidation, and on some toxic oxidation and digestion products. Nonenzymatic fatty acid peroxidation is exemplified by an arachidonic acyl group, and the initiation of chain reaction can be described by 3 pathways: singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radical from the Fenton reaction, and perferrylmyoglobin. Enzymatic oxidation of fatty acids is exemplified using linoleic acid, and the main characteristics of lipoxygenase are also presented. Heme protein oxidation is described in an interrelation with lipid peroxidation and the significance for food quality is shown. For protein oxidation, 3 different mechanism types are described: oxidation of amino acid residues, oxidation of protein backbone, and reactions of proteins with carbonyl compounds from lipid peroxidation. The effects of oxidative damage on protein properties and bioavailability are also shown. At the end of each oxidative process, the postprandial toxicity induced by oxidation products and the dietary degradation products are presented. Also discussed are reports by some researchers who suggest that dietary lipid and protein oxidation products and heme iron from red meat are in part cytotoxic and/or genotoxic.


Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety | 2017

Plant Polyphenols as Antioxidant and Antibacterial Agents for Shelf-Life Extension of Meat and Meat Products: Classification, Structures, Sources, and Action Mechanisms

Camelia Papuc; Gheorghe Valentin Goran; Corina Predescu; Valentin Nicorescu; Georgeta Stefan

Oxidative processes and meat spoilage bacteria are major contributors to decreasing the shelf-life of meat and meat products. Oxidative processes occur during processing, storage, and light exposure, lowering the nutritional and sensory value and acceptability of meat and generating toxic compounds for humans. Polyphenols inhibit oxidative processes in 3 ways: as reactive species scavengers, lipoxygenase inhibitors, and reducing agents for metmyoglobin. Thus, polyphenols are candidate antioxidants for meat and meat products. The cross-contamination of meat with spoilage and pathogenic microorganisms can occur in production lines and result in economic losses. The ability of polyphenols to interact with bacterial cell wall components and the bacterial cell membrane can prevent and control biofilm formation, as well as inhibit microbial enzymes, interfere in protein regulation, and deprive bacterial cell enzymes of substrates and metal ions. Thus, polyphenols are candidate antimicrobial agents for use with meat and meat products. Commercially available polyphenols can decrease primary and secondary lipid peroxidation levels, inhibit lipoxygenase activity, improve meat color stability, minimize the degradation of salt-soluble myofibrillar protein and sulfhydryl groups, and retard bacterial growth. Further studies are now needed to clarify the synergistic/antagonistic action of various polyphenols, and to identify the best polyphenol classes, concentrations, and conditions of use.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2018

COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE INFLUENCE OF HAWTHORN (CRATAEGUS MONOGYNA) BERRIES ETHANOLIC EXTRACT AND BUTYLATED HYDROXYLANISOLE (BHA) ON LIPID PEROXIDATION, MYOGLOBIN OXIDATION, CONSISTENCY AND FIRMNESS OF MINCED PORK DURING REFRIGERATION

Camelia Papuc; Corina Predescu; Liliana Tudoreanu; Valentin Nicorescu; Iuliana Gâjâilă

BACKGROUND Following public concern on the use of synthetic food antioxidants, there is an increasing demand for the application of mixed or purified natural antioxidants to maintain quality of meat products quality during storage. The aim of this research was to investigate the effect of ethanolic extract of hawthorn berry, compared to butylated hydroxylanisole (BHA), on lipid peroxidation, myoglobin oxidation, protein electrophoresis pattern, consistency and firmness of minced pork during refrigeration at 4 °C, and to identify the relationship between chemical modifications and consistency variation. RESULTS After 6 days of refrigeration it was found that the thiobarbituric acid reactive substances value of minced pork containing 200 mg GAE kg-1 total phenolics in minced meat (200 HP) was significantly lower (0.1543 ± 0.006 mg) compared to BHA-treated meat. The ratio of oxymyoglobin to metmyoglobin in treated minced pork was respectively 0.845 for 200 HP and 0.473 for BHA-treated minced meat. Concentrations of 100 HP or 300 HP will generate statistically higher firmness than BHA in minced pork. CONCLUSION Hawthorn berry ethanolic extract was more effective than BHA in reducing lipid oxidation and protein degradation, for maintaining firmness and consistency of minced pork during 6 days of refrigeration at 4 °C.


Archive | 2012

Scavenging Activity of Reactive Oxygen Species by Polyphenols Extracted from Different Vegetal Parts of Celandine (Chelidonium majus). Chemiluminescence Screening

Camelia Papuc; Maria Crivineanu; Valentin Nicorescu; Corina Predescu; Eugenia Rusu


Archive | 2012

Increase of the Stability to Oxidation of Lipids and Proteins in Carp Muscle (Cyprinus Carpio) Subject to Storage by Freezing by Polyphenols Extracted from Sea Buckthorn Fruits (Hippophae Rhamnoides)

Camelia Papuc; Maria Crivineanu; Valentin Nicorescu; Costin Papuc; Corina Predescu


Archive | 2012

Reactive Oxygen Species Scavenging Activity and Hepatoprotective Effects of a Polyphenolic Extract Obtained from Cuscuta Europaea

Camelia Papuc; Maria Crivineanu; Valentin Nicorescu; Corina Predescu


Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca: Horticulture | 2018

The Effect of Some Polyphenols on Minced Pork during Refrigeration Compared with Ascorbic Acid

Corina Predescu; Camelia Papuc; Carmen Daniela Petcu; George Goran; Amelia Elena Rus


Journal of Biotechnology | 2016

Obtaining vegetable juices with high nitrite concentration using Staphylococcus xylosus ATCC 29971 strain as source of nitrate reductases

Sabina Blascu; Corina Predescu; Camelia Papuc; Valentin Nicorescu; Constantin Savu


Current Research in Nutrition and Food Science Journal | 2016

Antioxidant Properties of a Parsley (Petroselinum crispum) Juice Rich in Polyphenols and Nitrites

Camelia Papuc; Corina Predescu; Valentin Nicorescu; Georgeta Stefan; Isabela Nicorescu


Scientific Works - University of Agronomical Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, Bucharest. Series C, Veterinary Medicine | 2012

Attenuation of oxidative stress by ethanolic extract of nettle (Urtica dioica) in mice.

Corina Predescu; Camelia Papuc; Maria Crivineanu; Valentin Nicorescu

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Camelia Papuc

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Valentin Nicorescu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Maria Crivineanu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Gheorghe Valentin Goran

University of Agricultural Sciences

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Carmen Daniela Petcu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Constantin Savu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Iuliana Gâjâilă

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Liliana Tudoreanu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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Sabina Blascu

University of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Bucharest

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