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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Soler-Rivas is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Soler-Rivas.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2000

OLEUROPEIN AND RELATED COMPOUNDS

Cristina Soler-Rivas; Juan Carlos Espín; Harry J. Wichers

In this paper, oleuropein and some other related phenolic compounds are reviewed. Their occurrence, distribution, biosynthesis and transformation during maturation and during industrial processing (preparation of table olives and oil production) are described. Their role in human health is proposed based on current human, animal and in vitro studies as molecules with antioxidant and antimicrobial properties.


Phytochemical Analysis | 2000

An easy and fast test to compare total free radical scavenger capacity of foodstuffs

Cristina Soler-Rivas; Juan Carlos Espín; Harry J. Wichers

An easy and fast test has been designed to compare the total free radical scavenging capacity (RSC) of various food samples. Black and green teas from different countries, and wines of different brands were studied and compared as examples of coloured liquids (water- and methanol-soluble); oils from different sources were used as examples of lipidic foodstuffs; apples of different varieties and spinach were analysed as solid foods. Dilutions of extracts of the described foodstuffs were prepared and aliquots of each dilution were spotted onto TLC silica gel layers in the form of a dot-blot test: layers were stained with a methanolic solution of the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical. Dots of extracts of foodstuffs with RSC turned yellow, with a colour intensity depending on the RSC compounds present in the dilutions. After 1 h staining, the intensity of the yellow colour was measured with a chromameter (b* parameter) at one of the dilutions at which the colour value was linearly correlated to the concentration of the sample. According to these readings the different samples were organised in decreasing order of b* values, an order which corresponded to the decreasing order of RSC as determined by spectrophotometric methods. The dot-blot test was sensitive enough to detect differences of RSC between varieties and brands of water- or methanolsoluble products, but was not adequate for lipid-based compounds. The test was also able to follow the variation of RSC during food processing as in, for example, the heat-treatment of spinach. Copyright (C) 2000 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2008

Effect of domestic processing on bioactive compounds

Alejandro Ruiz-Rodríguez; Francisco R. Marín; Aurelio Ocaña; Cristina Soler-Rivas

Nowadays, most of the consumed foods are rarely ready for direct consumption. Food can be purchased at the local supermarket as fresh raw product such as meat, fruit, fish etc. or as manufactured product after an industrial processing (canned meat, dried fish, packed fruit etc.). But later on, both food types are usually submitted to culinary treatments which will transform the selected food into a cooked dish ready to eat. Domestic methods of food processing have been developed over the centuries to make the final product more attractive in flavour, appearance, taste and consistency. But, until the last centuries, none of the gourmets realize that at the same time, the cooking process was making their foods more digestible, microbiologically safer and more or less nutritive depending on the selected cooking technology. Besides consumer preferences, the selected cooking method is an important factor affecting not only the food chemical composition, but also the intake of bioactive compounds under normal dietary conditions. Therefore, in this work, the different culinary treatments and domestic cooking methods will be compared to define the optimal process to reduce the degradation of biologically active metabolites present in foods commonly consumed as an elaborated dish. Compounds such as carotenoids, glucosinolates, flavonoids and other phenolic compounds, ω-3 fatty acids, tocopherols, phytosterols, etc. have been pointed as bioactive compounds beneficial for human health. Apparently, they are able to prevent cardiovascular diseases (CVD), tumour formation, hiper-cholesterolemia in blood and other deleterious disorders. An adequate domestic practice might help to increase in taking of those functional molecules enhancing their functionality and reducing the risk of chronic diseases.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2010

Testing and Enhancing the in Vitro Bioaccessibility and Bioavailability of Rosmarinus officinalis Extracts with a High Level of Antioxidant Abietanes

Cristina Soler-Rivas; Francisco R. Marín; Susana Santoyo; Mónica R. García-Risco; F. Javier Señoráns; Guillermo Reglero

An antioxidant-enriched extract (RE) was obtained from rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) by supercritical fluid extraction to be used as an ingredient to design functional foods. The optimized mixture (42 mg RE g(-1) sunflower oil) was submitted to in vitro digestion and absorption tests (using Caco2 cells) to investigate the effect of these processes on its DPPH scavenging activity and also whether its major abietanes (tricyclic diterpenes) might be bioaccessible and bioavailable. Results indicated that supplementation of the rosemary extract with sunflower oil and lecithin (37 mg g(-1)) enhanced abietanes micellation (almost 2-fold). In vitro digestion of the mixture including RE, sunflower oil, and lecithin reduced 50% the bioaccesibility in terms of antioxidant activity. Bioavailability was 31%. It was evidenced that this activity was not due to the original levels of carnosol, carnosic acid, and methyl carnosate (which only 47% remained after digestion) but due to their derivatives and digestion products.


Allergy | 2001

Impact of (bio)chemical and physical procedures on food allergen stability

Cristina Soler-Rivas; Harry J. Wichers

A variety of methods have been used to attempt to decrease the allergenicity of food products, with highly variable success. Limited knowledge of allergen and epitope structures and the factors governing their stability may explain this, and the ensuing need for an empirical approach. A combined effort from a processing and genomics‐based approach may open up new ways to improve the quality of foods from an allergenic perspective. Based on structural knowledge, a suitable approach can be chosen that is, for instance, heat stable but protease sensitive; protease resistant but not heat stable; easy to extract; easy to mask because the epitope is exactly on a crosslink site; a molecular probe design that allows screening of germplasm collections.


Biotechnology Progress | 2014

Pressurized water extraction of β‐glucan enriched fractions with bile acids‐binding capacities obtained from edible mushrooms

Marimuthu Palanisamy; Laila Aldars‐García; Alicia Gil-Ramírez; Alejandro Ruiz-Rodriguez; Francisco R. Marín; Guillermo Reglero; Cristina Soler-Rivas

A pressurized water extraction (PWE) method was developed in order to extract β‐glucans with bile acids‐binding capacities from cultivated mushrooms (Agaricus bisporus, Lentinula edodes, and Pleurotus ostreatus) to be used as supplements to design novel foods with hypocholesterolemic properties. Extraction yields were higher in individual than sequential extractions being the optimal extraction parameters: 200°C, 5 cycles of 5 min each at 10.3 MPa. The crude polysaccharide (PSC) fractions, isolated from the PWE extracts contained mainly β‐glucans (including chitooligosaccharides deriving from chitin hydrolysis), α‐glucans, and other PSCs (hetero‐/proteo‐glucans) depending on the extraction temperature and mushroom strain considered. The observed bile acids‐binding capacities of some extracts were similar to a β‐glucan enriched fraction obtained from cereals.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2015

Modulation of cholesterol-related gene expression by dietary fiber fractions from edible mushrooms

Victor Caz; Alicia Gil-Ramírez; Carlota Largo; María Tabernero; Mónica Santamaría; Roberto Martín-Hernández; Francisco R. Marín; Guillermo Reglero; Cristina Soler-Rivas

Mushrooms are a source of dietary fiber (DF) with a cholesterol-lowering effect. However, their underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. The effect of DF-enriched fractions from three mushrooms species on cholesterol-related expression was studied in vitro. The Pleurotus ostreatus DF fraction (PDF) was used in mice models to assess its potential palliative or preventive effect against hypercholesterolemia. PDF induced a transcriptional response in Caco-2 cells, suggesting a possible cholesterol-lowering effect. In the palliative setting, PDF reduced hepatic triglyceride likely because Dgat1 was downregulated. However, cholesterol-related biochemical data showed no changes and no relation with the observed transcriptional modulation. In the preventive setting, PDF modulated cholesterol-related genes expression in a manner similar to that of simvastatin and ezetimibe in the liver, although no changes in plasma and liver biochemical data were induced. Therefore, PDF may be useful reducing hepatic triglyceride accumulation. Because it induced a molecular response similar to hypocholesterolemic drugs in liver, further dose-dependent studies should be carried out.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2017

Evaluation of microwave-assisted and pressurized liquid extractions to obtain β- d -glucans from mushrooms

Fhernanda R. Smiderle; Diego Morales; Alicia Gil-Ramírez; Liana Inara de Jesus; Bienvenida Gilbert-López; Marcello Iacomini; Cristina Soler-Rivas

Microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) and pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) were compared as advanced technologies to obtain polysaccharides (particularly biologically active β-glucans) from Pleurotus ostreatus and Ganoderma lucidum fruiting bodies. Extraction effectiveness was compared by a full-factorial experimental design (response surface methodology, RSM), using water as extraction solvent. Total carbohydrate content of the obtained extracts and polysaccharide yields were the variable responses investigated, while temperature and extraction time were the experimental factors. Temperature showed stronger influence in the polysaccharide extraction than time. The latter factor slightly affected MAE but not PLE extractions. Optimal conditions within the studied range were determined for each extraction method and species based on the desirability functions. Regarding the polysaccharide composition, the main differences between the species were more quantitative rather than qualitative, since NMR analyses indicated that all extracts contained mainly β- and α-glucans and heteropolysaccharides. Both extraction systems were effective for polysaccharide extraction from mushrooms.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2008

Meat-based functional foods for dietary equilibrium omega-6/omega-3.

Guillermo Reglero; Paloma Frial; Alejandro Cifuentes; Mónica R. García-Risco; Laura Jaime; Francisco R. Marín; Vicente Palanca; Alejandro Ruiz-Rodriguez; Susana Santoyo; Francisco J. Señoráns; Cristina Soler-Rivas; Carlos F. Torres; Elena Ibáñez

Nutritionists encourage improving the diet by combining meat products with fish or other sea-related foods, in order to equilibrate the omega-6/omega-3 ratio. Strong scientific evidence supports the beneficial health effects of a balanced omega-6/omega-3 PUFA (poly unsaturated fatty acids) diets. In the present work, the scientific bases of new functional meat products with both a balanced omega-6/omega-3 ratio and a synergic combination of antioxidants are discussed. The aim is to contribute to the dietary equilibrium omega-6/omega-3 and to increase the antioxidant intake. Conventional meat products supplemented with a specific fatty acids and antioxidants combination led to functional foods with healthier nutritional parameters.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2013

Study on the 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl CoA reductase inhibitory properties of Agaricus bisporus and extraction of bioactive fractions using pressurised solvent technologies.

Alicia Gil-Ramírez; Cristina Clavijo; Marimuthu Palanisamy; Alejandro Ruiz-Rodriguez; María Navarro-Rubio; Margarita Pérez; Francisco R. Marín; Guillermo Reglero; Cristina Soler-Rivas

BACKGROUND Agaricus bisporus mushrooms were able to lower cholesterol levels in hypercholesterolaemic rats and it was suggested that dietary fibre might inhibit cholesterol absorption. However, A. bisporus extracts were also able to inhibit the 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl CoA reductase (HMGCR, the key enzyme in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway) and this might also contribute to the observed lowering of cholesterol levels in serum. RESULTS The methanol-water extracts obtained from A. bisporus were able to inhibit up to 60% the HMGCR activity using an in vitro assay. The HMGCR inhibitory capacities depended on cultivation conditions, strains, etc. The potential inhibitors were not statins, they might be β-glucans able to scavenge the substrate and impair the enzymatic reaction. They were present during all mushroom developmental stages and similarly distributed through all the tissues including the parts discarded as a by-product. Accelerated solvent extractions using 1:1 ethanol-water as pressurised solvent (10.7 MPa, 25°C, five cycles of 5 min) were more effective in the extraction of the HMGCiR inhibitor(s) than supercritical fluid extractions (9 MPa, 40°C) using CO2 with 10% ethanol. CONCLUSION A mushroom cultivation and two extraction procedures were optimised to obtain fractions from A. bisporus with high HMGCR inhibitory activities to design novel ingredients for hypocholesterolaemic functional foodstuffs.

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Francisco R. Marín

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Alicia Gil-Ramírez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Alejandro Ruiz-Rodriguez

Spanish National Research Council

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Susana Santoyo

Spanish National Research Council

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Harry J. Wichers

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Diego Morales

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Marimuthu Palanisamy

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan Carlos Espín

Spanish National Research Council

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