Luciana Gomes Malta
State University of Campinas
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Publication
Featured researches published by Luciana Gomes Malta.
Food Science and Technology International | 2007
Roberta Roesler; Luciana Gomes Malta; Luciana Cristina Carrasco; Roseane Barata Holanda; Clélia Alves Socorro Sousa; Glaucia Maria Pastore
Annona crassiflora (araticum), Solanum lycocarpum (lobeira), Eugenia dysenterica (cagaita), Caryocar brasilense (pequi) and Swartzia langsdorfii (banha de galinha) are tropical fruits consumed mainly by native people in the Brazilian Cerrado (second biggest biome of Brazil). In this study, pulp, seed and peel of the fruits were extracted using ethanol and water. Some of the extracts showed a high content of total phenols and were screened for their potential as antioxidants using the in vitro model 2,2-diphenyl-1-picryl hydrazyl (DPPH). The best results were found for aqueous and ethanolic extracts of pequi peel (IC50 of 9,44 and 17,98 µg.mL-1 respectively), etanolic extract of cagaita seeds (IC50 of 14,15 µg.mL-1), etanolic extract of araticum seeds and peel (IC50 of 30,97 and 49,18 µg.mL-1 respectively). This is the first report on the antioxidant properties of the extracts of cerrado fruit fractions. Owing to these properties, studies can be further extended to use them for possible applications as natural antioxidant for cosmetics, supplements and functional ingredients for food products as well as being able to represent a sustainable application of the natural sources in the Brazilian bioma cerrado.
Food Science and Technology International | 2013
Caroline Pazinatto; Luciana Gomes Malta; Glaucia Maria Pastore; Flavia Maria Netto
The effect of different process -defatting, protein concentration, thermal treatment, hydrolysis with Alcalase and in vitro digestion- on the antioxidant capacity of amaranth seeds was studied. The antioxidant capacity of the products was determined in methanolic and aqueous extracts and varied from 1.00 to 21.22 and 4.97 to 369.18 µ mol TE/g sample for DPPH and ORAC assays, respectively. The combination of protein concentration and hydrolysis with Alcalase led to products with higher antioxidant activity. However, after in vitro digestion, protein concentrate and its hydrolysate showed similar antioxidant capacity. A high correlation was observed between the antioxidant capacity and the total phenolic content for methanolic extracts, with r 2 values ranging from 0.6133 to 0.9352.
Food Research International | 2012
Alice Vieira Leite-Legatti; Ângela Giovana Batista; Nathalia Romanelli Vicente Dragano; Anne y Castro Marques; Luciana Gomes Malta; Maria Francesca Riccio; Marcos N. Eberlin; Ana Rita Thomazela Machado; Luciano Bruno de Carvalho-Silva; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Glaucia Maria Pastore; Mário Roberto Maróstica Júnior
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011
Alice Vieira Leite; Luciana Gomes Malta; Maria Francesca Riccio; Marcos N. Eberlin; Glaucia Maria Pastore; Mário Roberto Maróstica Júnior
Food Chemistry | 2007
Roberta Roesler; Rodrigo Ramos Catharino; Luciana Gomes Malta; Marcos N. Eberlin; Glaucia Maria Pastore
Food Chemistry | 2008
Roberta Roesler; Rodrigo Ramos Catharino; Luciana Gomes Malta; Marcos N. Eberlin; Glaucia Maria Pastore
Journal of Food Science | 2006
Roberta Roesler; Luciana Gomes Malta; Luciana Cristina Carrasco; Glaucia Maria Pastore
Food Research International | 2013
Luciana Gomes Malta; Elias Paulo Tessaro; Marcos N. Eberlin; Glaucia Maria Pastore; Rui Hai Liu
Food Research International | 2012
Luciana Gomes Malta; Flávia Gerelli Ghiraldini; Renato Reis; Maysa do Vale Oliveira; Luciano Bruno Silva; Glaucia Maria Pastore
Food Research International | 2015
Brunna Cristina Bremer Boaventura; Renata Dias de Mello Castanho Amboni; Edson Luiz da Silva; Elane Schwinden Prudêncio; Patrícia Faria Di Pietro; Luciana Gomes Malta; Renata Madureira Polinati; Rui Hai Liu