Roberta Neri
University of Bologna
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roberta Neri.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Francesca Danesi; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri; Magda Maranesi; Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Alessandra Bordoni
Notwithstanding the wide range of biological and pharmacological activities reported for sweet basil (Ocimum basilicum L.), many discrepancies are still present in the evaluation of its health-promoting properties. These discordances could be at least in part due to insufficient details of qualitative and quantitative composition, connected to the ample variability of this species. Furthermore, many investigations have been carried out in vitro, with few data available on the effectiveness in biological systems. In this study, the protective effect of essential oils and water-soluble extracts derived from three different cultivars of sweet basil has been evaluated in cultured cardiomyocytes. To verify the effectiveness of supplemented oils/extracts in counteracting oxidative damage, cardiomyocytes were stressed by the addition of hydrogen peroxide. The results indicate that (a) in vitro antioxidant activity is not predictive of biological activity and (b) basil can yield extracts with substantially different protective effects, in relation to composition and extraction techniques. Variation among different cultivars has also been detected.
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution | 2002
L Filippo D'Antuono; Alessandro Moretti; Roberta Neri
Local landraces of shallot from the Romagna region(Northern Italy) and North-western France, called ‘Scalogno di Romagna’ and ‘French grey’,respectively, have recently been evaluated for morphological,biochemical and molecular characters. These populations appeared very different from common shallots and onions, so were re-classified as Allium oschaninii O.Fedtsch., whereas almost no variability was observed within these types. Four ‘di Romagna’ and three French accessions were grown in Italy, and further evaluated for quality characters such asbulb colour and volatile oil content and composition. Colour was measured by means of a tristimulus colorimeter. Volatile oil was extracted by hydrodistillation and its components separated and identified by GC/MS. Colour parameters differentiated the‘di Romagna’ from the ‘French grey’accessions. Essential oil composition differed from what has been reported for most other Alliums, by a lower amount of1-propenyl- substituents. No individual oil component allowed a good differentiation of the two geographic origins.However, the French and ‘di Romagna’ accessions were perfectly separated by the discriminant analysis of oil composition.Minor 1-propenyl- components seemed more critical for discrimination. The shallot types examined seemed biochemically differentiatedfrom Allium cepa. Variation in the examined quality characters was detected both between the two provenances and among the accessions of common geographic origin.
Phytochemistry | 2008
L. Filippo D’Antuono; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2009
L Filippo D'Antuono; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri
Acta Horticulturae | 2007
Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri
Acta Horticulturae | 1998
L. Filippo D'Antuono; Roberta Neri
Acta Horticulturae | 2008
Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Roberta Neri; M. Pirazzini; P.E. Casali; A. Falavigna
Acta Horticulturae | 2007
Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri; D. Sciannimanica
2° Verona International Meeting on Foods, Phytotherapic Compounds and Health | 2007
Francesca Danesi; Mattia Di Nunzio; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri; Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Alessandra Bordoni
VII Convegno nazionale sulla biodiversità | 2005
Luigi Filippo D'Antuono; Simona Elementi; Roberta Neri