Sonia Losada-Barreiro
University of Vigo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sonia Losada-Barreiro.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2008
María José Pastoriza-Gallego; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Carlos Bravo-Díaz; K. Gunaseelan; Laurence S. Romsted
Until recently, determining the distribution of antioxidants, AOs, between the oil, interfacial and aqueous regions of opaque emulsions has not worked well because the concentrations of AOs in interfacial regions cannot be determined separately from their concentrations in the oil and water phases. However, our novel kinetic method based on the reaction between an arenediazonium ion and vitamin E, or alpha-tocopherol, provides the first good estimates for the two partition constants that describe alpha-tocopherol distribution between the oil/interfacial and water/interfacial regions of tributyrin/Brij 30/water emulsions without physical isolation of any phase. The reaction is monitored by a new derivatization method based on trapping unreacted arenediazonium ion as an azo dye and confirmed by linear sweep voltammetry, LSV. The results by both derivatization and LSV methods are in good agreement and show that alpha-tocopherol distributes strongly in favor of the interfacial region when the oil is tributyrin, e.g., ca. 90% when the surfactant volume fraction is Phi I=0.01. The second-order rate constant for reaction in the interfacial region is also obtained from the results. Our kinetic method provides a robust approach for determining antioxidant distributions in emulsions and should help develop a quantitative interpretation of antioxidant efficiency in emulsions.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2013
Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
We evaluated the effects of the hydrophile-lipophile balance (HLB) and emulsifier concentration on the distribution of the antioxidants gallic acid (GA), propyl gallate (PG), and α-tocopherol (TOC) between the aqueous, interfacial, and oil regions of food-grade emulsions composed of stripped corn oil, acidic water, and a mixture of the non-ionic surfactants Tween 20, 40, 80, and Span 20. The distribution of the antioxidants (AOs) is described by two partition constants, that between the oil-interfacial region, P(O)(I), and that between the aqueous and interfacial region, P(W)(I), of the emulsions. The partition constants were determined from the kinetic analyses of the variation in the observed rate constant, k(obs), for the reaction between the AOs and the hydrophobic 4-hexadecylbenzenediazonium ions, 16-ArN(2)(+), with the emulsifier volume fraction. The effects of emulsifier HLB on the second-order rate constants in the interfacial region k(I) were also evaluated for each antioxidant. Results show that an increase in emulsifier concentration promotes the incorporation of AOs to the interfacial region of the emulsions, so that at surfactant volume fractions of 0.04, more than 90% of GA and PG and more than 50% of TOC are located in that region. A decrease in the HLB favors the incorporation of PG and TOC to the interfacial region of the emulsions but has a negligible effect on the fraction of GA in that region. The %AOs in the interfacial region of the emulsions does not correlate with the polarity of the antioxidant, so that GA and PG are predominantly located in the aqueous-interfacial regions of the emulsion rather that in the oil droplet interior; meanwhile, TOC is mostly located in the oil-interfacial regions. Results should aid to understand how antioxidants are distributed in food-grade emulsions and their relative efficiency in inhibiting lipid oxidation.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2012
Patrícia Lisete-Torres; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Hélio Albuquerque; Fátima Paiva-Martins; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
We employed a kinetic method to determine the distributions of the antioxidants hydroxytyrosol (HT) and hydroxytyrosol acetate (HTA) between the oil, aqueous, and interfacial regions of a model food emulsion composed of stripped olive oil, acidic water, and a blend of Tween 80 and Span 80 [hydrophilic–lipophilic balance (HLB) = 8.05] as an emulsifier. HT is oil-insoluble, but HTA is both oil- and water-soluble (partition constant P(O)(W) = 0.61). Results indicate that, at a given emulsifier volume fraction Φ(I), the fraction of HTA in the interfacial region is higher than that of HT. The percentage of both antioxidants increases with an increasing Φ(I), so that % HT > 40% at Φ(I) = 0.005 and % HT > 80% at Φ(I) = 0.04. HTA appears to be a better antioxidant than HT, as shown by an accelerated oxidative test (Schaal oven method). A correlation between their distribution in the emulsion and their efficiency was established.
Langmuir | 2015
Carlos Bravo-Díaz; Laurence S. Romsted; Changyao Liu; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; María José Pastoriza-Gallego; Xiang Gao; Qing Gu; Gunaseelan Krishnan; Yongliang Zhang; Aijaz Ahmad Dar
Two important and unsolved problems in the food industry and also fundamental questions in colloid chemistry are how to measure molecular distributions, especially antioxidants (AOs), and how to model chemical reactivity, including AO efficiency in opaque emulsions. The key to understanding reactivity in organized surfactant media is that reaction mechanisms are consistent with a discrete structures-separate continuous regions duality. Aggregate structures in emulsions are determined by highly cooperative but weak organizing forces that allow reactants to diffuse at rates approaching their diffusion-controlled limit. Reactant distributions for slow thermal bimolecular reactions are in dynamic equilibrium, and their distributions are proportional to their relative solubilities in the oil, interfacial, and aqueous regions. Our chemical kinetic method is grounded in thermodynamics and combines a pseudophase model with methods for monitoring the reactions of AOs with a hydrophobic arenediazonium ion probe in opaque emulsions. We introduce (a) the logic and basic assumptions of the pseudophase model used to define the distributions of AOs among the oil, interfacial, and aqueous regions in microemulsions and emulsions and (b) the dye derivatization and linear sweep voltammetry methods for monitoring the rates of reaction in opaque emulsions. Our results show that this approach provides a unique, versatile, and robust method for obtaining quantitative estimates of AO partition coefficients or partition constants and distributions and interfacial rate constants in emulsions. The examples provided illustrate the effects of various emulsion properties on AO distributions such as oil hydrophobicity, emulsifier structure and HLB, temperature, droplet size, surfactant charge, and acidity on reactant distributions. Finally, we show that the chemical kinetic method provides a natural explanation for the cut-off effect, a maximum followed by a sharp reduction in AO efficiency with increasing alkyl chain length of a particular AO. We conclude with perspectives and prospects.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2012
Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Carlos Bravo-Díaz; Fátima Paiva-Martins; Laurence S. Romsted
We determined the effects of emulsifier concentration and temperature on the distribution of gallic acid (GA) in a food-grade emulsion composed of 1:9 vol:vol stripped corn oil, acidic water and Tween 20. The distribution of GA can be defined by the partition constant between the aqueous and the interfacial regions, P(W)(I), which was determined by using a kinetic method and the pseudophase kinetic model. Once P(W)(I) is known, determining the distribution of GA is straightforward. Our results show that at least 40% of the total GA is located in the interfacial region of the emulsion at 0.005 volume fraction of Tween 20, and this percentage increases to ca. 85% of the total GA at 0.04 volume fraction of Tween 20. The variation of P(W)(I) with the temperature was used to estimate the thermodynamic parameters for the GA transfer from the aqueous to the interfacial region of the emulsion and the activation parameters for the reaction between 16-ArN(2)(+) and GA in the interfacial region. The free energy of transfer from the aqueous to the interfacial region, ΔG(T)(0,W→I), is negative, the enthalpy of transfer is small and negative, but the entropy of transfer is large and positive. Our results demonstrate that the partitioning of GA in acidic emulsions between aqueous and interfacial regions depends primarily on droplet concentration and is only slightly dependent on temperature.
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
The oxidation of bioorganic materials by air and, particularly, the oxidative stress involved in the cell loss and other pathologies associated with neurodegenerative diseases (NDs) are of enormous social and economic importance. NDs generally involve free radical reactions, beginning with the formation of an initiating radical by some redox, thermal or photochemical process, causing nucleic acid, protein and lipid oxidations and the production of harmful oxidative products. Physically, persons afflicted by NDs suffer progressive loss of memory and thinking ability, mood swings, personality changes, and loss of independence. Therefore, the development of antioxidant strategies to retard or minimize the oxidative degradation of bioorganic materials has been, and still is, of paramount importance. While we are aware of the importance of investigating the biological and medical aspects of the diseases, elucidation of the associated chemistry is crucial to understanding their progression, heading to intelligent chemical intervention to find more efficient therapies to prevent or delay the onset of the diseases. Accordingly, this review aims to provide the reader with a chemical base to understand the behavior and properties of the reactive oxygen species involved and of typical radical scavengers such as polyphenolic antioxidants. Some discussion on the structures of the various species, their formation, chemical reactivities and lifetimes is included. The ultimate goal is to understand how, when and where they form, how far they travel prior to react, which molecules are their targets, and how we can, eventually, control their activity to minimize their impact by means of chemical methods. Recent strategies explore chemical modifications of the hydrophobicity of potent, natural antioxidants to improve their efficiency by fine-tuning their concentrations at the reaction site.
ChemPhysChem | 2016
Anna Galan; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
The efficiency of antioxidants to inhibit the oxidation of lipid-based emulsions depends on several factors including their nature and their concentration at the reaction site. Here, we have analyzed the effects of acidity and of surfactant concentration on the distribution and efficiency of the vitamin E analog Trolox (TR) in stripped olive oil-in-water emulsions stabilized with Tween 20. The distribution was assessed in the intact emulsions by employing a kinetic method that exploits the reaction between the hydrophobic 4-hexadecylbenzenediazonium ions and TR. Kinetic results are interpreted on the grounds of the pseudophase model. The effects of TR on the oxidative stability of the emulsion were determined at different pH values by monitoring the formation of conjugated dienes over time. The results show that the efficiency of TR increases upon increasing pH even though its concentration in the interfacial region decreases.
RSC Advances | 2016
Marlene Costa; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Fátima Paiva-Martins; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
Optimization of the efficiency of antioxidants, AOs, in lipid-based emulsions via chemical modifications of their reactive moieties is not always possible because of the inherent experimental difficulties and because of the regulatory status of AOs. Esterification of hydrophilic AOs may be a practical, convenient, alternative approach. Here we employed a series of caffeic acid derivatives bearing the same reactive moiety but of different hydrophobicity (alkyl chain lengths of 1 to 16 carbon atoms) to investigate the effects of hydrophobicity on the oxidative stability of stripped corn oil-in-water emulsions. AO efficiency was determined by monitoring the production of primary oxidation products (conjugated dienes) with time and a non-linear, parabolic-like, variation of their efficiency with the number of C atoms in their alkyl chain, with a maximum at the C8 derivative, found. To rationalize the results, we also determined the distribution of the AOs between the oil, interfacial and aqueous regions of the same emulsions by employing a recently developed kinetic method that provides the partition constants of the AO between the oil–interfacial, PIO, and water–interfacial, PIW, regions of the intact emulsions. Values of both PIO and PIW range between 180–2000, suggesting that the transfer of the AOs to the interfacial region is spontaneous. The results indicate that the variations of both the percentage of AO in the interfacial region, % AOI, of the emulsions and the AO efficiency with the number of C atoms in the AO alkyl chain parallel each other with a maxima at the C8 derivative. The results illustrate an effective and convenient way to control lipid oxidation by modulation of the hydrophobicity (HLB) of the AOs. An increase in the alkyl chain length of the AOs promote their incorporation into the interfacial region of emulsions but only up to a critical chain length, after which a further increase makes their efficiency decrease as a consequence of the decrease in their % AOI.
Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2017
Marlene Costa; Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Fátima Paiva-Martins; Carlos Bravo-Díaz
BACKGROUND The relationships between the hydrophilic-lipophilic balance (HLB) of antioxidants (AOs) and their distributions and efficiencies in emulsions are not fully understood. Recent reports indicate that, for series of homologous antioxidants of different hydrophobicity, the variation of their efficiency with the HLB of the AO increases with the alkyl chain length up to a maximum (C3 -C8 ester) followed by a decrease (cut-off effect). RESULTS We determined the distributions of a series of caffeic acid derivatives in intact soybean emulsions by employing a specifically designed chemical probe located in the interfacial region of the emulsion. We also determined the AO efficiencies in the very same emulsions. We demonstrate that the variation of the percentage of AO in the interfacial region of soybean oil-in-water emulsions with the AO HLB parallels that of their antioxidant efficiency. CONCLUSION The results provide physical evidence that the variations in the efficiency of homologous series of antioxidants in emulsions are the result of differences in their distribution. The results confirm that, with other things being equal, there is a direct relationship between the percentage of AO in the interfacial region of the emulsions and their efficiency, providing a natural explanation, based on molecular properties, of the cut-off effect.
Antioxidants | 2014
Sonia Losada-Barreiro; Marlene Costa; Carlos Bravo-Díaz; Fátima Paiva-Martins
We investigated the effects of resveratrol (RES) on the oxidative stability of emulsions composed of stripped corn oil, acidic water and Tween 20 and determined its distribution in the intact emulsions by employing a well-established kinetic method. The distribution of RES is described by two partition constants, that between the oil-interfacial region, POI, and that between the aqueous and interfacial region, PWI. The partition constants, POI and PWI, are obtained in the intact emulsions from the variations of the observed rate constant, kobs, for the reaction between the hydrophobic 4-hexadecylbenzenediazonium ion and RES with the emulsifier volume fraction, ФI. The obtained POI and PWI values are quite high, PWI = 4374 and POI = 930, indicating that RES is primarily located in the interfacial region of the emulsions, %RESI > 90% at ФI = 0.005, increasing up to 99% at ФI = 0.04. The oxidative stability of the corn oil emulsions was determined by measuring the formation of conjugated dienes at a given time in the absence and in the presence of RES. The addition of RES did not improve their oxidative stability in spite that more than 90% of RES is located in the interfacial region of the emulsion, because of the very low radical scavenging activity of RES.