Antioxidants from Natural Sources: Separation and Characterization
A special issue of Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049). This special issue belongs to the section "Natural Products Chemistry".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 September 2021) | Viewed by 53266
Special Issue Editor
Interests: isolation; fractionation, and characterization of natural antioxidants and other substances from various natural sources which are valuable for human consumption; particularly plant-origin materials and their processing byproducts; preferably using methods meeting green chemistry principles
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Living organisms, through long periods of evolution, have developed various self-protection mechanisms and learned to biosynthesize a vast diversity of molecules which are important for survival, among them antioxidant properties possessing microconstituents. The interest in discovery of the structures of natural antioxidants, their isolation, purification, and, finally, application in foods, nutraceuticals, cosmeceuticals, and pharmaceuticals has remarkably increased during the last few decades. Consumer preferences towards natural additives and ingredients in foods and other products for human consumption have also fostered the search and characterization of natural antioxidants. Thousands of antioxidants belonging to various chemical classes have been isolated and characterized to date. For instance, a large number of polyphenolics antioxidants such as flavonoids, phenolic acids and their derivatives, carotenoids, terpenoids, vitamins, and others have been identified and quantified in various plants, while many antioxidant peptides have been reported in animal- and marine-origin materials. However, regardless of the various considerable scientific achievements, their industrial production and commercialization still remains a challenge requiring technological upscaling solutions and development of economically feasible processes. Natural antioxidants are usually incorporated in a very complex biomatrix, and their content may be rather small; therefore, development of effective separation methods of natural antioxidants remains a topical research issue. Depending on the expected application, the process may include several steps of isolation, fractionation, and purification. From this point of view, nutraceutical, cosmeceutical, and pharmaceutical applications require standardized ingredients with the specified purity and concentration of active constituents. Last but not least, green chemistry principles and the use of biorefining concept for developing zero-waste technological schemes have also become very important issues in modern society. The results of original studies as well as review manuscripts covering the above-defined topics are invited for submission to this Special Issue of Molecules.
Prof. Dr. Petras Rimantas Venskutonis
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- extraction of natural antioxidants
- fractionation of natural antioxidants
- purification of natural antioxidants
- biorefining of natural sources for antioxidants
- characterization of natural antioxidants
- radical scavenging capacity
- chromatographic analysis of antioxidants
- spectroscopic analysis of antioxidants
- bio-guided assays of antioxidants
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