Repository logo
 
No Thumbnail Available
Publication

Antioxidant potential of wild food plants

Use this identifier to reference this record.
Name:Description:Size:Format: 
CapiCC81tulo5.pdf1.2 MBAdobe PDF Download

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

A free radical is defined as any species containing one or more unpaired electrons (electrons singly occupying an atomic or molecular orbital), whereas reactive species is the collective term for radicals and some other non-radical derivatives of oxygen, nitrogen, or sulfur that can easily generate free radicals and/or cause oxidative damage (Halliwell 2012). As shown in Table 10.1, reactive oxygen species (ROS) include free radicals such as hydroperoxyl radical (HO2), superoxide anion radical (O2−), hydroxyl radical (HO) and peroxyl radical (ROO; e.g., lipid derived), and other species such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), singlet oxygen (1O2), hypochlorous acid (HOCl), and peroxide (ROOR; Lü et al. 2010; Carocho and Ferreira 2013).

Description

Keywords

Citation

Barros, Lillian; Morales, Patricia; Carvalho, Ana Maria; Ferreira, Isabel C.F.R. (2015). Antioxidant potential of wild food plants. In María de Cortes Sánchez-Mata, Javier Tardío (Ed.) Mediterranean Wild Edible Plants: Ethnobotany and Food Composition Tables. New York: Springer. p. 209-232. ISBN 978-1-4939-3327-3

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Publisher

Springer Verlag

CC License