4.7 Review

Terpenoids and Polyphenols as Natural Antioxidant Agents in Food Preservation

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10081264

Keywords

lipid oxidation; protein oxidation; natural antioxidant

Funding

  1. Programa de Ayudas a Grupos de Investigacion del Principado de Asturias [IDI/2018/000120]
  2. Programa Severo Ochoa de Ayudas Predoctorales para la investigacion y docencia from Principado de Asturias [BP16023, BP19058]
  3. Programa de Ayudas para la Realizacion de Tesis Doctorales de la Universidad de Oviedo-Banco Santander [PAPI20-PF20]
  4. Proyectos I+D+I, del Programa Estatal de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad, from Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades of Spain [AGL2017-88095-R]
  5. European Union [814650]

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Synthetic antioxidant food additives like BHA, BHT and TBHQ are facing challenges due to negative consumer perception, prompting food manufacturers to seek safer natural alternatives. Terpenoids and polyphenols, widely distributed in fruits and vegetables, show broad antioxidant effects and have the potential to replace synthetic antioxidants in food preservation, particularly in preventing lipid oxidation in high fat-containing foods.
Synthetic antioxidant food additives, such as BHA, BHT and TBHQ, are going through a difficult time, since these products generate a negative perception in consumers. This has generated an increased pressure on food manufacturers to search for safer natural alternatives like phytochemicals (such as polyphenols, including flavonoids, and essential oils rich in terpenoids, including carotenoids). These plant bioactive compounds have antioxidant activities widely proven in in vitro tests and in diverse food matrices (meat, fish, oil and vegetables). As tons of food are wasted every year due to aesthetic reasons (lipid oxidation) and premature damage caused by inappropriate packaging, there is an urgent need for natural antioxidants capable of replacing the synthetic ones to meet consumer demands. This review summarizes industrially interesting antioxidant bioactivities associated with terpenoids and polyphenols with respect to the prevention of lipid oxidation in high fat containing foods, such as meat (rich in saturated fat), fish (rich in polyunsaturated fat), oil and vegetable products, while avoiding the generation of rancid flavors and negative visual deterioration (such as color changes due to oxidized lipids). Terpenoids (like monoterpenes and carotenoids) and polyphenols (like quercetin and other flavonoids) are important phytochemicals with a broad range of antioxidant effects. These phytochemicals are widely distributed in fruits and vegetables, including agricultural waste, and are remarkably useful in food preservation, as they show bioactivity as plant antioxidants, able to scavenge reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, such as superoxide, hydroxyl or peroxyl radicals in meat and other products, contributing to the prevention of lipid oxidation processes in food matrices.

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