Analytical evaluation and antioxidant properties of some secondary metabolites in northern Italian mono-and multi-varietal extra virgin olive oils (EVOOs) from early and late harvested olives

25Citations
Citations of this article
46Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The antioxidant activity and the phenolic and α-tocopherol content of 10 Northern Italian mono- and multi-varietal extra virgin olive oils (EVOOs), after early and late olive harvests, was analyzed. A hierarchical cluster analysis was used to evaluate sample similarity. Secoiridoids (SIDs), lignans and flavonoids were the most abundant phenolic compounds identified. The organic Casaliva (among mono-cultivar) and the organic multi-varietal (among blended oils) EVOOs had the higher total phenol content both in early (263.13 and 326.19 mg/kg, respectively) and late harvest (241.88 and 292.34 mg/kg, respectively) conditions. In comparison to late harvest EVOOs, early harvest EVOOs, in particular the organic mono-cultivar Casaliva, showed both higher antioxidant capacity (up to 1285.97 Oxygen Radicals Absorbance Capacity/ORAC units), probably due to the higher SID fraction (54% vs. 40%), and higher α-tocopherol content (up to 280.67 mg/kg). Overall, these results suggest that SIDs and α-tocopherol mainly contribute to antioxidant properties of the studied EVOOs. In light of this, the authors conclude that early harvest, organic mono-cultivar Casaliva EVOO represents the most interesting candidate to explicate healthy effects ascribed to these functional constituents, particularly regarding oxidative stress-related pathologies.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Trombetta, D., Smeriglio, A., Marcoccia, D., Giofrè, S., Toscano, G., Mazzotti, F., … Lorenzetti, S. (2017). Analytical evaluation and antioxidant properties of some secondary metabolites in northern Italian mono-and multi-varietal extra virgin olive oils (EVOOs) from early and late harvested olives. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 18(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms18040797

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free