Person:
Rosales Conrado, Noelia

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First Name
Noelia
Last Name
Rosales Conrado
Affiliation
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Faculty / Institute
Ciencias Químicas
Department
Química Analítica
Area
Química Analítica
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Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 15
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    Determination of phenolic compounds in residual brewing yeast using matrix solid-phase dispersion extraction assisted by titanium dioxide nanoparticles
    (Journal of Chromatography A, 2019) Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Madrid Albarrán, María Yolanda; ELSEVIER
    A simple and efficient low-cost matrix solid-phase dispersion (MSPD) extraction based on TiO2nanopar-ticles (NPs) and diatomaceous earth has been developed for the recovery of phenolic compounds fromresidual brewing yeast. Experimental conditions for MSPD extraction were optimized by an experimen-tal design approach. A screening factorial design plus replicates at the center point, followed by surfaceresponse analysis were used. The simultaneous identification and quantification of eleven main nat-ural polyphenols: caffeic, chlorogenic, p-coumaric, 3,4-dihydroxibenzoic, trans-ferulic and gallic acids,kaempferol, myricetin, naringin, quercetin and rutin, was possible by combining MSPD and capillaryliquid chromatography couple to a diode array detection system (cLC-DAD) and liquid chromatogra-phy couple to a triple quadrupole analyzer (LC–MS/MS). Moreover, residual brewing yeast extracts wereevaluated in terms of DPPH (1,1-diphenyl–2 picrylhydrazyl) free radical scavenging activity. Polyphenol-nanoparticle interaction was studied by UV–vis spectroscopy and electron transmission microscopy(TEM), pointing out a stable interplay that assists phenolic isolation. The extracted polyphenol quan-tities were within the 3.2-1,500 g g−1range, and the high antioxidant activity estimated suggested thatdeveloped MSPD is a successful, simple, efficient and rapid method for the extraction and recovery of bioactive phenolic compounds, which promotes the reuse and re-evaluation of brewing yeast agri-foodby-products.
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    Valorization of prunus seed oils: fatty acids composition and oxidative stability
    (Molecules, 2023) Rodríguez-Blázquez, Sandra; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; García-Sánchez, Beatriz; Miranda Carreño, Rubén
    Prunus fruit seeds are one of the main types of agri-food waste generated worldwide during the processing of fruits to produce jams, juices and preserves. To valorize this by-product, the aim of this work was the nutritional analysis of peach, apricot, plum and cherry seeds using the official AOAC methods, together with the extraction and characterization of the lipid profile of seed oils using GC-FID, as well as the measurement of the antioxidant activity and oxidative stability using the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) free-radical scavenging method. Chemometric tools were required for data evaluation and the obtained results indicated that the main component of seeds were oils (30–38%, w). All seed oils were rich in oleic (C18:1n9c) and linoleic (C18:2n6c) acids and presented heart-healthy lipid indexes. Oil antioxidant activity was estimated in the range IC50 = 20–35 mg·mL−1, and high oxidative stability was observed for all evaluated oils during 1–22 storage days, with the plum seed oil being the most antioxidant and stable over time. Oxidative stability was also positively correlated with oleic acid content and negatively correlated with linoleic acid content. Therefore, this research showed that the four Prunus seed oils present interesting healthy characteristics for their use and potential application in the cosmetic and nutraceutical industries.
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    Residual brewing yeast as a source of polyphenols: Extraction, identification and quantification by chromatographic and chemometric tools
    (Food Chemistry, 2018) León González, María Eugenia De; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; Madrid Albarrán, María Yolanda
    A method combining aqueous extraction, reversed-phase high-performance capillary liquid chromatography with photodiode array detection (cLC-DAD) and chemometric tools, was developed to determine phenolic compounds in residual brewing yeast. The effect of temperature, nature of extraction solvent and method for separation of extract solution were studied to optimize the extraction conditions on the basis of total phenolic content (TPC), total flavonoids content (TFC) and antioxidant capacity. Polyphenols were determined by cLC-DAD. Flavonols as rutin and kaempferol, flavonoids as naringin, phenolic acids as gallic acid and antioxidants as trans-ferulic and p-coumaric acids were found and quantified in the brewing residue. Data were subjected to evaluation using multifactor ANOVA and principal component analysis (PCA), both showing that lyophilization pretreatment affects the content of individual polyphenols and that residual brewing yeast contains higher polyphenol amounts than the liquid beer waste. The obtained results suggest that residual brewing yeast could be a source of polyphenols.
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    Effect of Storage and Drying Treatments on Antioxidant Activity and Phenolic Composition of Lemon and Clementine Peel Extracts
    (Molecules, 2023) Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Madrid Albarrán, María Yolanda; Sacristán Navarro, Iván
    Obtaining polyphenols from horticultural waste is an emerging trend that enables the valorization of resources and the recovery of value-added compounds. However, a pivotal point in the exploitation of these natural extracts is the assessment of their chemical stability. Hence, this study evaluates the effect of temperature storage (20 and −20 ◦C) and drying methods on the phenolic composition and antioxidant activity of clementine and lemon peel extracts, applying HPLC-DADMS, spectrophotometric methods, and chemometric tools. Vacuum-drying treatment at 60 ◦C proved to be rather suitable for retaining the highest antioxidant activity and the hesperidin, ferulic, and coumaric contents in clementine peel extracts. Lemon extracts showed an increase in phenolic acids after oven-drying at 40 ◦C, while hesperidin and rutin were sustained better at 60 ◦C. Hydroethanolic extracts stored for 90 days preserved antioxidant activity and showed an increase in the total phenolic and flavonoid contents in lemon peels, unlike in clementine peels. Additionally, more than 50% of the initial concentration was maintained up to 51 days, highlighting a half-life time of 71 days for hesperidin in lemon peels. Temperature was not significant in the preservation of the polyphenols evaluated, except for in rutin and gallic acid, thus, the extracts could be kept at 20 ◦C.
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    Screening the extraction process of phenolic compounds from pressed grape seed residue: Towards an integrated and sustainable management of viticultural waste
    (LWT - Food Science and Technology, 2022) Gómez Mejía, Esther; Vicente Zurdo, David; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia; Madrid Albarrán, Yolanda
    The integrated valorisation of waste from the food chain to obtain value-added compounds with biological functionality will facilitate the transition to the era of a sustainable bioeconomy. To this end, an efficient matrix solid-phase dispersion (MSPD) extraction method was developed and optimized, using experimental factorial design and response surface methodology, for polyphenols recovery from pressed grape seeds obtained after the extraction of essential oils by cold pressing. Gallic, dihydroxybenzoic, p-coumaric and trans-ferulic acid, naringin, resveratrol, quercetin and kaempferol were quantified at 2.1–295 μg g−1 by capillary liquid chromatography coupled to a diode array detector and a mass analyser (cLC-DAD-MS). Furthermore, total antioxidant activity, free radical scavenging and lipid peroxidation suppression, together with the inhibition of beta-amyloid (Αβ42) protein aggregation, considered one of the main pathological effects of Alzheimer's disease, were evaluated. Potent lipid peroxidation inhibition (IC50 0.238 ± 0.003 ng g−1) was observed, along with the reduction of Αβ42 fibril width (9.4–54.8%) and aggregation. The results presented proved that the MSPD extraction method could be considered as an efficient and sustainable methodology to produce phenolic-rich extracts that may serve as an alternative antioxidant and neuroprotective ingredient for the food or pharmaceutical formulations, leading to the cascade valorisation of winery by-products.
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    Extraction, identification and quantification of polyphenols from spent coffee grounds by chromatographic methods and chemometric analyses
    (WASTE MANAGEMENT, 2019) Ramón-Gonçalves, Marina; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Madrid, Yolanda
    A solid-liquid extraction method using ethanol-water mixtures was combined with cLC-DAD, LC-MS/MS and chemometric analyses for establishing the optimum extraction conditions of valuable polyphenols from spent coffee grounds. Chlorogenic and p-coumaric acids were the most abundant polyphenols found, ranging from 0.02 to 4.8 mg g−1 and 0.173–0.50 mg g−1, respectively. In addition, total polyphenol content (9–29 mg GAE g−1 DW), total flavonoid content (11–27 mg QE g−1 DW), total antioxidant activity (0.3–7 mg GAE g−1 DW) and free radical scavenging ability (DPPH assay, 64–927 µg extract g−1 at EC50) of obtained extracts were determined. Response surface methodology allowed obtaining predictive models for the extraction of each individual polyphenol. On the other hand, multifactorial ANOVA was used to establish differences between coffee and spent coffee ground extracts. Principal component analysis was also employed to relate antioxidant activities, total polyphenol and total flavonoid contents with both the polyphenols extracted and the residue coffee type. The overall results suggested that spent coffee grounds could be reused as a promising, inexpensive and natural source of bioactive polyphenols with potential industrial applications, thus minimizing the waste disposal and environmental impact.
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    Bioactive polyphenols from Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf. Roots: quantification, identification and antioxidant activity
    (South African Journal of Botany, 2020) Deghima, Amirouche; Righi, Nadjat; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Madrid Albarrán, María Yolanda; Baali, Faiza; Bedjou, Fatiha
    Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf. is an Algerian medicinal plant whose roots are used in traditional medicine to cure feminine infertility and other diseases, however there are no studies regarding its phytochemistry and biological activities. The aim of this work is to study the phytochemical composition and antioxidant activity of different solvents fractions from the roots of Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf. Spectrophotometric and chromatographic methods were used to study the phytochemical composition; while antiradical, iron chelating ability, reducing power and lipid peroxidation were studied in-vitro. The ethyl acetate fraction showed the highest values of total phenolic compounds (271.0 ± 0.2 µg GAE/mg dry extract (d.e), flavonols (24 ± 5 µg RE/ mg d.e) and condensed tannins (129 ± 10 µg CE/mg d.e), while the hexane fraction contained the highest amount of triterpenoids (91 ± 7 µg UAE/mg d.e). The highest radical scavenging ability was recorded for the ethyl acetate fraction against DPPH (IC50 = 3.7 ± 0.1 µg/mL) and ABTS (IC50 = 81 ± 3 µg/mL) whereas the hexane fraction had the best hydrogen peroxide radical scavenging (IC50 = 380 ± 4 µg/mL). The ethyl acetate fraction had the best total antioxidant capacity (TAC = 361 ± 1 µAAE/ mg extract) and reducing power (310 ± 2 µAAE/mg extract). The β-carotene bleaching was inhibited at high rate even after 24 h by the ethyl acetate fraction (81.0 ± 0.5 %). All activities were correlated with the polyphenolic content of the fractions. Capillary LC-DAD and LC-MS/MS analysis of ethyl acetate fraction revealed high amounts of gallic acid (9.3 ± 0.6 mg/g d.e), dihydroxybenzoic acid (8.1 ± 0.2 mg/g d.e) and hesperidin (5.9 ± 0.6 mg/g d.e). With such high amounts of polyphenols and strong antioxidant activity Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf. roots could have a potential use in pharmaceutical and nutraceutical industries.
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    Neuroprotective activity of selenium nanoparticles against the effect of amino acid enantiomers in Alzheimer’s disease
    (ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2022) Vicente Zurdo, David; Sandra Rodríguez-Blázquez; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Madrid Albarrán, María Yolanda
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most prevalent neurodegenerative disease, is characterized by extracellular accumulation of amyloid-beta protein (Aβ), which is believed to be the very starting event of AD neurodegeneration. In this work, D-Phe, D-Ala, and D-Glu amino acids, which are the non-occurring enantiomeric form in the human body, and also D-Asp and DL-SeMet, have proved to be amyloidogenic regarding Aβ42 aggregation in TEM studies. These amyloidogenic amino acid enantiomers also widened Aβ42 fibrils up to 437% regarding Aβ42 alone, suggesting that Aβ42 aggregation is enantiomerically dependent. To inhibit enantiomeric-induced amyloid aggregation, selenium nanoparticles stabilized with chitosan (Ch-SeNPs) were successfully synthesized and employed. Thus, Ch-SeNPs reduced and even completely inhibited Aβ42 aggregation produced in the presence of some amino acid enantiomers. In addition, through UV–Vis spectroscopy and fluorescence studies, it was deduced that Ch-SeNPs were able to interact differently with amino acids depending on their enantiomeric form. On the other hand, antioxidant properties of amino acid enantiomers were evaluated by DPPH and TBARS assays, with Tyr enantiomers being the only ones showing antioxidant effect. All spectroscopic data were statistically analysed through experimental design and response surface analysis, showing that the interaction between the Ch-SeNPs and the amino acids studied was enantioselective and allowing, in some cases, to establish the concentration ratios in which this interaction is maximum.
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    A combined analytical-chemometric approach for the in vitro determination of polyphenol bioaccessibility by simulated gastrointestinal digestion
    (Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 2022) Gómez Mejía, Esther; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia; Valverde de la Fuente, Alejandro; Madrid Albarrán, Yolanda
    In this study, an integrated characterisation through polyphenol and cafeine content and antioxidant activity was combined with chemometric analysis to assess the efects of simulated in vitro gastrointestinal digestion on the bioaccessibility of these bioactive compounds from nine diferent tea infusions. Tea infusions were characterised based on total favonoids, total polyphenols and antioxidant activity, together with the determination of individual polyphenol content. Fourteen phenolic compounds, including phenolic acids, stilbenes and favonoids, were selected based on their reported bioactivity and high accessibility, attributed to their low molecular weight. Both polyphenols and cafeine were initially monitored in raw tea infusions and through the diferent digestion stages (salivary, gastric and duodenal) by capillary high performance liquid chromatography coupled to diode array detection (cHPLC-DAD) and/or HPLC coupled to a triple quadrupole mass analyser (HPLC–MS/MS). Multivariate analysis of the studied bioactives, using principal component analysis and cluster analysis, revealed that the decafeination process seems to increase the stability and concentration of the compounds evaluated during digestion. The greatest transformations occurred mainly in the gastric and duodenal stages, where low bioactivity indices (IVBA) were shown for resveratrol and cafeic acid (IVBA=0%). In contrast, the polyphenols gallic acid, chlorogenic acid and quercetin gave rise to their availability in white, green and oolong infusion teas (IVBA>90%). Furthermore, highly fermented black and pu-erh varieties could be designated as less bioaccessible environments in the duodenum with respect to the tested compounds.
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    Valorisation of the green waste parts from large-leaved buttercup (Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf.): phenolic profile and health promoting effects study
    (Waste and biomass valorization, 2020) Deghima, Amirouche; Righi, Nadjat; Rosales Conrado, Noelia; León González, María Eugenia De; Baali, Faiza; Gómez Mejía, Esther; Madrid, Yolanda; Bedjou, Fatiha; Springer
    Due to the extensive use of Ranunculus macrophyllus Desf. roots for medicinal purposes, most of the leafy green parts are just wasted. The aim of this work is to valorize the leafy green parts and promote their application in different modern industries. Methods For this purpose, we studied the phenolic profile of R. macrophyllus Desf. (RM-B) using chromatographic and spectrophotometric methods and we tested the in-vitro antioxidant activity and the in-vivo effect of RM-B on plasma and liver antioxidant statuts. Results RM-B contained high amounts of polyphenols (675 mg GAE/100 g dry weigh dw) and flavonoids (105 mg QE/100 g dw). In-vitro, RM-B exhibited promising radical scavenging activity against 2,2′-azino-bis(3-éthylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonique) (ABTS+·) (IC50: 247 µg/mL), hydrogen peroxide radicals (IC50: 626 µg/mL) and inhibited oxidative red blood cells hemolysis (IC50: 120 µg/mL), RM-B also showed strong reducing power (982 µM FeSO4/mg extract). In-vivo, RM-B improved the radical scavenging ability and reducing power of plasma and enhanced liver antioxidant status by increasing catalase and reduced glutathione levels and decreasing malondialdhyde levels without altering the key serum biochemical parameters reflecting liver and kidney functions. Polyphenols identified using capillary LC-DAD and LC–MS/MS analyses like hesperidin (131.2 mg/100 g dw), rutin (29.0 mg/100 g dw) and p-coumaric acid (5.8 mg/100 g dw), may be responsible for the health promoting effects of RM-B. Conclusion We may conclude that R. macrophyllus Desf. is a good source of beneficial polyphenols with strong antioxidant, anti-hemolytic and health-promoting effects, which promotes its use in pharmaceutical, medicinal and nutraceutical industries.