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Berry anthocyanins as novel antioxidants in human health and disease prevention

✍ Scribed by Shirley Zafra-Stone; Taharat Yasmin; Manashi Bagchi; Archana Chatterjee; Joe A. Vinson; Debasis Bagchi


Book ID
102948853
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
828 KB
Volume
51
Category
Article
ISSN
1613-4125

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Edible berries, a potential source of natural anthocyanin antioxidants, have demonstrated a broad spectrum of biomedical functions. These include cardiovascular disorders, advancing age‐induced oxidative stress, inflammatory responses, and diverse degenerative diseases. Berry anthocyanins also improve neuronal and cognitive brain functions, ocular health as well as protect genomic DNA integrity. This chapter demonstrates the beneficial effects of wild blueberry, bilberry, cranberry, elderberry, raspberry seeds, and strawberry in human health and disease prevention. Furthermore, this chapter will discuss the pharmacological benefits of a novel combination of selected berry extracts known as OptiBerry, a combination of wild blueberry, wild bilberry, cranberry, elderberry, raspberry seeds, and strawberry, and its potential benefit over individual berries. Recent studies in our laboratories have demonstrated that OptiBerry exhibits high antioxidant efficacy as shown by its high oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) values, novel antiangiogenic and antiatherosclerotic activities, and potential cytotoxicity towards Helicobacter pylori, a noxious pathogen responsible for various gastrointestinal disorders including duodenal ulcer and gastric cancer, as compared to individual berry extracts. OptiBerry also significantly inhibited basal MCP‐1 and inducible NF‐κβ transcriptions as well as the inflammatory biomarker IL‐8, and significantly reduced the ability to form hemangioma and markedly decreased EOMA cell‐induced tumor growth in an in vivo model. Overall, berry anthocyanins trigger genetic signaling in promoting human health and disease prevention.


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Free radicals and grape seed proanthocya
✍ Debasis Bagchi; Manashi Bagchi; Sidney J Stohs; Dipak K Das; Sidhartha D Ray; Ch πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2000 πŸ› Elsevier Science 🌐 English βš– 598 KB

Free radicals have been implicated in over a hundred disease conditions in humans, including arthritis, hemorrhagic shock, atherosclerosis, advancing age, ischemia and reperfusion injury of many organs, Alzheimer and Parkinson's disease, gastrointestinal dysfunctions, tumor promotion and carcinogene