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Antioxidant, Antimutagenic and Cytoprotective Properties of Hydrosos Pistachio Nuts.

Angel Carbonell-BarrachinaJoel Said García-RomoEma C Rosas-BurgosFrancisco Javier Cinco-MoroyoquiReyna Luz Vidal-QuintanarAngel Antonio Carbonell-BarrachinaArmando Burgos-Hernández
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2019)
Pistachio nuts are included among the foods with the highest antioxidant capacity. Stressed cultivating conditions, such as the use of regulated deficit irrigation (RDI), are expected to create a plant response that might increase the production of secondary metabolites. Fruits that are obtained under RDI treatments are commonly called hydroSOS products. The aim of this work was to study the influence of using different rootstocks (P. atlantica, P. integerrima, and P. terebinthus) and two RDI treatments on the antioxidant (ABTS, ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP), and DPPH), antimutagenic (Ames test), and cytotoxicity (MTT assay in five human cell lines) activities of pistachios. P. terebinthus showed the best antioxidant activity, and the RDI treatments maintained and improved the antioxidant properties of pistachios. Neither the rootstock nor the RDI had significant impact on the antimutagenic potential of pistachios. The nut extracts had no toxic effect on non-cancerous cells and the application of RDI did not reduce their cytoprotective capacity. Furthermore, neither rootstock nor RDI treatments affected the ability of the pistachio extracts of preventing the oxidative damage by H2O2. The application of RDI strategies, in addition to allowing irrigation water saving, led to obtaining pistachios with the same or even better biofunctional characteristics as compared to fully irrigated pistachios.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • anti inflammatory
  • induced apoptosis
  • endothelial cells
  • high throughput
  • transcription factor
  • signaling pathway
  • risk assessment
  • climate change