Erythrodiol is a natural triterpenoid produced in olives. It is believed to exhibit antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity in colon adenocarcinoma cells.[1]
Application
Erythrodiol has been used as working standard for determination of terpenoid in olive leaves using SPE followed by HPLC analysis.[2]
Packaging
Bottomless glass bottle. Contents are inside inserted fused cone.
Pentacyclic triterpenes are minor, but very relevant compounds found in virgin olive oil (VOO). A rapid and reliable LC-MS method for determining the triterpenic acids and dialcohols (after ultrasound assisted extraction) from VOO has been developed, giving an alternative to
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 53(3), 730-735 (2005-02-03)
In contrast to other metabolic functions, the role of dietary antioxidants and oil on microsomal lipid oxidation has been less extensively studied. This study examines ascorbate-Fe(2+) and NADPH-induced lipid peroxidation of hepatic microsomes of rats that were fed for three
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 58(17), 9685-9691 (2010-08-18)
This work establishes a new procedure for the extraction and analysis of pentacyclic triterpenes, with which fruits and leaves from three Spanish olive cultivars ("Picual", "Hojiblanca", and "Arbequina") has been studied. The leaf contains important amounts of oleanolic acid (3.0-3.5%
Journal of natural products, 67(3), 469-471 (2004-03-27)
Four new triterpenoids with various skeletons, maytefolins A-C (1-3) and uvaol-3-caffeate (4), were isolated from the leaves of a Brazilian medicinal plant, Maytenus ilicifolia, together with five known triterpenoids. Of these triterpenoids only erythrodiol exhibited significant cytotoxicity against KB/S, KB/VJ300
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