Phytochemical Profile and Nutraceutical Value of Old and Modern Common Wheat Cultivars Leoncini, Emanuela Prata, Cecilia Malaguti, Marco Marotti, Ilaria Segura Carretero, Antonio Catizone, Pietro Dinelli, Giovanni Hrelia, Silvana Antioxidants Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching HL60 cells Oxidative stress Phenols Phytochemicals Reactive oxygen species Wheat Among health-promoting phytochemicals in whole grains, phenolic compounds have gained attention as they have strong antioxidant properties and can protect against many degenerative diseases. Aim of this study was to profile grain phenolic extracts of one modern and five old common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) varieties and to evaluate their potential antiproliferative or cytoprotective effect in different cell culture systems. Wheat extracts were characterized in terms of antioxidant activity and phenolic composition (HPLC/ESI-TOF-MS profile, polyphenol and flavonoid contents). Results showed that antioxidant activity (FRAP and DPPH) is mostly influenced by flavonoid (both bound and free) content and by the ratio flavonoids/polyphenols. Using a leukemic cell line, HL60, and primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, the potential antiproliferative or cytoprotective effects of different wheat genotypes were evaluated in terms of intracellular reactive oxygen species levels and cell viability. All tested wheat phenolic extracts exerted dose-dependent cytoprotective and antiproliferative effects on cardiomyocytes and HL60 cells, respectively. Due to the peculiar phenolic pattern of each wheat variety, a significant genotype effect was highlighted. On the whole, the most relevant scavenging effect was found for the old variety Verna. No significant differences in terms of anti-proliferative activities among wheat genotypes was observed. Results reported in this study evidenced a correspondence between the in vitro antioxidant activity and potential healthy properties of different extracts. This suggests that an increased intake of wheat grain derived products could represent an effective strategy to achieve both chemoprevention and protection against oxidative stress related diseases. 2014-03-19T07:53:51Z 2014-03-19T07:53:51Z 2012 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Leoncini, E.; et al. Phytochemical Profile and Nutraceutical Value of Old and Modern Common Wheat Cultivars. Plos One, 7(9): e45997 (2012). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/30949] 1932-6203 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045997 http://hdl.handle.net/10481/30949 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Public Library of Science (PLOS)