| Literature DB >> 26373576 |
Benjamin Houillé1, Sébastien Besseau1, Guillaume Delanoue2, Audrey Oudin1, Nicolas Papon1, Marc Clastre1, Andrew John Simkin3, Laurence Guérin2, Vincent Courdavault1, Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc'h1, Arnaud Lanoue1.
Abstract
Grape canes are byproducts of viticulture containing valuable bioactive stilbenoids including monomers and oligomers of E-resveratrol. Although effective contents in stilbenoids are known to be highly variable, the determining factors influencing this composition remain poorly understood. As stilbenoids are locally induced defense compounds in response to phytopathogens, this study assessed the impact of downy mildew infection during the growing season on the stilbenoid composition of winter-harvested grape canes. The spatial distribution between pith, conducting tissues, and cortex of E-piceatannol, E-resveratrol, E-ε-viniferin, ampelopsin A, E-miyabenol C, Z/E-vitisin B, hopeaphenol, and isohopeaphenol in grape canes from infected vineyards was strongly altered. In conducting tissues, representing the main site of stilbenoid accumulation, E-ε-viniferin content was higher and E-resveratrol content was lower. These findings suppose that the health status in vineyards could modify the composition of stilbenoids in winter-harvested grape canes and subsequently the potential biological properties of the valuable extracts.Entities:
Keywords: downy mildew; grape canes; stilbenoids; tissue distribution
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26373576 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b02997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279