| Literature DB >> 26784230 |
Gema Flores1, Maria Luisa Ruiz Del Castillo2.
Abstract
The health awareness recently shown by consumers has led to a demand for health beneficial products. In particular, researchers are currently focusing their studies on the search for foods for cancer prevention activity. In the present work, we study comparatively the effect of two different processing methods on the contents of phenolic compounds (i.e., ellagic acid, myricetin, quercetin and kaempferol) with antioxidant and antitumor properties in strawberry jams. In turn, the results obtained were compared with those of unprocessed fruit. Additionally carcinogenic heat-induced compounds formed by the two jam making methods were evaluated. Decreases of total ellagic acid from 138.4 µg/g to 86.5 µg/g were measured in jam as compared with the intact fruit. Even higher losses of up to 90% of total flavonols were found in strawberry after the jam-making process. A comparison between the two processing methods proved shorter heating periods (around 60 min) even at temperatures as high as 100 °C enabled losses of antioxidant phenolics to be minimized. Carcinogenic heat-induced volatile compounds, mainly Maillard reaction products, were formed as a result of thermal treatment during jam processing. However, shorter heating periods also helped reduce the formation of these harmful compounds. These results are deeply discussed. From a practical standpoint, the processing conditions here proposed can be used by industry to obtain strawberry jam with higher content of antioxidant flavonoids and, at the same time, reduced amounts of carcinogenic compounds.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; antitumor compounds; carcinogenic compounds; heat induced compounds; processing effects; strawberry jam
Year: 2016 PMID: 26784230 PMCID: PMC4728463 DOI: 10.3390/cancers8010016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Content (expressed as µg/g fresh weight ± standard deviation) of ellagic acid, myricetin, quercetin and kaempferol in strawberry fresh fruits and strawberry jams.
| Samples | Ellagic Acid | Myricetin | Quercetin | Kaempferol |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh Fruit | 138.4 ± 0.23 a | 75.7 ± 0.15 a | 106.8 ± 0.33 a | 26.8 ± 0.25 a |
| Home-Made Jam | 107.0 ± 0.21 b | 3.2 ± 0.11 b | 16.5 ± 0.13 b | 10.5 ± 0.11 b |
| Commercial Jam | 86.4 ± 0.17 b | 2.8 ± 0.08 b | 1.7 ± 0.10 b | 7.7 ± 0.08 b |
Data are presented as means (n = 3) ± SD where n refers to three independent samples; Different letters for the same compound in the same column between samples indicate differences at p < 0.05.
Figure 1Chromatograms obtained from the SPME-GC-MS analysis of home-made (a) and commercial (b) strawberry jams under the best experimental conditions. The identification peaks were as follows: 1. 2-Methyl-1-penten-3-one, 2. Butyric acid, 3. Hexanal, 4. Furfural, 5. 2,5 dimethyl-4-methoxy-3-(2H)-furanone (mesifurane), 6. 5-Methylfurfural, 7. Benzaldehyde, 8. 2-Acetylfuran, 9. Acetophenone, 10. Nonanal, 11. Phenylacetaldehyde, 12. 2-Methylbutyric acid, 13. 2-Heptanone, 14. Methyl 3-hydroxyhexanoate, 15. Benzyl alcohol, 16. Hexanoic acid, 17. 2-Hexenyl hexanoate, 18. Ethyl 3-hydroxyhexanoate, 19. (−)-α-Terpineol, 20. (+)-α-Terpineol, 21. 2,4-Hexadienoic acid, 22. Isobutyric acid, 23. Furan, 24. 5-Hydroxymethyl-2-furfural, 25. Benzyl acetate, 26. 2,4-Bis(1,1-dimethylethyl)-phenol (BHT), 27. γ-butyrolactone, 28. Methyl 3-hydroxyoctanoate, 29. Farnesol, 30. (−)-Furaneol.
Absolute areas of volatile compounds identified in home-made and commercial strawberry jams by the SPME-GC-MS method developed and the experimental conditions selected (i.e., CAR/PDMS fibre, 60 °C, 60 min).
| Numbers | Compounds | Home-Made Strawberry Jam | Commercial Strawberry Jam |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2-Methyl-1-penten-3-one | n.d. a | 6,060,266 ± 0.103 |
| 2 | Butyric acid | 798,148 ± 0.231 | n.d. |
| 3 | Hexanal | 667,617 ± 0.213 a | 600,082 ± 0.111 a |
| 4 | Furfural | 105,220,694 ± 0.105 a | 39,931,568 ± 0.206 b |
| 5 | 2,5-Dimethyl-4-methoxy-3-(2 | 2,080,383 ± 0.182 a | 1,328,358 ± 0.232 b |
| 6 | 5-Methylfurfural | 7,981,259 ± 0.098 | n.d. |
| 7 | Benzaldehyde | 18,199,786 ± 0.114 a | 2,818,282 ± 0.157 b |
| 8 | 2-Acetylfuran | 1,132,193 ± 0.098 a | 25,701 ± 0.121 b |
| 9 | Acetophenone | 328,488 ± 0.214 | n.d. |
| 10 | Nonanal | 468,206 ± 0.036 | n.d. |
| 11 | Phenylacetaldehyde | 398,036 ± 0.213 | n.d. |
| 12 | 2-Methylbutyric acid | 464,182 ± 0.086 a | 426,165 ± 0.145 a |
| 13 | 2-Heptanone | 1,735,403 ± 0.201 | n.d. |
| 14 | Methyl 3-hydroxyhexanoate | 578,543 ± 0.193 | n.d. |
| 15 | Benzyl alcohol | 6,830,691 ± 0.231 a | 1 574,617 ± 0.254 b |
| 16 | Hexanoic acid | 521,249 ± 0.087 a | 5,347,177 ± 0.113 b |
| 17 | 2-Hexenylhexanoate | 853,129 ± 0.151 | n.d. |
| 18 | Ethyl 3-hydroxyhexanoate | 3,201,276 ± 0.183 | n.d. |
| 19 | (-)-α-Terpineol | 717,332 ± 0.075 a | 1,854,972 ± 0.165 b |
| 20 | (+)-α-Terpineol | 983,539 ± 0.189 a | 2,165,148 ± 0196 b |
| 21 | 2,4-Hexadienoic acid | n.d. | 813,206 ± 0.118 |
| 22 | Isobutyric acid | n.d. | 2,252,812 ± 0.126 |
| 23 | Furan | 717,332 ± 0.105 | n.d. |
| 24 | 5-Hydroxymethyl-2-furfural | 683,539 ± 0.143 a | 6,528,233 ± 0.177 b |
| 25 | Benzyl acetate | n.d. | 414,871 ± 0.123 |
| 26 | 2,4-Bis (1,1-dimethylethyl)-phenol (BHT) | n.d. | 2,501,944 ± 0.169 |
| 27 | ɣ-Butyrolactone | n.d. | 866,534 ± 0.088 |
| 28 | Methyl 3-hydroxyoctanoate | n.d. | 159,336 ± 0.092 |
| 29 | Farnesol | 451,790 ± 0.099 | n.d. |
| (−)-Furaneol | 6,019,384 ± 0.116 | n.d. |
a Not detected; Data are presented as means (n = 3) ± SD where n refers to three independent samples; Different letters for the same compound in the same column between samples indicate differences at p < 0.05.