| Literature DB >> 26988491 |
Claudia Ancillotti1, Lorenzo Ciofi2, Daniele Pucci3, Eva Sagona4, Edgardo Giordani5, Stefano Biricolti6, Massimo Gori7, William Antonio Petrucci8, Fabio Giardi9, Riccardo Bartoletti10, Ugo Chiuminatto11, Serena Orlandini12, Stefano Mosti13, Massimo Del Bubba14.
Abstract
Total soluble polyphenols (TSP), total monomeric anthocyanins (TMA), radical scavenging activity (RSA), ferric reducing antioxidant power (FRAP), and a number of anthocyanins, phenolic acids, coumarins, flavanols, dihydrochalcones and flavonols were investigated in Tuscan bilberry (i.e. Vaccinium myrtillus) and "false bilberry" (i.e. Vaccinium uliginosum subsp. gaultherioides Bigelow). V. myrtillus berries showed much higher TSP, TMA, RSA and FRAP values than V. uliginosum subsp. gaultherioides fruits. Moreover, very different profiles of individual phenolics were observed in the two species, being V. myrtillus mainly characterised by delphinidin and cyanidin glycosides, together with chlorogenic acid, and V. uliginosum subsp. gaultherioides dominated by malvidin derivatives and flavonols. Strong differences between the two species regarded also metabolites investigated herein for the first time, such as scopoletin, which was approximately two magnitude orders higher in V. uliginosum subsp. gaultherioides than in V. myrtillus berries. Very different abundances were also highlighted for cryptochlorogenic acid and quercetin-3-rhamnoside that were about ten-fold higher in bilberry than in "false bilberry". When the anthocyanin composition pattern of Tuscan "false bilberry" was compared to those elsewhere reported for V. uliginosum fruits harvested in different world areas, some important differences were observed.Entities:
Keywords: Anthocyanins; DPPH radical scavenging activity; FRAP antioxidant activity; Flavanols; Flavonols; Phenolic acids; Vaccinium myrtillus; Vaccinium uliginosum subsp. gaultherioides
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26988491 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.02.106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514