| Literature DB >> 27340420 |
Hock Eng Khoo1, Azrina Azlan2, Kin Weng Kong3, Amin Ismail2.
Abstract
Hundreds of fruit-bearing trees are native to Southeast Asia, but many of them are considered as indigenous or underutilized. These species can be categorized as indigenous tropical fruits with potential for commercial development and those possible for commercial development. Many of these fruits are considered as underutilized unless the commercialization is being realized despite the fact that they have the developmental potential. This review discusses seven indigenous tropical fruits from 15 species that have been identified, in which their fruits are having potential for commercial development. As they are not as popular as the commercially available fruits, limited information is found. This paper is the first initiative to provide information on the phytochemicals and potential medicinal uses of these fruits. Phytochemicals detected in these fruits are mainly the phenolic compounds, carotenoids, and other terpenoids. Most of these phytochemicals are potent antioxidants and have corresponded to the free radical scavenging activities and other biological activities of the fruits. The scientific research that covered a broad range of in vitro to in vivo studies on the medicinal potentials of these fruits is also discussed in detail. The current review is an update for researchers to have a better understanding of the species, which simultaneously can provide awareness to enhance their commercial value and promote their utilization for better biodiversity conservation.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27340420 PMCID: PMC4906201 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7591951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Common names and scientific names of 15 selected indigenous tropical fruits.
| Scientific name | Family | English name | Malay name | Indonesian name | Thai name |
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| Anacardiaceae | Horse mango | Bacang | Limus | Mamut |
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| Anacardiaceae | Borneo mango | Bambangan | Embang | — |
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| Anacardiaceae | Plum mango | Kundang | Ramania | Maprang |
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| Burseraceae | African black olive | Dabai | Danau majang | — |
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| Myrtaceae | Rose apple | Jambu mawar | Jambu mawar | Chomphu-nam dok mai |
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| Myrtaceae | Malay apple | Jambu susu | Jambu bol | Chomphu-mamieow |
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| Rhamnaceae | Indian jujube | Epal siam | Bidara | Phut-saa |
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| Oxalidaceae | Cucumber tree | Belimbing buluh | Belimbing wuluh | Taling-pling |
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| Phyllanthaceae | Greater tampoi | Tampoi | Tampui | Lang-khae |
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| Phyllanthaceae | Rambai | Rambai | Rambai | Mafai-farang |
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| Fabaceae | Nam-nam | Katak puru | Namu-namu | Amphawa |
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| Anacardiaceae | Orange-fleshed durian | Durian Nyekak | Durian pulu | Thurian |
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| Clusiaceae | Seashore mangosteen | Beruas | — | Wa |
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| Clusiaceae | Brunei cherry | Asam aur aur | Kandis | — |
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| Phyllanthaceae | Indian gooseberry | Melaka | Malaka | Ma kham pom |
Figure 1Major phenolic compounds in plant.
Phenolic compounds in the selected indigenous tropical fruits.
| Fruit | Malaysia | Other countries |
|---|---|---|
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 629.17 (dry weight, DW) [ | Total phenolics (gallic acid equivalent): 50.23–68.67 mg/g extract [ |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/g DW): 60.04 (pericarp); 4.6 (pulp) [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 1160.14 [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (gallic acid equivalent): 372.35 | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g DW): 905–332.1 [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 1868.94 [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 183.07 [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g DW): 2070 [ | Total phenolics (mg GAE/g DW): 326.9 [ |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/g DW): 7.2 (pulp); 5.3 (peel) [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 491.94–849.63 [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g DW): 596 (pulp), 2293 (peel) [ | No report from the literature |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 2664.97 [ | Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g DW): 12900 [ |
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| Total phenolics (mg GAE/100 g): 555.57 [ | Total phenolics (8.69 mg GAE/100 g DW), total anthocyanins (0), ellagic acid (5 mg/100 g DW), quercetin (0.001 mg/100 g DW), quercitrin (0.003 mg/100 g DW) [ |
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| Total phenolics: 6.0 mg GAE/100 g [ | Total phenolics (858 mg GAE/100 g DW), total anthocyanins (trace), cyanidin-3-glucoside (0.002 mg/100 g DW), ellagic acid (0.001 mg/100 g DW), quercetin (trace), quercitrin (2.0 mg/100 g DW), rutin (0.002 mg/100 g DW) [ |
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| Total phenolics: 41.0 mg GAE/100 g [ | Total and major phenolics (mg GAE/g DW): 104.00–151.12 (ripe); 122.35–167.11 (unripe); gallic acid (49.21–216.54); protocatechuic acid (86.93–887.2); p-hydroxybenzoic acid (0–649.29); chlorogenic acid (0–187.44); p-coumaric acid (120.58–454.06); ferulic acid (37.14–187.77); sinapic acid (46.15–526.47) [ |
GAE: gallic acid equivalent; ND: not detected; DW: dry weight.
Figure 2Major carotenoids in plant.
Carotenoids in the selected indigenous tropical fruits.
| Fruit | Malaysia | Other countries |
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| Total carotenoids: 4.7 mg/100 g [ |
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| Total carotenes ( | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| Carotenoids: lutein (0.457 mg/100 g), cryptoxanthin (0.155 mg/100 g), |
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| Xanthophylls (mg/100 g in peel/pulp): all-trans lutein (0.16/0.04), 9-cis lutein (0.03/0.01), 13-cis lutein (0.06/0.02) [ | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| Total carotenes ( | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| Total carotenoids ( | No report from the literature |
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| Total carotenes ( | No report from the literature |
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| Xanthophylls (mg/100 g peel/pulp, DW): cryptoxanthin (0.60/1.18), cis-cryptoxanthin (0.07/ND) [ | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | Lutein (49 |
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| Total carotenes ( | No report from the literature |
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| Total carotenes ( | Total carotenes (mg/100 g): 0.003–0.008 [ |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
ND: not detected; DW: dry weight. Some of these fruits contain no carotenoids.
Figure 3Major volatile terpenoids detected in fruit.
Terpenes and terpenoids in selected indigenous tropical fruits.
| Fruit | Malaysia | Other countries |
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| Terpenes (% area): limonene (0.4%), linalool (0.2%), | Terpenes (mg/kg): |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| Terpenes (minor components) [ | No report from the literature |
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| Terpenes (% area): (E)- | No report from the literature |
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| Saponin derivatives (in defatted dabai pulp and peel) [ | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| No report from the literature | Triterpenoids: 17,14-friedolanostanes [(24E)-3 |
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| No report from the literature | No report from the literature |
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| Oxygenated monoterpenes (20.3% area) [ | Triterpenes: mangiferenes A and B [ |
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| Monoterpenes (% area): | No report from the literature |
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| Terpenoids and saponins [ | Terpenoids (% area): |
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| Monoterpenes (% area): linalool (3.58), myrcene (2.44%), geraniol (2.25%), citronellol (0.74%), nerol (0.39%), | Terpenoids: geraniol, nerol, linalool, hotrienol, citronellol, rose oxides [ |
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| Monoterpenes (% area): limonene (0.71%), linalool (0.14%), geraniol (0.06%), nerol (trace) [ | No report from literature |
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| No report from the literature | Saponin: 7.13% [ |
The uses of selected indigenous tropical fruits as food and folk medicine.
| Number | Fruit | As food | Folk medicine |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Freshly eaten as salad or pickle, and used in cooking dishes (whole ripe fruit) | Ripe fruits combined with pepper for inducing sweating; pickled bilimbi is smeared all over the body to hasten recovery after a fever; fruit conserves for treatment of coughs, beriberi, and biliousness; fruit syrup for reducing fever and inflammation and to alleviate internal hemorrhoids |
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| 2 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 3 |
| Freshly eaten and made into jam (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 4 |
| Freshly eaten as salad or pickle, and used in cooking dishes (whole ripe fruit) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 5 |
| Freshly eaten and as salad, made into jam, and used in cooking dishes (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 6 |
| Freshly eaten as salad and used in cooking dishes (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 7 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 8 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 9 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh), as pickle and used in cooking dishes (unripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 10 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh), as pickle and used in cooking dishes (unripe flesh) | Seeds used against trichophytosis, scabies, and eczema |
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| 11 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh), as pickle and used in cooking dishes (unripe flesh) | No report on usage as folk medicine |
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| 12 |
| Freshly eaten (ripe flesh), as pickle and used in cooking dishes (unripe flesh) | Fruit for treating cough and asthma, and several other health complications |
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| 13 |
| Freshly eaten, made into jam and served as dessert (whole ripe fruit) | Ripe fruit is used as a tonic for brain and liver and as a diuretic; seeds for treatment of diarrhea, dysentery, and catarrh |
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| 14 |
| Freshly eaten (whole ripe fruit), as pickle and used in cooking dishes (unripe fruit) | Fruit decoction as a febrifuge |
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| 15 |
| Freshly eaten as salad or pickle, and used in cooking dishes (whole ripe fruit) | Ripen fruit for treatment of sore throat and cough; seed for treatment of diarrhea and weakness of stomach |
Bioactive ingredients and medicinal properties of selected indigenous tropical fruits.
| Fruit | Bioactives | Medicinal properties | Experimental models |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Flavonoids, saponins, and triterpenoids | Antihypercholesterolemic [ | Triton-induced hypercholesterolemic rats |
| Antibacterial [ | Disc diffusion method: Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria | ||
| Antidiabetes [ | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats | ||
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| No report from the literature | ||
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| Phenolic compounds | Antimicrobial (peel) [ | Disc diffusion method: Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, fungus, and yeast |
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| No report from the literature | ||
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| Flavonoids and anthocyanins | Antiatherosclerosis [ | Cholesterol-induced hypercholesterolemic rabbits |
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| Phenolic compounds | Antileukemic [ | Human promyelocytic leukemia HL-60 and normal mouse fibroblast NIH/3T3 cell cultures |
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| Not reported | Antimelanogenesis effect [ | Tyrosinase assay and melanin inhibition in B16 melanoma cell cultures |
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| Phenolic compounds | Inhibition of platelet aggregation and LDL-peroxidation [ | Human whole blood from healthy subjects: |
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| Phenolic compounds | Antimicrobial [ | Well diffusion method: pathogenic and nonpathogenic bacteria |
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| No report from the literature | ||
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| Phenolic compounds and carotenoids | Antihypercholesterolemic and antiatherosclerotic [ | Cholesterol-induced hypercholesterolemic rabbit model |
| Anticancer (kernel) [ | MTT assay: HepG2, HT-29 and Caov3 cultures | ||
| Hepatoprotective effect [ | HepG2 cell culture and western blot method | ||
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| Phenolic compounds | Gastric ulcer healing effect [ | Indomethacin-induced ulceration of rats |
| Anticlastogenicity [ | Cochran-Armitage trend test: bone marrow cells of Swiss albino mice treated with lead and aluminum | ||
| Antiproliferative [ | MTT assay: MCF-7 tumor cell culture | ||
| Antimicrobial [ | TLC-bioautographic method: drug-resistant bacteria and yeast | ||
| Anticancer [ |
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| Antiaging effect [ |
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| Chondroprotection [ |
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| Phenols, tannins, alkaloids, and flavonoids | Antifungal (seed) [ | Disc diffusion method: microbroth dilution technique ( |
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| Phenolic compounds and terpenes | Antimicrobial [ | Disc diffusion method: test bacteria on Mueller Hinton Agar, and yeast on Potato Dextrose Agar |
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| Phenolic compounds and saponin | Antihyperglycemic, antidiarrhoeal, and hepatoprotective [ | Glucose overloaded hyperglycemic rats, castor oil-induced diarrhea in mice, and tetrachloromethane-induced liver damage in rats, respectively |
| Anticancer [ | Neutral red assay: cytotoxicity of various cultivars of jujube against different cancer cell lines | ||
The medicinal properties are reported based on in vitro and in vivo animal studies, as well as human intervention trials.