| Literature DB >> 30297619 |
Pardeep Kumar Sadh1, Suresh Kumar2, Prince Chawla3, Joginder Singh Duhan4.
Abstract
A large number of by-products or wastes are produced worldwide through various food industries. These wastes cause a serious disposable problem with the environment. So, now a day's different approaches are used for alternative use of these wastes because these by-products are an excellent source of various bioactive components such as polyphenols, flavonoids, caffeine, carotenoids, creatine, and polysaccharides etc. which are beneficial for human health. Furthermore, the composition of these wastes depends on the source or type of waste. Approximately half of the waste is lignocellulosic in nature produced from food processing industries. The dissimilar types of waste produced by food industries can be fortified by various processes. Fermentation is one of the oldest approaches and there are three types of fermentation processes that are carried out such as solid state, submerged and liquid fermentation used for product transformation into value added products through microorganisms. Selections of the fermentation process are product specific. Moreover, various studies were performed to obtain or fortified different bioactive compounds that are present in food industries by-products or wastes. Therefore, the current review article discussed various sources, composition and nutritive value (especially bioactive compounds) of these wastes and their management or augmentation of value-added products through fermentation.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive compounds; food waste; liquid fermentation; solid state fermentation; sub-merged fermentation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30297619 PMCID: PMC6222923 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23102560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Bioactive compounds in different food stuffs.
| Food Sources | Bioactive Compounds | References |
|---|---|---|
| Apple | Epicatechin, catechins, chlorogenic acid, hydroxycinnamates, phloretin glycosides, quercitin glycosides, procyanidins, anthocyanins | [ |
| Avocado | Epicatechin, catechin, gallic acid, chlorogenic acid, cyanidin 3-glucoside, homogentisic acid | [ |
| Banana | Gallocatechin, anthocyanins, delphindin, cyaniding, catecholamine | [ |
| Berries | Cyanidin, delphinidin, malvidin | [ |
| Citrus | Hesperidin, naringin, eriocitrin, narirutin | [ |
| Grapes | Cinnamic acid, coumaric acid, caffeic acid, ferulic acid, chlorogenic acid, neochlorogenic acid, | [ |
| Guava | Catechin, cyanidin 3-glucoside, galangin, gallic acid, homogentisic acid, kaempferol | [ |
| Litchi | Cyanidin-3-glucosides, cyanidin-3-rutonoside, malvidin-3-glucoside, gallic acid, epicatechin-3-gallate | [ |
| Mango | Gallic acid, ellagic acid, gallates, gallotannins, condensed tannins | [ |
| Olives | Cyanidin, delphinidin, malvidin | [ |
| Palm | Tocopherols, tocotrienols, sterols, and squalene, phenolic antioxidants | [ |
| Pomegranate | Gallic acid, cyanidin-3,5-diglucoside, cyanidin-3-diglucoside, delphinidin-3,5-diglucoside | [ |
| Carrot | Phenols, beta-carotene | [ |
| Celery | Cyanidin, delphinidin, malvidin | [ |
| Cucumber | Chlorophyll, pheophytin, phellandrene, caryophyllene | [ |
| Onion | Quercetin, rutin | [ |
| Tomato | Carotenoids | [ |
| Parsley | Apigenin, luteolin, quercetin | [ |
| Spinach | Apigenin; luteolin | [ |
| Chenopodium | Apigenin; luteolin | [ |
| Barley | β-Glucan | [ |
| Rice | γ-Oryzanol, bran oil | [ |
| Wheat | Phenolic acids, antioxidants | [ |
| Beans | Daidzen, glycindin | [ |
| Dark chocolate | Epicatechin | [ |
| Green tea | (−)-epigallocatechin, (+)-gallocatechin, (−)epicatechin-3- | [ |
Figure 1Bioactive compounds and their major types.
Figure 2(A) Flavonoids and their types (B) Basic structure of common flavonoids.
Figure 3(A) Alkaloids and their types, Common structure of (B) Heterocyclic alkaloids and Non-heterocyclic alkaloids.
Figure 4(A) Phenolic acids and their types (B) Common structure of some phenolic acids.
Figure 5Common structure of some major antibiotic classes.
Figure 6Food processing wastes from various food industries.
Various bioactive compounds produced from different microorganisms by fermentation using diverse food processing wastes.
| Bioactive Compounds | Substrate | Microorganism | Fermentation Process | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single cell protein | Sweet potato, banana skin, orange peel, mango waste and pineapple peel; Dairy waste | Solid state fermentation; Liquid fermentation | [ | |
| Bioethanol | pineapple waste, banana waste | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Indole-3-acetic acid | Cassava fibrous residue |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Protease production | Rice bran, Brewery waste (brewer’s spent grain, hottrub and residual brewer’s yeast); Soybean meal; Wheat bran, cotton seed meal and orange peel. | Liquid fermentation; Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Lactic acid production | Dairy waste; rice bran, wheat bran, ragi bran, rice starch water, tea waste, sugar cane bagasse, groundnut and coconut oil cakes | Fed batch fermentation | [ | |
| Ergosterol | Dairy waste (whey) | Liquid fermentation | [ | |
| Xanthan | Potato peel |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Protein | Orange peel | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Phenolic content | Guava and pineapple waste; Peanut waste (peanut press cake); Rice bran; plum pomaces and brandy distillery wastes; pomegranate wastes | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Antioxidants | Peanut waste (peanut press cake); apricot pomace; Apple pomace | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Neomycin | Apple pomace, cotton seed meal, soy bean powder and wheat bran |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Oxytetracycline | Groundnut shell, Sweet potato residues, Cassava peels, cocoyam peels | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Rifamycin | Coconut oil cake, groundnut oil cake, ground nut shell and rice husk |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Meroparamycin | Rice, wheat bran, quaker, bread, and ground corn | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Bleomycin | Date syrup |
| Fermentation | [ |
| Poly(3-Hyrdroxybutyric Acid) | Orange peel |
| Batch fermentation | [ |
| Laccase | Peels of citrus fruits, soybean meal, tofu dreg, Brewer’s spent grain | Sub merged fermentation; Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Bioherbicide | Soybean bran, bagasse and corn steep liquor | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Biosorbents | Apple pomace |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Astaxanthin (pigment) | Wheat waste; olive pomace; bakery waste | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Bioactive phenolic compounds | Wheat straw, Rice straw, Corn cob, Pea pod, Sugarcane baggase | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Fibrinolytic enzyme | Banana peel, black gram husk, paddy straw, rice bran, and wheat bran | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Pectin lyase | corn steep liquor and orange peel |
| Sub merged fermentation | [ |
| Citric acid | Apple pomace, brewer’s spent grain, citrus waste, sphagnum peat moss; peanut shell | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Fumaric acid | Apple pomace; pulp and paper solid waste |
| Solid state fermentation; Sub merged fermentation | [ |
| Biosurfactant | Potato peels, orange peels, banana peels, and bagasse | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Wine (antioxidant rich) | Potato, pumpkin and carrot peels |
| Liquid fermentation | [ |
| Cellulase | Wheat bran, Rice bran, Corn husks | Sub merged fermentation | [ | |
| Lycopene | Tomato waste |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Polygalactouronase | Wheat bran, Coffee pulp |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
| Vanillic acid and vanillin | Pineapple canary waste | Liquid fermentation | [ | |
| Proanthocyanidins, anthocynidins, phenolic acids, vitamin E and oryzanol | Rice bran | - | - | [ |
| Ferulic, p-coumaric, sinapic and syringic | Rice bran | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Lipase | Castor bean waste; | Solid state fermentation | [ | |
| Nisin | Date by product |
| Solid state fermentation | [ |
Figure 7Production of bioactive compounds from food industries waste using fermentation.