| Literature DB >> 31979214 |
Francesco Di Gioia1, Nikolaos Tzortzakis2, Youssef Rouphael3, Marios C Kyriacou4, Shirley L Sampaio5, Isabel C F R Ferreira5, Spyridon A Petropoulos6.
Abstract
The current trend for substituting synthetic compounds with natural ones in the design and production of functional and healthy foods has increased the research interest about natural colorants. Although coloring agents from plant origin are already used in the food and beverage industry, the market and consumer demands for novel and diverse food products are increasing and new plant sources are explored. Fresh vegetables are considered a good source of such compounds, especially when considering the great color diversity that exists among the various species or even the cultivars within the same species. In the present review we aim to present the most common species of colored vegetables, focusing on leafy and fruit vegetables, as well as on vegetables where other plant parts are commercially used, with special attention to blue color. The compounds that are responsible for the uncommon colors will be also presented and their beneficial health effects and antioxidant properties will be unraveled.Entities:
Keywords: anthocyanins; antioxidants; flavonoids; fruit vegetables; functional quality; inflorescence; leafy vegetables; lettuce; natural colorants; tomato
Year: 2020 PMID: 31979214 PMCID: PMC7070715 DOI: 10.3390/antiox9020097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
The main pigments isolated in various leafy vegetables.
| Species | Color | Class of Compounds | Compounds (Content on a Fresh Weight (fw) or Dry Weight (dw) Basis) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lettuce ( | Red | Anthocyanins | cyanidin (1558.0–3656.9 μγ/g dw), cyanidin-3- | [ |
| Carotenoids | all- | [ | ||
| Green | Carotenoids | all- | [ | |
| Chlorophylls | Chlorophyll a and b (6.95–26.92 mg/100 g fw and 4.60–10.30 mg/100 g fw, respectively) | [ | ||
| Anthocyanins | Cyanidin-3-glucoside (0.192–0.260 g/100 g fw) | [ | ||
| Basil ( | Purple/red | Anthocyanins | Anthocyanin A (0.325–0.423 mg/g dw),-anthocyanin B (0.057–0.641 mg/g dw), anthocyanin C (0.362–0.877 mg/g dw), anthocyanin D (0.063–0.662 mg/g dw), cyanidin-based (1.78–3.18 mg/g dw) pigments- and peonidin-based (19.8% fw) pigments, cyanidin-3-(6,6′-di-p-coumaroyl)-sophoroside-5-glcucoside (7.5 mg/g extract) | [ |
| Green | Carotenoids | Lutein (4.99–6.64 mg/100 g fw or 22.1–24.0 mg/100 g dw), β-carotene 4.42–6.01 mg/100 g fw, zeaxanthin (0.30–0.45 mg/100 g fw or 1.8 mg/100 g dw) | [ | |
| Perilla ( | Red | Anthocyanins | Cyanidin and cyanidin derivatives (6.44 mg/g dw), shisonin (0.126–0.416 mg/g dw), malonylshishonin (0.462–1.116 mg/g dw) | [ |
| Swiss chard ( | Yellow | Betaxanthins | Vulgaxanthin I, miraxanthin V | [ |
| Red/purple | Betacyanins | Betanin, isobetanin, betanidin, and isobetanidin | [ |
The main pigments isolated in various fruit vegetables.
| Species | Color | Class of Compounds | Compounds | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomato | Red tomato | Carotenoids | Lycopene, phytoene, phytofluene, ζ-carotene, γ-carotene, β-carotene, neurosporene, lutein | [ |
| Purple tomato | Carotenoids | Lycopene (36.51–61.30 mg/kg fw), β-carotene (6.5–6.8 mg/kg fw), lutein | [ | |
| Purple tomato | Petunidin and malvidin acylglycosides | petunidin-3- | [ | |
| Purple/black tomato | Petunidin and malvidin acylglycosides | petunidin 3-(6-(4-( | [ | |
| Eggplant | Purple eggplant | delphinidin derivatives | delphinidin-3 glucoside-5-(coumaryl) dirhamnoside (1.10 mg/g dw), | [ |
| Pepper | Green/red peppers | Carotenoids | β-carotene, lycopene, zeaxanthin | [ |
| Purple/black pepper | Delphinidin, cyanidin and malvidin derivatives | delphinidin 3,5-diglucoside, | [ | |
| Lablab | purple lablab | Malvidin and petunidin derivatives | malvidin 3-sambubiose, | [ |
| Common bean | Black bean | Pelargonidin, | pelargonidin-3-glucoside, | [ |
The main pigments isolated in vegetables consumed for plant parts other than fruit and leaves.
| Species | Edible Part | Color | Class of Compounds | Compounds | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broccoli ( | Inflorescence | Purple | Acylated anthocyanins | cyanidin 3- | [ |
| Cauliflower ( | Inflorescence | Purple or dark violet | Cyanidin derivatives | cyanidin-3-(6- | [ |
| Cabbage ( | Leaves | Purple | Cyanidin derivatives | cyanidin-3-diglucoside-5-glucoside (0.64 mg/g dw), cyanidin-3-(sinapoyl)(sinapoyl)-diglucoside-5-glucoside (0.26-0.58 mg/g dw), cyanidin-3-(sinapoyl)-diglucoside-5-glucoside (0.85 mg/g dw)and cyanidin-3-( | [ |
| Artichoke [ | Immature inflorescence | Purple | Cyanidin, peonidin, and delphinidin derivatives | cyanidin 3,5-diglucoside (0–11.7 mg/kg dw), cyanidin 3-glucoside (0.3–194.1 mg/kg dw), cyanidin 3,5-malonyldiglucoside (0.5-218.0 mg/kg dw), cyanidin 3-(3′′-malonyl)glucoside (0–47.3 mg/kg dw), and cyanidin 3-(6′′-malonyl)glucoside (7.6-1234.3 mg/kg dw) along with some minor compounds such as peonidin 3-glucoside, peonidin 3-(6′′-malonyl)glucoside, and delphinidin glycoside. | [ |
| Asparagus ( | Spears (young stems) | Purple | Cyanidin and peonidin derivatives | Cyanidin 3-[3’’-( | [ |
| Sweet corn ( | Maize kernels | Yellow – deep orange | Carotenoids | β-carotene (2.62 μg/g dw), | [ |
| Maize kernel pericarp and cobs | Orange – red brik | Phlobaphenes | Phlobaphenes (320.24 A510/100 g) | [ | |
| Maize cobs and kernel aleurone and pericarp | Pink, red, purple, blue | Anthocyanins (cyanidin, penodin, pelargonidin, | cyanidin-3-glucoside, | [ |