| Literature DB >> 32197427 |
Annalisa Tassoni1, Tullia Tedeschi2, Chiara Zurlini3, Ilaria Maria Cigognini3, Janos-Istvan Petrusan4, Óscar Rodríguez5, Simona Neri5, Annamaria Celli6, Laura Sisti6, Patrizia Cinelli7,8, Francesca Signori7,8, Georgios Tsatsos9, Marika Bondi10, Stefanie Verstringe11, Geert Bruggerman11, Philippe F X Corvini12.
Abstract
The world is confronted with the depletion of natural resources due to their unsustainable use and the increasing size of populations. In this context, the efficient use of by-products, residues and wastes generated from agro-industrial and food processing opens the perspective for a wide range of benefits. In particular, legume residues are produced yearly in very large amounts and may represent an interesting source of plant proteins that contribute to satisfying the steadily increasing global protein demand. Innovative biorefinery extraction cascades may also enable the recovery of further bioactive molecules and fibers from these insufficiently tapped biomass streams. This review article gives a summary of the potential for the valorization of legume residual streams resulting from agro-industrial processing and more particularly for pea, green bean and chickpea by-products/wastes. Valuable information on the annual production volumes, geographical origin and state-of-the-art technologies for the extraction of proteins, fibers and other bioactive molecules from this source of biomass, is exhaustively listed and discussed. Finally, promising applications, already using the recovered fractions from pea, bean and chickpea residues for the formulation of feed, food, cosmetic and packaging products, are listed and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: agro-industrial by-products; biomass; biowaste; fibers; legumes; plant proteins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32197427 PMCID: PMC7144388 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25061383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Valorization routes of residues generated by the agro-industrial food processing pipeline.
European production amount (in million tons, MT) of different legumes. Data from the FAOSTAT food and agriculture database and related to 2017 [25].
| Legume Type | World (MT) | Europe (MT) |
|---|---|---|
| Beans (dry) | 31.41 | 0.62 |
| Beans (green) | 24.22 | 0.77 |
| Broad Beans (dry) | 4.84 | 0.97 |
| Caw Peas | 7.41 | 0.002 |
| Chickpeas | 14.78 | 0.13 |
| Lentils | 7.59 | 0.07 |
| Lupins | 1.61 | 0.25 |
| Peas (dry) | 16.21 | 2.60 |
| Peas (green) | 20.70 | 0.93 |
| Soybeans | 35.26 | 2.67 |
Figure 2The top world producers (million tons) of green and dry peas in 2017. Data from the FAOSTAT database [25].
Figure 3Production share of green and dry peas by region. Data from the FAOSTAT database (year 2017) [25].
Figure 4Top world producers (million tons) of green and dry beans in 2017. Data from the FAOSTAT database [25].
Figure 5Top world producers (million tons) of chickpeas in 2017. Data from the FAOSTAT database [25].
Figure 6The industrial processing scheme of fresh legumes; in red are the steps generating by-products/wastes. Modified from Andreotti [31].
Figure 7Residues generated during the industrial processing of legumes by Conserve Italia Scarl. (Italy). (A) peas; (B) green beans; (C) chickpeas. Images from Chiara Zurlini.
Summary of most relevant applications of peas, beans and chickpeas byproducts/wastes and/or of their derived extracts.
| Legume Feedstock | Field of Application | Application | Bioactive Compounds | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pea pods | Feed | Monogastric and polygastric animal feed | Proteins, fibers, minerals | Biochemical and nutritional characterization. Impact on animal performance. | [ |
| Pigeon pea by-products | Food | High protein biscuits | Proteins | Chemical composition; physical and sensory parameters | [ |
| Pea and broad bean pods | Food | Food ingredients | Fibers, soluble sugars, minerals, linoleic acid | Biochemical and nutritional characterization; antioxidant activity | [ |
| Pea pod waste | Bio-resources | Bio-butanol production | Cellulose/hemicellulose | Potential carbon source for bio-butanol production | [ |
| Pea peel waste | Bio-resources | Cellulase enzyme production | Cellulose | Potential source for cellulose production | [ |
| Moth bean milling residues | Food | Food ingredients | High essential amino acids, fatty acids, minerals. | Water and oil absorption capacities, foaming and emulsification properties. | [ |
| Black gram ( | Food | Food ingredients | Phenolic acids like gallic, protocatechuic, gentisic, vanillic, syringic, caffeic and ferulic acids | Biochemical and nutritional characterization; α-glucosidase inhibitory activities correlated to potential antioxidant and anti-diabetic properties. | [ |
| Red, green and black gram by-products | Food | Deep-fried snacks | Proteins | Sensory results and shelf life studies | [ |
| Bean pod ash nanoparticles | Automobile application | Composites with bioreinforcements | Nano-fibers, cellulose | Increased tensile strength and hardness values, reduced weight and energy impact | [ |
| Process bean waste | Packaging | Ecopaper for food packaging | Fibers, cellulose | 100% recyclable packaging paper obtained by an eco-sustainable process and certified for application in direct contact with food | [ |
| Bean dregs | Compost | Compost product of high-quality | Cellulose, hemicellulose | Improved composting conditions and compost quality | [ |
| Bean dregs | Bio-resources | Production of reducing sugar | Sugars | Efficient method for biomass wastes liquefaction. | [ |
| Chickpea straw | Feed | Alternative forage in ruminant diet | Proteins, fibers | High nutritional value, dry matter digestibility, rumen degradability | [ |
| Chickpea, mung bean, pigeon pea hulls | Food | Meat additives | Phenolics, flavonoids | Antioxidant, antimicrobial, antinitrosant activities | [ |
| Chickpea husk | Food | Baking additives | Fibers, polyphenols | Calcium content, antioxidant activity and phenolic compounds content slightly improved; increase in shelf life, rheological, physical and sensory parameters. | [ |
| Chickpea husk | Textile | Textile grade dye | Flavonoids, tannins, terpenoids | Functional finishing features of textiles, good ultraviolet protection, excellent resistance against bacteria. | [ |
| Chickpeas hulls | Food | Food additives | Fibers, polyphenols | Source of dietary fiber and phenolics with antioxidant capacity | [ |
| Aquafaba | Food | Egg-white substitute in food foam and emulsions. | Proteins, carbohydrates | Foaming and emulsification properties | [ |
| Aquafaba | Packaging | Bioplastic | Proteins, carbohydrates | Biodegradable bioplastic | [ |