| Literature DB >> 33182299 |
De León-Medina José Carlos1, Sepúlveda Leonardo1, Morlett-Chávez Jesús2, Meléndez-Renteria Paola3, Zugasti-Cruz Alejandro4, Ascacio-Valdés Juan1, Aguilar Cristóbal Noé1.
Abstract
This work was performed to study Castilla Rose (Purshia plicata) as a potential source of polyphenols obtained by solid-state fermentation (SSF)-assisted extraction using the microorganism Aspergillus niger GH1 and to evaluate the antioxidant activity of the extracted compounds. First, water absorption capacity (WAC) of the plant material, radial growth of the microorganism, determination of best fermentation conditions, and maximum accumulation time of polyphenols were tested. Then, a larger-scale fermentation, polyphenols isolation by column liquid chromatography (Amberlite XAD-16) and recovered compounds identification by HPLC-MS were made. Finally, the antioxidant activity of the recovered compounds was tested by ABTS, DPPH, and lipid oxidation inhibition assays. The best fermentation conditions were temperature 25 °C and inoculum 2 × 106 spores/g, while the maximum extraction time of polyphenols was 24 h (173.95 mg/g). The HPLC/MS analysis allowed the identification of 25 different polyphenolic compounds, and the antioxidant activity of the obtained polyphenols was demonstrated, showing ABTS assay the most effective with inhibition of 94.34%.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus niger GH1; Castilla Rose; antioxidant activity; polyphenols; solid-state fermentation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33182299 PMCID: PMC7695294 DOI: 10.3390/plants9111518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Treatment matrix of experimental design Box Hunter & Hunter.
| Treatment | Temperature (°C) | Inoculum (spores/g) |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | 30 | 2 × 106 |
| 10 | 30 | 2 × 106 |
| 9 | 25 | 2 × 106 |
| 3 | 25 | 2 × 107 |
| 4 | 30 | 2 × 107 |
| 5 | 25 | 2 × 106 |
| 12 | 30 | 2 × 107 |
| 8 | 30 | 2 × 107 |
| 1 | 25 | 2 × 106 |
| 7 | 25 | 2 × 107 |
| 6 | 30 | 2 × 106 |
| 11 | 25 | 2 × 107 |
|
| ||
|
| +1 | −1 |
|
| 30 | 25 |
|
| 2 × 107 | 2 × 106 |
Data obtained about water absorption capacity of Castilla Rose (in dry base).
| Parameters | Results |
|---|---|
| Moisture (%) | 6.8 |
| Solids (%) | 93.2 |
| Water absorption capacity (g of gel/g of dry weight) | 5.3 |
| Maximum moisture of the support/substrate (%) | 83 |
Figure 1Kinetic of radial growth of Aspergillus niger GH1 on Castilla Rose.
Figure 2Pareto chart for total polyphenols from the Box Hunter &Hunter design analysis.
Figure 3Extraction of total polyphenols by fermentation of Castilla Rose using Aspergillus niger GH1.A (25 °C, 2 × 106 esp/g); B (30 °C, 2 × 106 esp/g); C (25 °C, 2 × 107 esp/g); D (30 °C, 2 × 107 esp/g).
Total polyphenols extracted by sold-state fermentation (SSF) from Castilla Rose.
| Fermentation Time | Total Polyphenols (mg/g of Dry Plant) |
|---|---|
| 0 h | 119.22 ± 8.70 |
| 24 h | 173.95 ± 4.72 |
Compounds present in Castilla Rose plant before solid-state fermentation.
| ID | Retention Time | Mass | Compound | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2.15 | 481.1 | HHDP-hexoxide | Ellagitannins |
| 2 | 8.27 | 577.1 | Procyanidindimer B1 | Proanthocyanidin dimers |
| 3 | 13.01 | 577.1 | Pelargodinin 3-o-rutinoside | Proanthocyanidin dimers |
| 4 | 14.17 | 865.3 | Procyanidintrimer C1 | Proanthocyanidins trimers |
| 5 | 19.42 | 289.1 | (+)-Catechin | Catechinns |
| 6 | 20.99 | 625.1 | Quercetin 3,4’-O-diglucoside | Flavonols |
| 7 | 26.36 | 595.1 | Quercetin 3-O-glucosilxiloside | Flavonols |
| 8 | 27.53 | 301.1 | Ellagicacid | Hydroxybenzoic acid |
| 9 | 29.52 | 463.1 | Ellagicacidglucoside | Hydroxybenzoic acid |
| 10 | 32.22 | 507.1 | Delphinidin 3-O-(6 acetyl-glucoside) | Anthocyanins |
Figure 4Chromatogram of the recovered polyphenols from Castilla Rose. Compound 11 Kaempferol 3,7-O-diglucoside; compound 13 procyanidin trimer C1; compound 18 ellagic acid.
Identified compounds from the RP-HPLC-ESI-MS of the solid-state fermentation of Castilla Rose.
| ID | Retention Time | Mass | Compound | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3.59 | 480.8 | HHDP-hexoxide | Ellagitannins |
| 2 | 6.77 | 752.7 | 1,2-Disinapoylgentibiose | Methoxycinnamic acids |
| 3 | 8.48 | 752.7 | 1,2-Disinapoylgentibiose | Methoxycinnamic acids |
| 4 | 14.6 | 770.7 | Kaempferol 3,7,4’-O-triglucoside | Flavonols |
| 5 | 15.74 | 752.7 | 1,2-Disinapoylgentiobiose | Methoxycinnamic acids |
| 6 | 19.28 | 770.7 | Kaempferol 3-O-sophoroside 7-O-glucoside | Flavonols |
| 7 | 20.55 | 770.7 | Quercetin 3-O-glucosyl-ramnosyl-galactoside | Flavonols |
| 8 | 21.98 | 576.7 | Procyanidindimer B1 | Proanthocyanindin dimers |
| 9 | 22.7 | 577 | Procyanidindimer B2 | Proanthocyanidin dimers |
| 10 | 23.6 | 288.7 | (+)-Catechin | Catechins |
| 11 | 24.49 | 608.7 | Kaempferol 3,7-O-diglucoside | Flavonols |
| 12 | 25.46 | 576.7 | Procyanidindimer B3 | Proanthocyanidin dimers |
| 13 | 26.69 | 864.6 | Procyanidintrimer C1 | Proanthocyanidins trimers |
| 14 | 27.19 | 288.7 | (−)-Epicatequin | Catechins |
| 15 | 28.76 | 864.6 | Procyanidintrimer C1 | Proanthocyanidin trimers |
| 16 | 29.39 | 782.6 | Terflavin B | Ellagitannins |
| 17 | 30.49 | 624.7 | Quercetin 3,4’-O-diglucoside | Flavonols |
| 18 | 32.06 | 300.6 | Ellagicacid | Hydroxybenzoic acid dimers |
| 19 | 35.54 | 506.7 | Delphinidin 3-O-(6’’-acetyl-glucoside) | Anthocyanins |
| 20 | 40.95 | 330.6 | Gallicacid 4-O-glucoside | Hydroxybenzoic acids |
| 21 | 42.6 | 562.9 | Apigeninarabinoside-glucoside | Flavones |
| 22 | 44.86 | 326.8 | p-Coumaricacid 4-O-glucoside | Hydroxycinnamic acids |
| 23 | 45.73 | 344.6 | Rosmanol | Phenolicterpenes |
| 24 | 46.39 | 560.9 | Vitisin A | Polymeric anthocyanins |
| 25 | 47.88 | 324.8 | p-Coumaroyltyrosine | Hydroxycinnamicacids |
Results of the antioxidant activities tested.
| Antioxidant Assay | Inhibition (%) |
|---|---|
| ABTS | 94.34 ± 1.98 |
| DPPH | 68.71 ± 0.97 |
| Lipid oxidation | 71.49 ± 1.25 |