| Literature DB >> 33572919 |
Cássia H Barbosa1, Mariana A Andrade1,2, Raquel Séndon3, Ana Sanches Silva4,5, Fernando Ramos2, Fernanda Vilarinho1, Khaoula Khwaldia6, Letricia Barbosa-Pereira3.
Abstract
Fruit by-products have a low economic value and have proven biological activities, such as antioxidant capacity due to the presence of active compounds. The main objective of this study was to obtain and determine the antioxidant capacity, through DPPH radical assay and β-carotene bleaching assay, of three food grade extracts from apple, lemon, and orange industrial by-products. Furthermore, the extracts were characterized by ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (UHPLC-MS/MS). LC with diode array detector (LC-DAD) was used for the quantification of the main polyphenols. Lemon extract presented the highest inhibition percentage of DPPH radical (51.7%) and the highest total phenolics content (43.4 mg GAE/g) from the by-products studied. Orange by-product was that with the higher number of polyphenols while lemon extract was that with the highest content of individual phenolics. The by-product obtained from the lemon was that with higher amounts of hydroxycinnamic acids (407 µg/g of by-product), mainly chlorogenic acid (386.7 µg/g), followed by the apple by-product (128.0 µg/g of by-product), which showed higher amounts of rosmarinic and chlorogenic acids. These industrial by-products have great potential as a source of natural antioxidants to be used directly as food additives or to be incorporated in packaging to produce active food packaging.Entities:
Keywords: LC-DAD; UHPLC-ESI-MS/MS; antioxidant capacity; apple; industrial by-products; lemon; orange
Year: 2021 PMID: 33572919 PMCID: PMC7912430 DOI: 10.3390/foods10020272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158