| Literature DB >> 33807100 |
Centhyea Chen1, Umi Hartina Mohamad Razali1, Fiffy Hanisdah Saikim2, Azniza Mahyudin2, Nor Qhairul Izzreen Mohd Noor1.
Abstract
Morus alba L. (M. alba) is a highly adaptable plant that is extensively incorporated in many traditional and Ayurveda medications. Various parts of the plant, such as leaves, fruits, and seeds, possess nutritional and medicinal value. M. alba has abundant phytochemicals, including phenolic acids, flavonoids, flavonols, anthocyanins, macronutrients, vitamins, minerals, and volatile aromatic compounds, indicating its excellent pharmacological abilities. M. alba also contains high nutraceutical values for protein, carbohydrates, fiber, organic acids, vitamins, and minerals, as well as a low lipid value. However, despite its excellent biological properties and nutritional value, M. alba has not been fully considered as a potential functional food ingredient. Therefore, this review reports on the nutrients and bioactive compounds available in M. alba leaves, fruit, and seeds; its nutraceutical properties, functional properties as an ingredient in foodstuffs, and a microencapsulation technique to enhance polyphenol stability. Finally, as scaling up to a bigger production plant is needed to accommodate industrial demand, the study and limitation on an M. alba upscaling process is reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Morus alba; bioactive compounds; functional food ingredients
Year: 2021 PMID: 33807100 PMCID: PMC8004891 DOI: 10.3390/foods10030689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Macronutrients and vitamins in M. alba.
| Nutrients | Carbohydrate | Protein | Fats | Fibre | Ascorbic Acid | β-Carotene | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | ||||||||
| 28.8% | 27.1% | 1.9% | 26.5% | - | - | [ | ||
| 9.7–29.6% | 15.3–30.9% | 2.1–4.9% | 27.6–36.7% | 100–200 mg/100 g | 8.4–13.1 mg/100 g | [ | ||
| 9.7–39.7% | 14.0–34.2% | 3.5–8.1% | 5.4–38.4% | - | - | [ | ||
| - | - | 1.10% | - | 22.4 mg/100 mL | - | [ | ||
| - | 10.2– 13.3% | - | - | - | - | [ | ||
| - | 12.98% | - | 8.32% | 351 mg/g | 13.7 mg/100 g | [ | ||
| 71% | 13–15% | 2–3.5% | 12–14% | - | - | [ | ||
| - | 1.55 g/100 g | 0.48 g/100 g | 1.47 g/100 g | 15.2 g/100 g | - | [ | ||
Mineral contents in M. alba.
| Minerals | Ca | Zn | Fe | Mg | P | K | Mn | Na | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | ||||||||||
| 14.9 mg/g | 2.2 mg/100 g | 27.1 mg/100 g | 5.3 mg/g | 3.7 mg/g | 12.4 mg/g | - | 58.62 mg/100 g | [ | ||
| 1.0–1.6% | - | - | 0.4–0.7% | 0.2–0.3% | 1.3–1.9% | - | - | [ | ||
| 11.2–27.6 mg/g | - | - | 2.2–3.4 mg/g | 3.8–7.02 mg/g | 16.1–18.6 mg/100 g | - | - | [ | ||
| 1.52 mg/g | 2.8 mg/100 g | 4.2 mg/100 g | 1.06 mg/g | 2.47 mg/g | 16.68 mg/g | 3.8 mg/100 g | 60 mg/100 g | [ | ||
| 0.2–0.4 g/100 g | 14.9–19.6 mg/kg | 28.2–46.7 mg/kg | 0.1–0.2 g/100 g | 0.2–0.3 g/100 g | 1.6–2.1 g/100 g | 12.3–19.4 mg/kg | 0.01 g/100 g | [ | ||
| 2.73 mg/g | 1.8 mg/100 g | 6.3 mg/100 g | 1.82 mg/g | 1.98 mg/g | 9.07 mg/g | 0.8 mg/100 g | 82.8 mg/100 g | [ | ||
| 5.76 mg/g | 50.20 mg/100 g | 73 mg/100 g | 2.4 mg/g | - | 17.31 mg/g | - | 2.8 mg/g | [ | ||
Major phytochemical classes in M. alba leaves.
| Phytochemical Class | Amount in Leaves | References |
|---|---|---|
| Flavonoids | 57.8% | [ |
| 21.36–56.41 mg RE/g DW | [ | |
| 20.4–187.23 mg QUE/g | [ | |
| 3.66–6.11 mg/g DW | [ | |
| Benzofurans | 17.9% | [ |
| Phenolic acids | 10.7% | [ |
| 0.84–1.07 mg/g DW | [ | |
| 6.78–8.48 mg/g DW | [ | |
| Alkaloids | 6.4% | [ |
| 0.680–6.909 mg/g | [ | |
| 1359 mg/kg | [ | |
| Coumarins | 3.6% | [ |
| Chalcones | 2.9% | [ |
| Stilbenes | 0.7% | [ |
| 188.57 mg/100 g DW | [ |
Major phytochemical classes of M. alba fruit.
| Phytochemical Class | Amount in Fruit | References |
|---|---|---|
| Phenolic acids | 0.013–0.57 mg CAE/g DW | [ |
| 0.90–2.18 mg/g DW | [ | |
| 1.17–3.62 mg/g DW | [ | |
| 0.62–0.84 mg/g DW | [ | |
| Flavonoids | 0.026–0.607 mg QE/g | [ |
| 0.553–2.83 mg/g DW | [ | |
| 3.66–6.11 mg/g DW | [ | |
| Alkaloids | 660 mg/100 FW | [ |
| 1047 mg/kg | [ | |
| Anthocyanins | 0.95–28.61 mg/g DW | [ |
| 6.52 mg/100 g DW | [ | |
| Sterol | 28.07% | [ |
| Stilbenes | 609.15 mg/100 g DW | [ |
Antioxidative properties of M. alba from various studies.
| Extraction | Assay | Result | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaves | Ethanol, | DPPH | IC50 = 145–2070 mg/mL | [ |
| ABTS | IC50 = 32.73–642.33 mg/mL | |||
| FRAP | EC50 = 868.67–2429.33 mg/mL | |||
| Leaves | Methanol | DPPH | 33.22–56.37 μmol TE/g DW | [ |
| FRAP | 91.62–149.15 μmol AAE/g DW | |||
| ABTS | 51.28–70.84 μmol TE/g DW | |||
| Leaf | Liquid | DPPH | 322.7–876.9 μg/mL | [ |
| ABTS | 141.3–259.6 μg/mL | |||
| Nitric oxide | 5.11–176.4 μg/mL | |||
| Metal chelation | 169.6–328.6 μg/mL | |||
| Anti-lipid | 202.3–315.5 μg/mL | |||
| Leaf | Ethanol | Oxygen radical | 1.55–10.86 μmol TE/μmol | [ |
| DPPH | IC50 = 40.00–285.54 μM | |||
| Cellular | No PBS wash: | |||
| Fruit | Ethanol | DPPH | IC50 = 0.518 mg/mL | [ |
| FRAP | 0.522–0.685 | |||
| Ferrous ion | 72.6% | |||
| Lipid peroxidation | 39–45.51% | |||
| Fruit | Ethanol, Hexane, Chloroform, Ethyl acetate and | DPPH | EC50 = 71.12–623.86 mg/L | [ |
| Superoxide anion radical-scavenging | EC50 = 82.37–921.83 mg/L | |||
| Fruit | Ethanol, | DPPH | 35.43–66.6% | [ |
| Fruit polysaccharides | Ethanol | Oxygen radical | 1117.3–2159.8 μmol TE/g | [ |
| Rapid peroxyl | 75.23–461.32 μmol Vit C/g | |||
| Cellular antioxidant activity | No PBS wash: | |||
| PBS wash: | ||||
| Seed polyphenols | Methanol | DPPH | IC50 = 20.2–48.2 μM | [ |
Figure 1Natural compounds in M. alba with antioxidative abilities. (a) Chlorogenic acid; (b) quercetin; (c) rutin; (d) quercitrin; (e) isoquercitrin; (f) dihydroquercetin; (g) resveratrol; (h) moracin; (i) phenylpropanoids. 1 Refers to compounds in M. alba leaves; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba fruit; 3 refers to compounds in M. alba seeds.
Figure 2Natural compounds with antidiabetic activities. (a) 1-Deoxynojirimycin (DNJ); (b) quercetin; (c) kaempferol; (d) 4′-prenyloxyresveratrol; (e) chalcomoracin; (f) isobavachalcone; (g) morachalcone. 1 Refers to compounds in M. alba leaves; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba fruit.
Figure 3Natural compounds with antihyperlipidaemia activities. (a) Chlorogenic acid; (b) caffeic acid; (c) quercetin; (d) rutin; (e) kaempferol; (f) cyanidin-3-O-glucoside; (g) cyanidin-3-O-rutinoside. 1 Refers to compounds in M. alba leaves; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba fruit.
Figure 4Structures of (a) 1-deoxynojirimycin (DNJ) and (b) cyanidin-3-O-glucoside. 1 Refers to compounds in M. alba leaves; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba fruit.
Figure 5Natural compounds in M. alba possessing antimicrobial and antiviral activities. (a) Morin; (b) 1-deoxynojirimycin (DNJ); (c) cyanidin-3-O-rutinoside; (d) pectin.1 Refers to compounds in M. alba fruit; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba seeds.
Figure 6Natural compounds in M. alba with anticancer abilities. (a) Morin; (b) morusin; (c) atalantoflavone; (d) 3′-geranyl-3-prenyl-2′,4′,5,7-tetrahydroxyflavone; (e) 8-geranylapigenin; (f) sanggenon K; (g) morachalcone B; (h) morachalcone C; (i) moracin D; (j) chalcomoracin; (k) 1-deoxynojirimycin (DNJ); (l) cyanidin-3-glucoside. 1 Refers to compounds in M. alba leaves; 2 refers to compounds in M. alba fruit.