| Literature DB >> 34945651 |
Eva Quitério1, Cristina Soares2, Ricardo Ferraz1,3, Cristina Delerue-Matos2, Clara Grosso2.
Abstract
Seaweeds represent a rich source of biologically active compounds with several applications, especially in the food, cosmetics, and medical fields. The beneficial effects of marine compounds on health have been increasingly explored, making them an excellent choice for the design of functional foods. When studying marine compounds, several aspects must be considered: extraction, identification and quantification methods, purification steps, and processes to increase their stability. Advanced green techniques have been used to extract these valuable compounds, and chromatographic methods have been developed to identify and quantify them. However, apart from the beneficial effects of seaweeds for human health, these natural sources of bioactive compounds can also accumulate undesirable toxic elements with potential health risks. Applying purification techniques of extracts from seaweeds may mitigate the amount of excessive toxic components, ensuring healthy and safer products for commercialization. Furthermore, limitations such as stability and bioavailability problems, chemical degradation reactions during storage, and sensitivity to oxidation and photo-oxidation, need to be overcome using, for example, nanoencapsulation techniques. Here we summarize recent advances in all steps of marine products identification and purification and highlight selected human applications, including food and feed applications, cosmetic, human health, and fertilizers, among others.Entities:
Keywords: analytical methods; biological activities; purification methods; seaweeds
Year: 2021 PMID: 34945651 PMCID: PMC8702156 DOI: 10.3390/foods10123100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Human uses of seaweeds.
Proximate composition and total phenolic, total carotenoid, total tocopherol and total phytosterol contents of Seaweeds.
| Class of Compounds | Green Seaweeds | Red Seaweeds | Brown Seaweeds | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polysaccharides (%, dw) | 29.8–65 | 18–74 | 12.2–68 | [ |
| Proteins (%, dw) | 4–44 | 6–50 | 1–24 | [ |
| Total lipids (%, dw) | 0.2–4.1 | 0.12–3.8 | 0.3–4.5 | [ |
| Saturated fatty acids (% of total fatty acids) | 23.5–77 | 25.5–85.7 | 15.8–50 | [ |
| Mono-unsaturated fatty acids (% of total fatty acids) | 12.2–38.8 | 1.0–35.7 | 10.1–36 | [ |
| Poly-unsaturated fatty acids (% of total fatty acid) | 6.6–39 | 9.1–68 | 17.8–70.9 | [ |
| Phenolic compounds (TPC, mg GAE/g dried extract) | 1.26–50.0 | 1.05–38.08 | 0.26–397.23 | [ |
| Carotenoids (µg/g dw) | 1.41–298.87 | 0.29–202.91 | 3.40–7.51 | [ |
| Phytosterols (µg/g dw) | 1700–2100 | 186–337 | 662–2443 | [ |
| Tocopherols (µg/g dw) | 19.70–35 | 14.25–500 | 3.63–450 | [ |
dw—dry weight.
Figure 2Example of a fucoidan structure.
Figure 3Tetrafucol A, a fucol-type phlorotannin found in the brown alga Ascophyllum nodosum (L.) Le Jolis.
Figure 4Chemical structure of fucoxanthin.
Figure 5Schematic structure of the steroid skeleton.
Figure 6The four isomers of tocopherol: α-, β-, γ-, and δ-tocopherol.
Figure 7Examples of the most common purification techniques for seaweed extracts.
Food applications of seaweeds compounds.
| Seaweed Species | Compounds | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agar | Thickening and gelling properties (icing and bakery glazes, liquid and soft-texture food products, and edible films) | [ | |
| Alginate | Restructured meat and vegetable products, baked products, ice creams, frozen desserts | [ | |
|
| Carragenans | Gelling, emulsifying, thickening and stabilizing properties (ice cream, yogurt, cheese, milk-based products, bread, coating films) | [ |
|
| Laminarin and Fucoidan | Increase lipid stability in pork meat products | [ |
|
| Fucoxanthin | Increase lipid stability in chicken products and enhance redness and yellowness in ground chicken breast meat | [ |
|
| Protein hydrolisate | Functional (renin inhibition) bread with potential positive heart effects | [ |
| PUFA | Seaweed addition increased n-3 PUFA but decreased n-6/n-3 PUFA ratio in pork products. Moreover, seaweeds conferred antioxidant activity and increased amino acid levels. | [ | |
|
| Phlorotannins | Increased antioxidant activity in fish products | [ |
PUFA—polyunsaturated fatty acid.
Feed applications of seaweeds.
| Seaweed Species | Compounds | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minerals, amino acids, carbohydrates | Feed for fish and prawn culture | [ | |
| Low protein content, high mineral content and large concentration of phlorotannins | Feed for ruminants. Increase resistance to stressors like mixing, livestock transportation, exposure to food-borne toxins, excessive heat or temperature; improvement of the immune system; increased productivity and/or quality of the animal (milk, meat, carcass grade, etc.); and reduction of risk of pathogen infection | [ | |
|
| Mineral, polysaccharide and carotenoid contents | Improved egg production and quality; improved immune functions and intestinal microflora | [ |
|
| UFA, PUFA, carotenoid contents | Decreased yolk cholesterol, triglycerides and n-6 fatty acids and increased carotenoid content | [ |
Bioactivies of seaweeds with pharmaceutical and cosmetic applications.
| Seaweed Species | Biological Activities | References |
|---|---|---|
| Antiviral activity | [ | |
| Antibacterial effects | [ | |
| Anticancer activity | [ | |
| Antidiabetic effect | [ | |
| Neuroprotective effects | [ | |
| Cosmetic applications (including anti-moisture, anti-ageing, anti-inflammatory, whitening effect, hair growth) | [ |
Other applications of seaweeds.
| Seaweed Species | Application | References |
|---|---|---|
| Fertilizer | [ | |
| Biomass for fuel (methane production) | [ | |
| Wastewater treatment (accumulation of toxic metals) | [ |