| Literature DB >> 35204130 |
Bojana B Vidović1, Danijel D Milinčić2, Mirjana D Marčetić3, Jelena D Djuriš4, Tijana D Ilić1, Aleksandar Ž Kostić2, Mirjana B Pešić2.
Abstract
Goji berries have long been used for their nutritional value and medicinal purposes in Asian countries. In the last two decades, goji berries have become popular around the world and are consumed as a functional food due to wide-range bioactive compounds with health-promoting properties. In addition, they are gaining increased research attention as a source of functional ingredients with potential industrial applications. This review focuses on the antioxidant properties of goji berries, scientific evidence on their health effects based on human interventional studies, safety concerns, goji berry processing technologies, and applications of goji berry-based ingredients in developing functional food products.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant properties; bioactive compounds; food product development; goji; health benefits; processing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204130 PMCID: PMC8868247 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11020248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Biological activities of goji berry and its products.
The total content of phenolics, flavonoids, carotenoids, and polysaccharides in goji berries.
| TPC (mg/g) | TFC (mg/g) | TCC (mg/g) | LBP (mg/g) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 2.56–2.82 | - | 5.7 | - | [ |
| 11.6–15.7 | - | - | - | [ |
| 4.0–13.0 | - | 4.0–9.5 | - | [ |
| 7.17 | 2.37 | 0.43 | - | [ |
| 1.62 | 2.14 | 0.42 | - | [ |
| 3.89–8.20 | - | 2.9 | - | [ |
| 0.71–2.94 | - | - | - | [ |
| 0.25–1.93 | - | 0.66–4.13 | - | [ |
| 7.6 | - | - | - | [ |
| 6.9–8.25 | 3.18–6.14 | 12.93–25.35 | 23.62–42.45 | [ |
| 16–48 | [ | |||
| 30.3–73.4 | 38.5–54.7 | 3.64–11.33 | 55.9–62.7 | [ |
| 6.9–10.9 | - | - | - | [ |
| 2.17–4.48 | 2.67–3.16 | 0.21–0.23 | - | [ |
| 8.36–14.13 | - | 0.42–1.01 | - | [ |
| 8.16–9.04 | 1.78–2.63 | - | - | [ |
| 3.45–3.47 | 2.20–2.23 | - | - | [ |
| 0.01–5.47 | - | - | - | [ |
|
| ||||
| 2.96 | 0.27 | nd 1 | - | [ |
| 26.9 | 36.1 | 0.40 | 56.1 2 | [ |
| 7.26–9.01 | 9.77–12.32 | 0.001–0.003 | - | [ |
| 3.44–6.45 | 5.66–11.16 | - | - | [ |
| 21.14–28.52 | 1.23–1.38 | - | - | [ |
| 49.07 | - | - | - | [ |
1 nd—not detected; TPC—total phenolic content; TFC—total flavonoid content; TCC—total carotenoid content; LBP—L. barbarum polysaccharides content; 2 LRP—L. ruthenicum polysaccharides content.
Antioxidant properties of goji berries.
| Sample Origin | Extraction Solvent | DPPH• | ABTS•+ | FRAP | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| China | ethanol (60%, | 44.63–47.63% | - | 0.15–0.17 µmol Fe+2/g | [ |
| methanol (80%, | 35.88–85.46 µmol TE/g fw | 59.3–95.6 µmol TE/g fw | 57.7–92.5 µmol TE/g fw | [ | |
| Acetone/water/acetic acid | 16.07–17.47 µmol TE/g | 53.92–64.38 µmol TE/g | 26.39–46.51 mmol Fe+2/g | [ | |
| Greece | water | 1.29–3.00 mg/mL (IC50) | 0.42–1.10 mg/mL (IC50) | - | [ |
| water | 0.83–1.15 mg/mL (IC50) | 0.19–0.4 mg/mL (IC50) | - | [ | |
| Italy | methanol: water acidified with HCL | - | - | 18.00–20.89 µmol Fe+2/g fw | [ |
| North | water | 1.51–6.25 mg/g dw | 1.94–9.93 mg /g dw | - | [ |
| Poland | methanol (80%, | - | 16.0–68.3 µmol TE/g | 14.4–63.0 µmol TE/g | [ |
| Portugal | methanol (80%, | 6.25 mg/mL (EC50) | - | - | [ |
| Romania | methanol (70%, | 8.79–9.35 mg TE/g | 24.86–25.12 mg TE/g | 16.91–19.52 mg TE/g | [ |
| Serbia | methanol (80%, | 4.52 µmol TE/g fw | 0.12 µmol TE/g fw | 5.32 µmol TE/g fw | [ |
| Switzerland | methanol | 6.94–13.22 µmol TE/g dw | - | [ | |
| Turkey | water | 22.64 mg/mL (EC50) | - | 2.93 mM Fe+2 | [ |
| methanol (80%, | 18.19 mg/mL (EC50) | - | 2.62 mM Fe+2 | ||
|
| |||||
| China | ethanol (85%, | 315.7–460.5 µmol TE/g dw | 327.8–485.6 µmol TE/g dw | 377.0–539.4 µmol TE/g dw | [ |
| ethanol (60%, | 63.09–85.15% | - | 0.55–0.62 µmol Fe+2/g | [ | |
| methanol (80%, | 49.65 µmol TE/g fw | 47.8 µmol TE/g fw | 56.3 µmol TE/g fw | [ | |
| acetone/water/ acetic acid (70:29.5:0.5) | 32.29–35.86 µmol TE/g | 147.00–180.03 µmol TE/g | 278.21–363.46 mmol Fe+2/g | [ | |
| Serbia | methanol (80%, | 10.22 µmol TE/g fw | 0.28 µmol TE/g fw | 19.43 µmol TE/g fw | [ |
TE—Trolox equivalent; fw—fresh weight; dw—dry weight.
Clinical studies on the effects of goji berries and their products.
| Study Design | Study Population | Number | Intervention (Dose) | Main Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-blinded, placebo-controlled, parallel design study | Healthy adults | 27 | 28 days (15 g/d wolfberries-estimated to provide ~3 mg/d esterified zeaxanthin) | plasma zeaxanthin increased 2.5-fold | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy adults | 34 | 14 days (120 mL/d LBP standardized juice—equivalent at least 150 g of fresh fruit) | ↑ subjective feelings of general well-being, neurologic/psychologic performance and gastrointestinal functions | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy adults | 39 | 30 days (120 mL/d LBP-standardized juice) | ↑ SOD, GSH-Px | [ |
| Parallel design intervention study | Healthy elderly subjects | 177 | 3 months (LBPs) | ↓ plasma triglycerides, total cholesterol, and LDL cholesterol | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Older healthy adults | 60 | 30 days (120 mL/d LBP standardized juice—equivalent at least 150 g of fresh fruit) | ↑ several immunological responses and subjective feelings of general well-being | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy adults | 28 | 14 days (120 mL/d LBP standardized juice—equivalent at least 150 g of fresh fruit) | ↓ waist circumference | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy elderly subjects | 150 | 90 days (13.7 g/d milk-based formulation of goji berry, LWB) | ↑ plasma zeaxanthin and antioxidant levels protects from hypopigmentation and soft drusen accumulation in the macula of elderly subjects | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy elderly subjects | 150 | 90 days (13.7 g/d milk-based formulation of goji berry, LWB) | ↑ postvaccination serum influenza-specific immunoglobulin G levels and seroconversion rate | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Type 2 diabetes patients | 67 | 90 days (300 mg LBPs/d) | ↓ glucose and ↑ insulinogenic index ↑ HDL cholesterol | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Healthy overweight and mild hypercholesterolemic subjects | 53 | 8 weaks (80 mL/pouch-contained 13.5 g of WBE) | anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory effects by modulating mRNA expression | [ |
| Parallel design RCT | Metabolic syndrome patients | 50 | 45 days (14 g dried goji berry with healthy dietary pattern) | ↓ transaminases and waist circumference | [ |
| Double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT | Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) patients | 42 | 12 months (10 g of LB granules/d, estimated to provide 0.175 g LBPs) | LB supplement provides a neuroprotective effect for the retina and could help delay or minimize | [ |
| Double-blind crossover RCT | Healthy, overweight men | 17 | 25 g of dried LB fruit | ≠ postprandial energy expenditure, substrate oxidation, and markers for lipid and glucose metabolism | [ |
| Parallel design RCT | Middle-aged and older adults | 40 | 16 weak (15 g/d whole, dried wolfberry with healthy dietary pattern) | improves vascular tone | [ |
| Parallel design RCT | Healthy, middle-aged subjects | 27 | 3 months (25 g of whole goji berries or supplements of lutein and zeaxhantin) | ↑ macular pigment optical density | [ |
RCT—randomized control trial; RP—retinitis pigmentosa; LB—L.barbarum; LBPs—L.barbarum polysaccharides; LWB—Lacto-Wolfberry; SOD—superoxide dismutase; GSH-Px—glutathione peroxidase; MDA—malondialdehyde; LDL—low density lipoprotein; HDL—high density lipoprotein; WBE—aqueous extract of wolfberry; GSH—glutathione.
Figure 2Goji berry-based functional food products.
An overview in the functional food products development using goji berries or goji berry products.
| Products | Goji Berries | Microbial Species Involved in Fermentation | Main Observations | Specific Note | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional Properties | Sensory and Texture Properties | |||||
|
| ||||||
| Kombucha beverages | Dried goji berries: | Kombucha culture: | 1. High TPC | 1. Decrease colour intensity due to microbial transformation of phenolics (high score) | Increased TPC and antioxidant properties (except DPPH•) after in vitro digestion | [ |
| Amber ale beer | Dry goji berries | 1. High TPC | Hedonic score: Appreciation | Goji berries were added | [ | |
| Fermented goji juice | Goji berries extract | 1. High TPC, TFC and TAcy | / | / | [ | |
| Fermented goji juice | Dried goji berries | 1. High TPC and TFC | 1. Colour is moderate, very good | / | [ | |
| Goji berry tea | Dried goji berries: | / | 1. High TPC | 1. Colour of red and black goji berry tea were light | This study monitored the effects of various temperatures and times of soak on antioxidant properties of specific goji berry tea. | [ |
| Fermented goji juice by probiotics | Dried goji berries | 1. Decreases the levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and total superoxide dismutase in serum and colon | / | Probiotics fermentation of goji berry juice contributing to enhanced the anti-ulcerative colitis function. | [ | |
| Fermented goji juice | Fully ripe and frozen goji berries (goji purre crashed with pectinase) |
| 1. Highly individually volatile compounds content | 1. Juices fermented with L. | L. | [ |
| Goji juice and goji capsules | Goji berries | / | 1. Source of nutritional and mineral elements | / | Goji capsules contained higher concentration of all individually minerals compared to goji juice samples. | [ |
| Goji wine | Dried goji berries |
| 1. High TPC and TFC | 1. Flavour (woody, vanillia and clove aroma), aroma related with compounds such as | This study monitored the effects of various oak matrices (medium toast barrel, medium toast shavings, non-toast chips, light toast chips, medium toast chips, and heavy toast chips) on the volatiles and antioxidant activity in Goji wine. | [ |
| Goji berry juice | Dehydrated goji berries | / | 1. High protocatehuic acid, vanillic acid, | / | High concentration of goji juice showed toxic effects and promoted premature aging in | [ |
| Black goji extract as source of natural colour | Dried black goji berries | / | 1. High content of petunidin derivatives, primarily | Acylated petunidin anthocyanins are responsible for colour retention and improvement of colour intensity and stability. | Black goji anthocyanins produced various colour shades in broad ranges of pH. | [ |
| Goji wine | Dried goji berries (mixed with water and decomposed with pectolase) |
| / | / | Ethyl carbamate was formed during the fermentation and storage processes of goji wine. | [ |
|
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| Minced catfish | Goji berry extract | / | / | High score for odour, texture, colour and overall quality of catfish minced blended with chitosan/goji berry extract, immediately after mixing and after 14 days of storage. | Chitosan/goji berry extract can be used as a biopreservative and anti-listerial agents (prevents the growth of | [ |
| Beef burgers | Goji puree | / | Burgers with goji: | Burgers had acceptable appearance, odour, taste, flavour and texture for all groups of consumers (young, adult and elderly) | Burgers with goji had significantly higher TPC and antioxidant properties after in vitro digestion | [ |
| Cooked sausages | Dried goji berries | / | / | The addition of 0.5% goji berries had the highest contribution to the preservation of bright red colour, fresh aroma and taste of functional cooked sausages | The addition of 0.5% and 1% of goji berries effectively inhibited protein oxidation, lipolysis, and lipid oxidation in functional cooked sausages | [ |
| Rabbit meat | Rabbit feed was supplemented with 3% goji berries | / | / | Consumers gave a higher score for meatballs produced of meat of rabbits which were fed with goji berries dietary supplementation. These samples had more acceptable colour, juiciness, taste and overall liking. | Meat obtained of rabbits fed with goji berries dietary supplementation had reduced TBARS values and significant impact on | [ |
| Smoked common carp sausages | Goji berry extracts | / | / | 1. Sausages with goji berry extract had partial redness colour | Sausages supplemented with goji extracts had decreased TBA values, TVB-N contents and total aerobic mesophilic bacteria during storage, in comparison to control sample (without goji). | [ |
| Cooked and smoked horse meat product | Goji berry extract and goji berry extract/buckwheat flour | / | / | A high score for appearance, shear, colour, taste, odour and consistency were evaluated for a horsemeat product enriched with goji extract or goji/buckwheat mixture. | / | [ |
| Rabbit meat | Rabbit feed was supplemented with 1% and 3% goji berries | / | Meat obtained of rabbits fed with goji berries dietary supplementation: | Goji berries dietary supplementation did not affect the colour, water holding capacity and tenderness of rabbit meat muscle. | Meat obtained of rabbits which were fed with 3% goji berries dietary supplementation showed an increase in oxidative stability. | [ |
| Kazakh horse-meat product | Goji berry extract | / | A high score for surface colour, smell and taste were evaluated for a horsemeat product enriched with 0.5% and 1% goji extract. | Horse meat products with 1.0% of goji extract had improved oxidative stability. On the other hand, adding of goji berries had destructive effect on most meat fiber. | [ | |
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| Goji jam and jelly | Dehydrated goji berries | / | 1. High antioxidant activity (DPPH•) | Both goji products had high score for colour, appearance, consistency, flavour and sweet taste, however, for sour taste and aftertaste products had lower scores. | / | [ |
| Muffins and spritz cookies | Whole goji berries | / | / | 1. Pastry products with goji berries had a sour, slightly sweet and specific flavour. | / | [ |
| Muffins and cookies | Goji berry by-products | / | Bakery products enriched with goji by-products: | 1. Increased goji by-products level decreased muffin firmness, that is, hardness and fracturability of cookies. | / | [ |
| Prebiotic white chocolate | Dried goji berries | / | / | 1. According to quantitative descriptive analysis, adding goji berries in chocolate reduced the perception of most aroma and flavour attributes, and improved the bitter taste, bitter aftertaste, astringency, and most of the texture attributes | / | [ |
| Rice flour based extrudates | Dry goji berries | / | Increasing goji berry level in rice flour based extrudates resulted in: | / | / | [ |
| Instant gruels | Dry goji berries | / | Increasing goji berry level in instant corn gruels resulted in: | / | This study also monitored time (10 and 15 min) and rotation speed of the extruder screw (80 rpm, 100 rpm and 120 rpm) | [ |
| Gluten-free bread | Dried goji berries | / | / | 1. Goji addition in bread, range 3–12% had no significant influence on bread volume, while addition of 15% caused reduction in volume | / | [ |
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| Yoghurt | Dried goji berries | Commercial yoghurt culture (yo-FAST-88), Hansen, Denmark | Increasing goji extract level in yoghurt resulted in: | Increasing goji extract level in yogurt decreased consumer acceptability, with the same trend at the 1st day and after 20 days. | / | [ |
| Yoghurt | Goji berries with/without honey | Starter mezophylic culture | / | Consumers preferred | Goji berries maintained viability of lactic acid bacteria in yoghurt during | [ |
| Yoghurt | Dry and ground goji berries | Increasing goji extract level in yoghurt resulted in: | / | Total phenolic content and antioxidant activity of yogurt enriched with goji berries is continuously reduced after 3th, 7th and 14th days of storage. | [ | |
| Cheese | 1. Dried goji berries (3% water extract) | Lactic acid bacteria | 1. Cheese with goji extract showed decreased ACE inhibitory activity | / | / | [ |
“/”—not analysed; TPC—total phenolic content; TFC—total flavonoid content; TAcy—total anthocyanin content; LBPs—L. barbarum polysaccarides; AA-2βG: 2-O-β-d-glucopyranosyl-L-ascorbic acid; DPPH 2,2′-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging activity; FRAP—ferric reducing antioxidant power; CUPRAC-cupric ion reducing antioxidant capacity; TEAC-trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity; ORAC—oxygen radical antioxidant capacity; ACE—angiotensin-converting enzyme; TBA—thiobarbituric acid; TVB-N: total volatile basic nitrogen.