| Literature DB >> 35336621 |
Mirela Lăcrămioara Mocanu1, Sonia Amariei1.
Abstract
In the current context, when more and more unknown pathogens appear, healthy eating and supplementing it with natural products play an increasingly important role in maintaining the health of the body. The European black elder (Sambucus nigra), found in abundance in the spontaneous flora, can provide us, as a raw material, elderberries, which have been known for thousands of years as having nutritional and healing properties. The phytotherapeutic principles found in elderberry fruits give them antiviral, antibacterial and antidiabetic properties, antitumor potential, antioxidant, antidepressant and immune boosting properties, as well as a certain impacts on obesity and metabolic dysfunctions. Polyphenols and lectins give elderberry fruits the ability to inhibit coronaviruses, which is a topic of great interest in our times. This article summarizes the existing data regarding the chemical composition, active principles and biopharmaceutical properties of elderberries, as well as their use.Entities:
Keywords: Sambucus nigra; antioxidant; antiviral; black elder; phenolic compounds
Year: 2022 PMID: 35336621 PMCID: PMC8948669 DOI: 10.3390/plants11060740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Elderberries found wildly grown.
Nutritional and phytotherapeutic principles found in 100 g of fresh elderberries.
| Phytotherapeutic Principle | Quantity (%) [ | Quantity (%) [ |
|---|---|---|
| Pectin | 0.16 | |
| Total sugars (glucose and | 7.5 | 7.86–11.5 |
| Total protein | 2.7–2.9 | |
| Organic acids (citric acid, malic acid, shikimic acid, fumaric acid) | 1.0–1.3 | |
| Quantity (mg) | Quantity (mg) | |
| Potassium | 288–305 | 295–549 |
| Phosphorus | 73.5–134 | |
| Calcium | 57–153 | |
| Magnesium | 40–74 | |
| B2 vitamin | 65 | |
| B6 vitamin | 0.25 | |
| C vitamin | 18–26 | |
| Folic acid | 17 | |
| Biotin | 1.8 | |
| Beta-carotene | 0.36 | |
| Pantothenic acid | 0.18 | |
| Nicotinamide | 1.48 |
Chemical composition of elderberries.
| Anthocyanis | Proanthocyanide/Flavonols | Phenolic Acids | Organic Acids | Vitamins | Sugars | Lectine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyanidin-3-sambubioside, Chrysanthemin, Cyanidin-3,5-diglucoside, Cyanidin-3-sambubioside-5-glucoside, Antirrhinin, Callistephin, Tulipanin, Pelargonidin-3-sambubioside, Peonidin-3-glucoside, Peonidin-3-sambubioside, Peonidin monoglucuronide, Chrysanthemin monoglucuronide | Epicatechin, Rutin, Isoquercetin, Kaempferol-3-O-rutinoside, Isorhamnetin-3-O-rutinoside, Quercetin, Astragalin, 5,7,3′,4′-tetra-O-methylquercetin, unidentified quercetin acetylhexosides, unidentified quercetin hexoside pentosides | caffeoylquinic acid, feruloylquinic acid, coumaroylquinic acid | shikimic acid, fumaric acid, citric acid, | ascorbic acid, retinol | fructose, | SNA-IV ( |
The content of phenolic compounds in elder fruits and flowers.
| Compound | Content in Fruit | Content in Flowers | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| [ | ||
| mg GAE/100 g FW | 364–582 | 1021.7 | |
| mg GAE/100 g DW extract | 4917–8974 | ||
| mg CAE/100 g FW | 2684–4480 | 3702–5333 | |
| mg CE/100 g FW | 622–672 | ||
| [ | |||
| mg ChAE/100 g FW | 0.7–4.4 | ||
| mg/kg FW | 510.6 | ||
| mg ChAE/g DW | 0.05–0.40 | ||
| mg/g DW | 0.8–2.4 | ||
| [ | |||
| mg ChAE/100 g FW | 1.2–2.5 | ||
| mg/kg FW | 31.4 | ||
| mg/g DW | 0.6–1.5 | ||
| [ | |||
| mg ChAE/100 g FW | 26.4–35.9 | ||
| mg ChAE/g DW | 0.53–1.22 | ||
| mg/g DW | 10.1–20.7 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg rutin/100 g FW | 0.7–1.2 | 0.64 | |
| mg/g DW | 0.2–3.0 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| g/100 g extract | 1.05–1.79 | 1.28–2.50 | |
| mg/kg FW | 3.5 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 2.7–4.5 | ||
| mg/100 g FW | 29–60 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg rutin/100 g FW | 42.6–95.6 | ||
| mg rutin/g DW | 6–14 | 11.6–42.3 | |
| g/100 g extract | 10.86–15.39 | 132.69–202.08 | |
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 35.59–52.02 | ||
| mg/kg FW | 3265.1 | ||
| [ | |||
| mg rutin/100 g FW | 3.9–14.9 | ||
| g/100 g extract | 1.79–3.01 | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 6.4–26.5 | 5.37–9.67 | |
| mg rutin/g DW | 0.11–1.08 | 0.4–1.9 | |
| mg/kg FW | 20.2 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg rutin/100 g FW | 0.3–2.2 | ||
| mg/kg FW | 888.0 | ||
| mg/g DW | 2.0–7.5 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg rutin/100 g FW | 0.1–0.3 | ||
| mg/kg FW | 61.6 | ||
| mg/g DW | 0.2–1.0 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg/kg FW | 10.7 | 6.8 | |
|
| [ | ||
| mg/kg FW | 81.3 | 254.3 | |
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 170–343 | ||
| 518–1028 | |||
| 664–1816 | |||
| 602.9–1265.3 | |||
| mg CGE/100 g DW | 408.6–1066.6 | ||
| 39–153 | |||
| mg CGE/100 g extract | 285–1326 | ||
| mg CSE/g DW | 8.33–101.40 | ||
| g CSE/kg FW | 1.9–20.2 | ||
| g/100 g extract | 48.46–52.89 | ||
| mg/100 g FW | 254–841 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 16.0–59.2 | ||
| 14–47 | |||
| 19.52–53.49 | |||
| mg CSE/g DW | 0.86–11.50 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 8.2–19.5 | ||
| 5–36 | |||
| 7.41–23.29 | |||
| mg CSE/g DW | 0.12–5.22 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 122.2–269.1 | ||
| 269–656 | |||
| mg CSE/g DW | 270.8–630.8 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 204.6–481.4 | ||
| 361–1266 | |||
| 221.4–586.4 | |||
| mg CSE/g DW | 2.74–49.50 | ||
| g/100g extract | 21.41–25.18 | ||
| mg CGE/g DW | 14–78 | ||
|
| [ | ||
| mg CGE/100 g FW | 1.49–9.63 | ||
Abbreviations: GAE—gallic acid equivalents, CAE—caffeic acid equivalents, ChAE—chlorogenic acid equivalents, CGE—cyanidin-3-glucoside equivalents, CSE—cyanidin-3-sambubioside equivalents, DW—dry weight, FW—fresh weight.