Volume 69, March 2015, Pages 179–188
Foodomics for mulberry fruit (Morus spp.): Analytical fingerprint as antioxidants' and health properties' determination tool
- doi:10.1016/j.foodres.2014.12.020
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Highlights
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- Fingerprinting uses the concentration of nutraceuticals to describe the fruit.
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- An analytical study of mulberry fruit was performed.
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- Morus spp. represent a rich source of phytochemicals.
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- Analytical fingerprinting could be an important tool for studies of Foodomics.
Abstract
Human
nutrition science has greatly developed in the past decades, turning
from the consideration of foods as simply energy sources to the
recognition of their role in maintaining health and in reducing disease
risks: Foodomics is a new science that studies Food and Nutrition
domains through the application and integration of advanced “omics”
technologies to improve consumer's well-being, health, and knowledge. In
recent years, wild food plants have become very attractive to the food
industry, prompting their use as replacements for synthetic chemicals
and nutraceuticals: in this sense, mulberry is a very important resource
for its phytochemical composition, nutritional value, and antioxidant
properties.
The aim of this study was to describe
mulberry fruit quality traits and report on the level of potentially
bioactive compounds (HPLC fingerprint) and their influence on total
fruit phytocomplex and antioxidant activity in comparison to the most
common fruits.
Mulberry was identified as a rich
source of antioxidant compounds; the observed analytical fingerprint
demonstrated that the species (and in particular the considered
genotype) represents a rich source of phytochemicals, as organic acids,
monoterpenes and polyphenolic compounds, especially flavonols and
anthocyanins, which led to reasonably good overall fruit quality.
This
study developed an important tool to assess mulberry quality, chemical
composition, and bioactivity, using different chromatographic methods
for comprehensive authentication and quality control of its fruits: this
research showed that analytical fingerprinting could be an important
tool for studies of Foodomics, helping to find new sources of natural
health-promoting compounds.
Keywords
- Fruit species biodiversity;
- Nutraceutical quality;
- Bioactive compounds
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