Litcius/Paper detail

Nutraceutical Potential of Underutilized Tropical Fruits and Their Byproducts: Phenolic Profile, Antioxidant Capacity, and Biological Activity of Jerivá (<i>Syagrus romanzoffiana</i>) and Butiá (<i>Butia catarinensis</i>)

Renan Danielski, Fereidoon Shahidi

2024Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Jerivá and butiá are under-valued tropical fruits lacking scientific evidence about their nutraceutical potential. Therefore, they were investigated for their phenolic compound composition and biological activities. Free, esterified, and insoluble-bound polyphenols were obtained from powdered jerivá and butiá pomace and seeds. The total phenolic estimation in seeds (jerivá, 36.45 mg GAE/g; butiá, 45.79 mg GAE/g) exceeded pomaces (jerivá, 23.77 mg GAE/g; butiá, 18.69 mg GAE/g). Phenolic extracts demonstrated antidiabetic and antiobesity potential, inhibiting α-glucosidase (30.51-98.43%) and pancreatic lipase (19.66-41.98%). They also suppressed free radical-induced damage to DNA (21.46-92.48%) and LDL-cholesterol (8.27-23.20%). Identified phenolics (51) included multiple phenolic acids, flavonoids, and tannins, predominantly gallic acid derivatives/conjugates. This is the first study to provide a detailed description of the phenolic profile of these fruits and their byproducts coupled with their bioactivities. Butiá and jerivá were demonstrated to be outstanding sources of polyphenols with high nutraceutical potential for bioeconomic exploration.

Topics & Concepts

NutraceuticalAntioxidant capacityChemistryFood scienceBiotechnologyAntioxidantBiologyBiochemistryNatural Antidiabetic Agents StudiesPhytochemicals and Antioxidant ActivitiesPhytoestrogen effects and research
Nutraceutical Potential of Underutilized Tropical Fruits and Their Byproducts: Phenolic Profile, Antioxidant Capacity, and Biological Activity of Jerivá (<i>Syagrus romanzoffiana</i>) and Butiá (<i>Butia catarinensis</i>) | Litcius