Litcius/Paper detail

Physicochemical characterization of pectin and mango peel (Mangifera indica L.) from Mexican cultivars

Andrés A. Pacheco-Jiménez, Jaime Lizardi‐Mendoza, J. Basilio Heredia, Erick Paul Gutiérrez‐Grijalva, Eber Addí Quintana-Obregón, María Dolores Muy‐Rangel

2024Heliyon15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In Mexico, about 40 % of the mango harvest is lost due to marketing problems. Moreover, the mango industry generates peel and seed waste that ranges from 35 to 60 % of the total weight of processed fruits. This unexploited mango biomass represents a potential resource for producing value-added by-products. A market alternative is exploiting the mango peel as a source of biofunctional compounds, such as pectin. This hydrocolloid has applications in the pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and food industries. This study quantified the peel components of the Ataulfo, Panameño, Manila, and Haden cultivars. The mango peel showed a considerable input of dietary fiber (37-45 % DM), minerals (1018-2156 mg/100 g DM), phenols (2123-4851 mg gallic acid equivalent/100 g DM), flavonoids (0.74-2.7 mg quercetin equivalent/g DM) and antioxidant capacity (375-937 μM Trolox equivalent/g DM). The four cultivars presented high methoxyl pectins (66-71 %). The molecular weight of the pectins analyzed was from 957 to 4859 kDa. The Panameño cultivar showed the highest amount of pectin and viscosity concerning the peel of the other cultivars and a higher content of glucomannans (≈28.21 %). The pectin of the Haden cultivar was the only one with arabinoxylans since xylose was not detected in the pectin of the other cultivars. The chemical characteristics of the studied mango peels are promising for their industrialization.

Topics & Concepts

MangiferaCultivarPectinHorticultureBotanyPlant scienceChemistryBiologyPolysaccharides and Plant Cell WallsPostharvest Quality and Shelf Life ManagementPhytochemicals and Antioxidant Activities