Litcius/Paper detail

Phytochemicals in Legumes: A Qualitative Reviewed Analysis

Alba Tor‐Roca, Mar Garcia‐Aloy, Fulvio Mattivi, Rafaël Llorach, Cristina Andrés‐Lacueva, Mireia Urpí-Sardà

2020Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Legumes are an excellent source of nutrients and phytochemicals. They have been recognized for their contributions to health, sustainability, and the economy. Although legumes comprise several species and varieties, little is known about the differences in their phytochemical composition and the magnitude of these. Therefore, the aim of this review is to describe and compare the qualitative profile of phytochemicals contained in legumes and identified through LC-MS and GC-MS methods. Among the 478 phytochemicals reported in 52 varieties of legumes, phenolic compounds were by far the most frequently described (n = 405, 85%). Metabolomics data analysis tools were used to visualize the qualitative differences, showing beans to be the most widely analyzed legumes and those with the highest number of discriminant phytochemicals (n = 180, 38%). A Venn diagram showed that lentils, beans, soybeans, and chickpeas shared only 7% of their compounds. This work highlighted the huge chemical diversity among legumes and identified the need for further research in this field and the use of metabolomics as a promising tool to achieve it.

Topics & Concepts

PhytochemicalMetabolomicsBiologyBiotechnologyNutrientHealth benefitsQualitative analysisFood scienceTraditional medicineBotanyQualitative researchEcologyBioinformaticsMedicineSociologySocial scienceBotanical Research and ChemistryAgricultural pest management studiesGenetic and Environmental Crop Studies
Phytochemicals in Legumes: A Qualitative Reviewed Analysis | Litcius