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Phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity of yellow and purple-red Ecuadorian cultivars of tree tomato (Solanum betaceum Cav.).
Food Chem. 2016 Mar 01; 194:1073-80.FC

Abstract

Tree tomato fruits from the yellow giant, giant purple and New Zealand purple cultivars, cultivated in Ecuador were analysed for their phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity. Twelve hydroxycinnamoyl derivatives and four anthocyanins (in the purple cultivars) were detected and identified. The hydroxycinnamoyl derivatives mostly derived from caffeic acid, being 3-O-caffeoylquinic acid and rosmarinic acid the majority compounds. Furthermore, various rosmarinic acid glucosides, caffeoyl glucoside, feruloyl glucoside and two ferulic acid dehydrodimers were tentatively identified. The presence of rosmarinic acid is particularly relevant as it constituted a majority phenolic compound in the four studied tree tomato cultivars and it had not been reported previously in this fruit. In the purple cultivars main anthocyanins were pelargonidin 3-O-rutinoside and delphinidin 3-O-rutinoside. The New Zealand purple cultivar was by far the richest sample in both hydroxycinnamates (421.6mg/100g dry pulp) and anthocyanins (168.9mg/100g dry pulp). Antioxidant capacity, as determined by FRAP, ABTS and ORAC assays, followed the same pattern as phenolic contents, with the New Zealand purple cultivar being the one with the highest and the yellow giant cultivar with the lowest values.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Departamento de Nutrición y Calidad, Estación Experimental Santa Catalina, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agropecuarias INIAP, Quito, Ecuador.Grupo de Investigación en Polifenoles. Unidad de Nutrición y Bromatología, Facultad de Farmacia. Universidad de Salamanca, Spain. Electronic address: susanagm@usal.es.Universidad Central del Ecuador, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas, Ciudadela Universitaria, América y Av. Universitaria, Quito, Ecuador.Departamento de Nutrición y Calidad, Estación Experimental Santa Catalina, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agropecuarias INIAP, Quito, Ecuador.Grupo de Investigación en Polifenoles. Unidad de Nutrición y Bromatología, Facultad de Farmacia. Universidad de Salamanca, Spain.Grupo de Investigación en Polifenoles. Unidad de Nutrición y Bromatología, Facultad de Farmacia. Universidad de Salamanca, Spain.Grupo de Investigación en Polifenoles. Unidad de Nutrición y Bromatología, Facultad de Farmacia. Universidad de Salamanca, Spain.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

26471655

Citation

Espin, Susana, et al. "Phenolic Composition and Antioxidant Capacity of Yellow and Purple-red Ecuadorian Cultivars of Tree Tomato (Solanum Betaceum Cav.)." Food Chemistry, vol. 194, 2016, pp. 1073-80.
Espin S, Gonzalez-Manzano S, Taco V, et al. Phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity of yellow and purple-red Ecuadorian cultivars of tree tomato (Solanum betaceum Cav.). Food Chem. 2016;194:1073-80.
Espin, S., Gonzalez-Manzano, S., Taco, V., Poveda, C., Ayuda-Durán, B., Gonzalez-Paramas, A. M., & Santos-Buelga, C. (2016). Phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity of yellow and purple-red Ecuadorian cultivars of tree tomato (Solanum betaceum Cav.). Food Chemistry, 194, 1073-80. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2015.07.131
Espin S, et al. Phenolic Composition and Antioxidant Capacity of Yellow and Purple-red Ecuadorian Cultivars of Tree Tomato (Solanum Betaceum Cav.). Food Chem. 2016 Mar 1;194:1073-80. PubMed PMID: 26471655.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity of yellow and purple-red Ecuadorian cultivars of tree tomato (Solanum betaceum Cav.). AU - Espin,Susana, AU - Gonzalez-Manzano,Susana, AU - Taco,Verónica, AU - Poveda,Cristina, AU - Ayuda-Durán,Begoña, AU - Gonzalez-Paramas,Ana M, AU - Santos-Buelga,Celestino, Y1 - 2015/07/31/ PY - 2015/04/29/received PY - 2015/07/27/revised PY - 2015/07/28/accepted PY - 2015/10/17/entrez PY - 2015/10/17/pubmed PY - 2016/5/28/medline KW - Anthocyanins KW - Antioxidant capacity KW - Hydroxycinnamic acids KW - Rosmarinic acid KW - Tamarillo SP - 1073 EP - 80 JF - Food chemistry JO - Food Chem VL - 194 N2 - Tree tomato fruits from the yellow giant, giant purple and New Zealand purple cultivars, cultivated in Ecuador were analysed for their phenolic composition and antioxidant capacity. Twelve hydroxycinnamoyl derivatives and four anthocyanins (in the purple cultivars) were detected and identified. The hydroxycinnamoyl derivatives mostly derived from caffeic acid, being 3-O-caffeoylquinic acid and rosmarinic acid the majority compounds. Furthermore, various rosmarinic acid glucosides, caffeoyl glucoside, feruloyl glucoside and two ferulic acid dehydrodimers were tentatively identified. The presence of rosmarinic acid is particularly relevant as it constituted a majority phenolic compound in the four studied tree tomato cultivars and it had not been reported previously in this fruit. In the purple cultivars main anthocyanins were pelargonidin 3-O-rutinoside and delphinidin 3-O-rutinoside. The New Zealand purple cultivar was by far the richest sample in both hydroxycinnamates (421.6mg/100g dry pulp) and anthocyanins (168.9mg/100g dry pulp). Antioxidant capacity, as determined by FRAP, ABTS and ORAC assays, followed the same pattern as phenolic contents, with the New Zealand purple cultivar being the one with the highest and the yellow giant cultivar with the lowest values. SN - 1873-7072 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/26471655/Phenolic_composition_and_antioxidant_capacity_of_yellow_and_purple_red_Ecuadorian_cultivars_of_tree_tomato__Solanum_betaceum_Cav___ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -