Wild Prunus Fruit Species as a Rich Source of Bioactive Compounds.

J Food Sci

Chair for Applied Botany, Ecology, Plant Physiology and Informatics, Dept. of Agronomy, Biotechnical Faculty, Univ. of Ljubljana, Jamnikarjeva 101, SI-1000, Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Published: August 2016

Sugars, organic acids, carotenoids, tocopherols, chlorophylls, and phenolic compounds were quantified in fruit of 4 wild growing Prunus species (wild cherry, bird cherry, blackthorn, and mahaleb cherry) using HPLC-DAD-MSn. In wild Prunus, the major sugars were glucose and fructose, whereas malic and citric acids dominated among organic acids. The most abundant classes of phenolic compounds in the analyzed fruit species were anthocyanins, flavonols, derivatives of cinnamic acids, and flavanols. Two major groups of anthocyanins measured in Prunus fruits were cyanidin-3-rutinoside and cyanidin-3-glucoside. Flavonols were represented by 19 derivatives of quercetin, 10 derivatives of kaempferol, and 2 derivatives of isorhamnetin. The highest total flavonol content was measured in mahaleb cherry and bird cherry, followed by blackthorn and wild cherry fruit. Total phenolic content varied from 2373 (wild cherry) to 11053 mg GAE per kg (bird cherry) and ferric reducing antioxidant power antioxidant activity from 7.26 to 31.54 mM trolox equivalents per kg fruits.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1750-3841.13398DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

wild cherry
12
bird cherry
12
wild prunus
8
fruit species
8
organic acids
8
phenolic compounds
8
cherry
8
cherry bird
8
cherry blackthorn
8
mahaleb cherry
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!