AI Article Synopsis

  • LC-MS profiling of red grape skin identified 65 compounds across various categories, including organic acids and flavonoids, with ethanol-water extraction (70:30) proving most effective for overall polyphenol yield.
  • Water extraction at high temperatures showed comparable yield for certain polyphenolic classes, but struggled with lipophilic compounds, indicating a trade-off in extraction efficiency based on solubility.
  • All extracts demonstrated anti-inflammatory activity, with ethanol-water extracts showing strong radical scavenging potential; findings suggest a valuable use for grape skin as an industrial waste due to its bioactive properties.

Article Abstract

A fully-detailed LC-MS qualitative profiling of red grape skin, extracted with a mixture of ethanol and water (70:30 :) has permitted the identification of 65 compounds which can be classified into the following chemical classes: organic and phenolic acids (14 compounds), stilbenoids (1 compound), flavanols (21 compounds), flavonols (15 compounds) and anthocyanins (14 compounds). The extraction yield obtained with water at different temperatures (100 °C, 70 °C, room temperature) was then evaluated and the overall polyphenol content indicates that EtOH:HO solvent is the most efficient and selective for polyphenol extraction. However, by analyzing the recovery yield of each single polyphenol, we found that water extraction under heating conditions is effective (extraction yield similar or even better in respect to the binary solvent) for some polyphenolic classes, such as hydrophilic procyanidins, phenolic acids, flavonol glucosides and stilbenoids. However, according to their lipophilic character, a poor yield was found for the most lipophilic components, such as flavonol aglycones, and in general for anthocyanins. The radical scavenging activity was in accordance with the polyphenol content, and hence, much higher for the extract obtained with the binary solvent in respect to water extraction. All the tested extracts were found to have an anti-inflammatory activity in the R3/1 cell line with NF-kb reporter challenged with 0.01 µg/mL of IL-1α, in a 1 to 250 µg/mL concentration range. An intriguing result was that the EtOH:HO extract was found to be superimposable with that obtained using water at 100 °C despite the lower polyphenol content. Taken together, the results show the bioactive potentialities of grape skin extracts and the possibility to exploit this rich industrial waste. Water extraction carried out by heating is an easy, low-cost and environmentally friendly extraction method for some polyphenol classes and may have great potential for extracts with anti-inflammatory activities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8471016PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26185454DOI Listing

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