The Antioxidant, Antibacterial and Anti-Biofilm Properties of Rapeseed Creamed Honey Enriched with Selected Plant Superfoods.

Antibiotics (Basel)

Department of Chemistry and Food Toxicology, Institute of Food Technology and Nutrition, University of Rzeszów, Ćwiklinskiej 1a, 35-601 Rzeszów, Poland.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how adding various superfoods, specifically fruits and herbs, affects the bioactivity of rapeseed honey, by analyzing their antioxidant and antibacterial properties.
  • Nine flavored creamed honeys were created with different superfood additives (2% and 4% content) and tested for phenolic and flavonoid content, plus their ability to combat bacteria.
  • Results showed that honey with sea buckthorn leaves and black raspberry fruits had the highest levels of bioactive compounds, demonstrated significant antibacterial effects, and even prevented biofilm formation at low concentrations.

Article Abstract

The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of the addition of selected fruits and herbs belonging to the "superfoods" category for the bioactivity of a rapeseed honey matrix. Flavored creamed honeys with nine types of various additives (2 and 4% of content) were prepared and analyzed for the content of total phenols, flavonoids, antioxidant (FRAP, DPPH and ABTS) and antibacterial activity against four strains of bacteria. Additionally, the impact of three months of storage on the antioxidant properties of the products obtained was examined. The significant dose-dependent increase in the content of bioactive ingredients and antioxidant capacity in spiced honeys, as compared to control honey, was observed. The highest enrichment was obtained for the addition of powdered sea buckthorn leaves and black raspberry fruits. Honey with the addition of sea buckthorn leaves inhibited the growth of , and whereas honeys with black raspberry and blackcurrant fruits showed activity only on the latter two strains. Furthermore, what is more interesting, honey supplemented with sea buckthorn leaf and black raspberry fruits inhibited biofilm formation at the sub-minimum inhibitory concentrations (sub-MICs), showing a dose-dependent anti-biofilm effect.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9951885PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020235DOI Listing

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