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Identification of key phenolic compounds responsible for antioxidant activities of free and bound fractions of blackberry varieties' extracts by boosted regression trees.

Authors :
Gong, Er Sheng
Li, Bin
Li, Binxu
Podio, Natalia S
Chen, Hongyu
Li, Tong
Sun, Xiyun
Gao, Ningxuan
Wu, Wenlong
Yang, Tianran
Xin, Guang
Tian, Jinlong
Si, Xu
Liu, Changjiang
Zhang, Jiyue
Liu, Rui Hai
Source :
Journal of the Science of Food & Agriculture; Feb2022, Vol. 102 Issue 3, p984-994, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND Free fractions of different blackberry varieties' extracts are high in phenolic compounds with antioxidant activities. However, the phenolic profiles and antioxidant activities against peroxyl radicals of bound fractions of different blackberry varieties' extracts have not been previously reported. In addition, what the key antioxidant phenolic compounds are in free and bound fractions of blackberry extracts remain unknown. This study aimed to investigate the phenolic profiles and antioxidant activities of free and bound fractions of eight blackberry varieties' extracts and reveal the key antioxidant phenolic compounds by boosted regression trees. RESULTS: Fifteen phenolics (three anthocyanins, four flavonols, three phenolic acids, two proanthocyanidins, and three ellagitannins) were identified in blackberry by ultra‐performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry. Ferulic acid, ellagic acid, procyanidin C1, kaempferol‐O‐hexoside, ellagitannins hex, and gallic acid were major bound phenolics. Bound fractions of eight blackberry varieties' extracts were high in phenolics and showed great antioxidant activity. Boosted regression trees analysis showed that cyanidin‐3‐O‐glucoside and chlorogenic acid were the most significant compounds, contributing 48.4% and 15.9% respectively to the antioxidant activity of free fraction. Ferulic acid was the most significant antioxidant compound in bound fraction, with a contribution of 61.5%. Principal component analysis showed that Kiowa was the best among the eight varieties due to its phenolic profile and antioxidant activity. CONCLUSION: It was concluded that blackberry varieties contained high amounts of bound phenolics, which confer health benefits through reducing oxidative stress. Ferulic acid was the key compound to explain the antioxidant activities of bound fractions. © 2021 Society of Chemical Industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00225142
Volume :
102
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of the Science of Food & Agriculture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154545624
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.11432