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Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India

The eastern Himalayas, one of the important hotspots of global biodiversity, have a rich diversity of wild edible fruit trees. The fruits of these tree species have been consumed by the tribal people since time immemorial. However, there is limited information available on the biochemical and antiox...

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Autores principales: Rymbai, Heiplanmi, Verma, Veerendra Kumar, Talang, Hammylliende, Assumi, S. Ruth, Devi, M. Bilashini, Vanlalruati, Sangma, Rumki Heloise CH., Biam, Kamni Paia, Chanu, L. Joymati, Makdoh, Badapmain, Singh, A. Ratankumar, Mawleiñ, Joiedevivreson, Hazarika, Samarendra, Mishra, Vinay Kumar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10014916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36937364
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1039965
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author Rymbai, Heiplanmi
Verma, Veerendra Kumar
Talang, Hammylliende
Assumi, S. Ruth
Devi, M. Bilashini
Vanlalruati,
Sangma, Rumki Heloise CH.
Biam, Kamni Paia
Chanu, L. Joymati
Makdoh, Badapmain
Singh, A. Ratankumar
Mawleiñ, Joiedevivreson
Hazarika, Samarendra
Mishra, Vinay Kumar
author_facet Rymbai, Heiplanmi
Verma, Veerendra Kumar
Talang, Hammylliende
Assumi, S. Ruth
Devi, M. Bilashini
Vanlalruati,
Sangma, Rumki Heloise CH.
Biam, Kamni Paia
Chanu, L. Joymati
Makdoh, Badapmain
Singh, A. Ratankumar
Mawleiñ, Joiedevivreson
Hazarika, Samarendra
Mishra, Vinay Kumar
author_sort Rymbai, Heiplanmi
collection PubMed
description The eastern Himalayas, one of the important hotspots of global biodiversity, have a rich diversity of wild edible fruit trees. The fruits of these tree species have been consumed by the tribal people since time immemorial. However, there is limited information available on the biochemical and antioxidant properties of the fruits. Therefore, the present investigation was undertaken to study the physico-chemical and antioxidant properties of the nine most important wild fruit trees. Among the species, Pyrus pashia had the maximum fruit weight (37.83 g), while the highest juice (43.72%) and pulp content (84.67%) were noted in Haematocarpus validus and Myrica esculenta, respectively. Maximum total soluble solids (18.27%), total sugar (11.27%), moisture content (88.39%), ascorbic acid content (63.82 mg/100 g), total carotenoids (18.47 mg/100 g), and total monomeric anthocyanin (354.04 mg/100 g) were recorded in H. validus. Docynia indica had the highest total phenolic content (19.37 mg GAE/g), while H. validus recorded the highest total flavonoids and flavanol content. The antioxidant activities of the different fruits ranged from 0.17 to 0.67 IC(50) for DPPH activity and 3.59–13.82 mg AAE/g for FRAP. These fruits had attractive pigmentation of both pulp and juice and were a good potential source for the extraction of natural edible color in the food industry. The fruits also possess high market prices; Prunus nepalensis fetched $ 34.10–$ 141.5 per tree. Therefore, these fruits are rich sources of antioxidants, pigments and have a high market value for livelihood and nutritional security.
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spelling pubmed-100149162023-03-16 Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India Rymbai, Heiplanmi Verma, Veerendra Kumar Talang, Hammylliende Assumi, S. Ruth Devi, M. Bilashini Vanlalruati, Sangma, Rumki Heloise CH. Biam, Kamni Paia Chanu, L. Joymati Makdoh, Badapmain Singh, A. Ratankumar Mawleiñ, Joiedevivreson Hazarika, Samarendra Mishra, Vinay Kumar Front Nutr Nutrition The eastern Himalayas, one of the important hotspots of global biodiversity, have a rich diversity of wild edible fruit trees. The fruits of these tree species have been consumed by the tribal people since time immemorial. However, there is limited information available on the biochemical and antioxidant properties of the fruits. Therefore, the present investigation was undertaken to study the physico-chemical and antioxidant properties of the nine most important wild fruit trees. Among the species, Pyrus pashia had the maximum fruit weight (37.83 g), while the highest juice (43.72%) and pulp content (84.67%) were noted in Haematocarpus validus and Myrica esculenta, respectively. Maximum total soluble solids (18.27%), total sugar (11.27%), moisture content (88.39%), ascorbic acid content (63.82 mg/100 g), total carotenoids (18.47 mg/100 g), and total monomeric anthocyanin (354.04 mg/100 g) were recorded in H. validus. Docynia indica had the highest total phenolic content (19.37 mg GAE/g), while H. validus recorded the highest total flavonoids and flavanol content. The antioxidant activities of the different fruits ranged from 0.17 to 0.67 IC(50) for DPPH activity and 3.59–13.82 mg AAE/g for FRAP. These fruits had attractive pigmentation of both pulp and juice and were a good potential source for the extraction of natural edible color in the food industry. The fruits also possess high market prices; Prunus nepalensis fetched $ 34.10–$ 141.5 per tree. Therefore, these fruits are rich sources of antioxidants, pigments and have a high market value for livelihood and nutritional security. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10014916/ /pubmed/36937364 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1039965 Text en Copyright © 2023 Rymbai, Verma, Talang, Assumi, Devi, Vanlalruati, Sangma, Biam, Chanu, Makdoh, Singh, Mawleiñ, Hazarika and Mishra. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Nutrition
Rymbai, Heiplanmi
Verma, Veerendra Kumar
Talang, Hammylliende
Assumi, S. Ruth
Devi, M. Bilashini
Vanlalruati,
Sangma, Rumki Heloise CH.
Biam, Kamni Paia
Chanu, L. Joymati
Makdoh, Badapmain
Singh, A. Ratankumar
Mawleiñ, Joiedevivreson
Hazarika, Samarendra
Mishra, Vinay Kumar
Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title_full Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title_fullStr Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title_short Biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern Himalaya, India
title_sort biochemical and antioxidant activity of wild edible fruits of the eastern himalaya, india
topic Nutrition
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10014916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36937364
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2023.1039965
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