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Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds

Bioactive lipophilic compounds were investigated in 14 leguminous tree species of timber, agroforestry, medicinal or ornamental use but little industrial significance to elucidate their potential in food additive and supplement production. The tree species investigated were: Acacia auriculiformis, A...

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Autores principales: Grygier, Anna, Chakradhari, Suryakant, Ratusz, Katarzyna, Rudzińska, Magdalena, Patel, Khageshwar Singh, Lazdiņa, Danija, Segliņa, Dalija, Górnaś, Paweł
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10221283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37241735
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28103994
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author Grygier, Anna
Chakradhari, Suryakant
Ratusz, Katarzyna
Rudzińska, Magdalena
Patel, Khageshwar Singh
Lazdiņa, Danija
Segliņa, Dalija
Górnaś, Paweł
author_facet Grygier, Anna
Chakradhari, Suryakant
Ratusz, Katarzyna
Rudzińska, Magdalena
Patel, Khageshwar Singh
Lazdiņa, Danija
Segliņa, Dalija
Górnaś, Paweł
author_sort Grygier, Anna
collection PubMed
description Bioactive lipophilic compounds were investigated in 14 leguminous tree species of timber, agroforestry, medicinal or ornamental use but little industrial significance to elucidate their potential in food additive and supplement production. The tree species investigated were: Acacia auriculiformis, Acacia concinna, Albizia lebbeck, Albizia odoratissima, Bauhinia racemosa, Cassia fistula, Dalbergia latifolia, Delonix regia, Entada phaseoloides, Hardwickia binata, Peltophorum pterocarpum, Senegalia catechu, Sesbania sesban and Vachellia nilotica. The hexane-extracted oils of ripe seeds were chromatographically analysed for their fatty acid composition (GC-MS), tocochromanol (RP-HPLC/FLD), squalene and sterol (GC-FID) content. A spectrophotometrical method was used to determine total carotenoid content. The results showed generally low oil yield (1.75–17.53%); the highest was from H. binata. Linoleic acid constituted the largest proportion in all samples (40.78 to 62.28% of total fatty acids), followed by oleic (14.57–34.30%) and palmitic (5.14–23.04%) acid. The total tocochromanol content ranged from 100.3 to 367.6 mg 100 g(−1) oil. D. regia was the richest and the only to contain significant amount of tocotrienols while other oils contained almost exclusively tocopherols, dominated by either α-tocopherol or γ-tocopherol. The total carotenoid content was highest in A. auriculiformis (23.77 mg 100 g(−1)), S. sesban (23.57 mg 100 g(−1)) and A. odoratissima (20.37 mg 100 g(−1)), and ranged from 0.7 to 23.7 mg 100 g(−1) oil. The total sterol content ranged from 240.84 to 2543 mg 100 g(−1); A. concinna seed oil was the richest by a wide margin; however, its oil yield was very low (1.75%). Either β-sitosterol or Δ5-stigmasterol dominated the sterol fraction. Only C. fistula oil contained a significant amount of squalene (303.1 mg 100 g(−1)) but was limited by the low oil yield as an industrial source of squalene. In conclusion, A. auriculiformis seeds may hold potential for the production of carotenoid-rich oil, and H. binata seed oil has relatively high yield and tocopherol content, marking it as a potential source of these compounds.
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spelling pubmed-102212832023-05-28 Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds Grygier, Anna Chakradhari, Suryakant Ratusz, Katarzyna Rudzińska, Magdalena Patel, Khageshwar Singh Lazdiņa, Danija Segliņa, Dalija Górnaś, Paweł Molecules Article Bioactive lipophilic compounds were investigated in 14 leguminous tree species of timber, agroforestry, medicinal or ornamental use but little industrial significance to elucidate their potential in food additive and supplement production. The tree species investigated were: Acacia auriculiformis, Acacia concinna, Albizia lebbeck, Albizia odoratissima, Bauhinia racemosa, Cassia fistula, Dalbergia latifolia, Delonix regia, Entada phaseoloides, Hardwickia binata, Peltophorum pterocarpum, Senegalia catechu, Sesbania sesban and Vachellia nilotica. The hexane-extracted oils of ripe seeds were chromatographically analysed for their fatty acid composition (GC-MS), tocochromanol (RP-HPLC/FLD), squalene and sterol (GC-FID) content. A spectrophotometrical method was used to determine total carotenoid content. The results showed generally low oil yield (1.75–17.53%); the highest was from H. binata. Linoleic acid constituted the largest proportion in all samples (40.78 to 62.28% of total fatty acids), followed by oleic (14.57–34.30%) and palmitic (5.14–23.04%) acid. The total tocochromanol content ranged from 100.3 to 367.6 mg 100 g(−1) oil. D. regia was the richest and the only to contain significant amount of tocotrienols while other oils contained almost exclusively tocopherols, dominated by either α-tocopherol or γ-tocopherol. The total carotenoid content was highest in A. auriculiformis (23.77 mg 100 g(−1)), S. sesban (23.57 mg 100 g(−1)) and A. odoratissima (20.37 mg 100 g(−1)), and ranged from 0.7 to 23.7 mg 100 g(−1) oil. The total sterol content ranged from 240.84 to 2543 mg 100 g(−1); A. concinna seed oil was the richest by a wide margin; however, its oil yield was very low (1.75%). Either β-sitosterol or Δ5-stigmasterol dominated the sterol fraction. Only C. fistula oil contained a significant amount of squalene (303.1 mg 100 g(−1)) but was limited by the low oil yield as an industrial source of squalene. In conclusion, A. auriculiformis seeds may hold potential for the production of carotenoid-rich oil, and H. binata seed oil has relatively high yield and tocopherol content, marking it as a potential source of these compounds. MDPI 2023-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10221283/ /pubmed/37241735 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28103994 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Grygier, Anna
Chakradhari, Suryakant
Ratusz, Katarzyna
Rudzińska, Magdalena
Patel, Khageshwar Singh
Lazdiņa, Danija
Segliņa, Dalija
Górnaś, Paweł
Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title_full Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title_fullStr Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title_short Evaluation of Selected Medicinal, Timber and Ornamental Legume Species’ Seed Oils as Sources of Bioactive Lipophilic Compounds
title_sort evaluation of selected medicinal, timber and ornamental legume species’ seed oils as sources of bioactive lipophilic compounds
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10221283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37241735
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28103994
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