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Thermal and non-thermal processing of red-fleshed apple: how are (poly)phenol composition and bioavailability affected?

The present study evaluated the impact of different thermal (infrared-drying, hot air-drying and purée pasteurization) and non-thermal (freeze-drying) processing technologies on red-fleshed apple (poly)phenolic compounds. We further investigated the processing effect on the (poly)phenol bioavailabil...

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Published in:Food & function 2020-12, Vol.11 (12), p.1436-1447
Main Authors: Yuste, Silvia, Macià, Alba, Motilva, María-José, Prieto-Diez, Neus, Romero, María-Paz, Pedret, Anna, Solà, Rosa, Ludwig, Iziar A, Rubió, Laura
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container_title Food & function
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creator Yuste, Silvia
Macià, Alba
Motilva, María-José
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Pedret, Anna
Solà, Rosa
Ludwig, Iziar A
Rubió, Laura
description The present study evaluated the impact of different thermal (infrared-drying, hot air-drying and purée pasteurization) and non-thermal (freeze-drying) processing technologies on red-fleshed apple (poly)phenolic compounds. We further investigated the processing effect on the (poly)phenol bioavailability in a crossover postprandial study where three subjects consumed three apple products (freeze-dried snack, hot air-dried snack and pasteurized purée). (Poly)phenolic compounds present in the apple products and their biological metabolites in urine were analyzed using liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS). When comparing different processes, infrared-drying caused important losses in most of the apple (poly)phenolics, while hot air-drying and purée pasteurization maintained approximately 83% and 65% of total (poly)phenols compared with the freeze-dried snack, respectively. Anthocyanins in particular were degraded to a higher extent, and hot air-dried apple and pasteurized purée maintained respectively 26% and 9% compared with freeze-dried apple snack. The acute intake showed that pasteurized purée exhibited the highest (poly)phenol bioavailability, followed by hot air-drying and freeze-dried snack, highlighting the impact of processing on (poly)phenols absorption. In conclusion, for obtaining affordable new red-fleshed apple products with enhanced (poly)phenol bioavailability, purée pasteurization and hot air-drying represent viable techniques. However, to obtain a red-fleshed apple snack with high anthocyanin content, freeze-drying is the technique that best preserves them. This work fills a gap in the understanding of the effect of processing on the bioavailability of (poly)phenols in fruit products.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/d0fo02631j
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2042-650X
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source Royal Society of Chemistry
subjects Anthocyanins
Apples
Bioavailability
Food preservation
Freeze drying
Liquid chromatography
Mass spectrometry
Mass spectroscopy
Metabolites
Pasteurization
Phenolic compounds
Phenols
title Thermal and non-thermal processing of red-fleshed apple: how are (poly)phenol composition and bioavailability affected?
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