Anthocyanins Recovered from Agri-Food By-Products Using Innovative Processes: Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Their Application in Food Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Anthocyanins
2.1. Chemical Structure and Properties
2.2. Natural Sources
2.3. Chemical Stability
2.4. Biological Activities
3. Innovative Processes for Anthocyanin Extraction from Agri-Food By-Products
3.1. Pulsed Electric Field
3.2. Microwave
3.3. Ultrasound
4. Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Anthocyanins Application in Food Systems
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Anthocyanin | Anthocyanin Dose | Time | Subject Profile | Study Type | Major Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 160 subjects with prediabetes or early untreated T2DM (40–75 years; 54 males and 106 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [68] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 138 subjects with prediabetes or newly diagnosed T2DM (40–75 years; 45 males and 93 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [69] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 121 patients with fasting hyperglycemia (average age: 61 years old; 42 males and 79 females) | Randomized controlled trial |
| [70] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 14 healthy (35.2 ± 3.16 years old; 8 males and 6 females), 14 T2DM at-risk (50.1 ± 3.15 years old; 8 males and 6 females), and 12 T2DM (57.7 ± 2.5 years old; 8 males and 4 females) individuals | Open-label design |
| [71] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 20, 40, 80, 160, and 320 mg/day | 14 days | 111 healthy adults (18–35 years old; 39 males and 72 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [72] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 40, 80, and 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 169 dyslipidemic subjects (35–70 years old; 45 males and 124 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [65] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 40, 80, and 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 176 dyslipidemic subjects (35–70 years old; 46 males and 130 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [73] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 40, 80, and 320 mg/day | 12 weeks | 176 dyslipidemic subjects (57.41 ± 7.95 years old; 46 males and 130 females) | Placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized trial with multiple doses |
| [74] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 24 weeks | 150 hypercholesterolemic subjects (40–65 years old; 63 males and 87 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial |
| [75] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 12 lean (33.0 ± 3.2 years old; 6 males and 6 females), 9 overweight (49.9 ± 4.2 years old; 5 males and 4 females), and 8 obese (43.3 ± 4.5 years old; 4 males and 4 females) participants | Clinical trial |
| [76] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 51 subjects (25 normal subjects (38.2 ± 2.7 years old; 13 males and 12 females) and 26 MetS subjects (56.6 ± 2.6 years old; 14 males and 12 females)) | Clinical trial |
| [77] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 35 subjects (15 normal subjects (37.3 ± 2.9 years old; 10 males and 5 females) and 20 MetS subjects (56.2 ± 2.9 years old; 11 males and 9 females)) | Clinical trial |
| [78] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 26 pro-thrombotic overweight and obese individuals (39 ± 11 years old; 9 males and 17 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design dietary intervention trial |
| [79] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 4 weeks | 16 sedentary pro-thrombotic individuals (38 ± 12 years old; 3 males and 13 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over design dietary intervention trial |
| [80] |
MEDOX® (Purified anthocyanins) a | 320 mg/day | 16 weeks | 27 individuals with MCI (n = 8) or stable non-obstructive coronary artery disease (n = 19) (55–70 years old; 18 males and 9 females) | Open-label study |
| [81] |
Anthocyanins-rich blackcurrant extract | 150, 300, and 600 mg | Acute | 14 men and 9 postmenopausal women (46 ± 14 years old) consuming a high-carbohydrate meal | Randomized, double-blind, crossover trial |
| [82] |
Anthocyanins-rich blackcurrant extract | 3.2 mg/kg/day (~240 mg/day) | 5 weeks | 34 healthy individuals (38 ± 11 years old; 21 males and 13 females) | Double-blind placebo-controlled trial design |
| [66] |
Anthocyanins-rich black soybean testa extract | 31.45 mg/day | 8 weeks | 63 overweight or obese individuals (30.59 ± 9.25 years old; 50 males and 30 females) | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial |
| [83] |
Anthocyanins-rich Queen Garnet plum juice | 200.8 mg/day | 4 days | 16 overweight subjects (65.9 ± 6.0 years old; 3 males and 13 females) consuming a high-fat high energy meal | Crossover, randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial |
| [84] |
Anthocyanins-rich Queen Garnet plum juice | 47 and 201 mg/day | 8 weeks | 31 subjects with MCI (75.3 ± 6.9 years old; 12 males and 19 females) | Randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial |
| [85] |
Anthocyanins from blueberry | 258 mg/day | 16 weeks | 37 older adults with MCI (≥68 years old; 17 males and 20 females) | Randomized, double-blind, parallel groups, placebo-controlled trial |
| [86] |
Anthocyanins-rich black rice extract | 19.08 mg/day | 12 weeks | 48 subjects with subjective memory impairment (63.88 ± 7.59 years old; 16 males and 32 females) | Double-blind randomized, placebo-controlled trial |
| [87] |
Anthocyanins-rich cherry juice | 138 mg/day | 12 weeks | 49 older adults with mild-to-moderate dementia (≥70 years old; 25 males and 24 females) | Randomized controlled clinical trial |
| [88] |
Anthocyanins-rich bilberry extract | 840 mg/day | 6 weeks | 13 patients with current mild-to-moderate ulcerative colitis (19–61 years old; 10 males and 3 females) | Open, prospective, non-blinded, and non-controlled pilot trial |
| [67] |
Anthocyanins-rich blackcurrant extract | 210 mg/day | 7 days | 14 older adults (73.3 ± 1.7 years old; 6 males and 8 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design study |
| [89] |
Anthocyanins-rich red fruit juice b | 205.5 mg/day | 8 weeks | 57 healthy male volunteers (20–50 years old) | Prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled parallel design |
| [90] |
Anthocyanins-rich aronia extract | 30 mg/day | 12 weeks | 66 healthy male volunteers (18–45 years old) | 3-arm, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel trial |
| [91] |
Anthocyanins-rich bilberry extract | 88.5 mg/day | 12 weeks | 109 healthy adults (20–60 years old; 34 males and 75 females) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group comparison trial |
| [92] |
Delphinol® (Purified anthocyanins) c | 60 mg/day | 8 weeks | 16 healthy female subjects (27–57 years old) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study |
| [93] |
Waste/By-Product | Extraction Process Parameters | Major Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Raspberry by-product | Electric field intensity: 1 and 3 kV/cm Specific energy input: 1, 6, and 12 kJ/kg Frequency: 20 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [47] |
Sweet cherry by-product | Electric field intensity: 0.5, 1, and 3 kV/cm Specific energy input: 10 kJ/kg Frequency: 5 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [48] |
Sour cherry by-product | Electric field intensity: 1, 3, and 5 kV/cm Specific energy input: 10 kJ/kg Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [99] |
Blueberry by-product | Electric field intensity: 10–35 kV/cm Pulse number: 2–14 Pulse width: 2 μs |
| [100] |
Blueberry by-product | Electric field intensity: 3 kV/cm Specific energy input: 1, 5, and 10 kJ/kg Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [46] |
Blueberry by-product | Electric field intensity: 1, 3, and 5 kV/cm Specific energy input: 10 kJ/kg Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [101] |
Blueberry by-product | Electric field intensity: 1, 3, and 5 kV/cm Specific energy input: 10 kJ/kg Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 20 μs |
| [102] |
Blueberry pomace | Electric field intensity: 10, 15, and 20 kV/cm Specific energy input: up to 41.03 kJ/kg Pulse number: 10, 50, and 100 Pulse width: 2 μs |
| [103] |
Peach pomace | Electric field intensity: 0.8–10 kV/cm Specific energy input: 0.02–20 kJ/kg Frequency: 0.1 Hz Pulse width: 4 μs |
| [98] |
Grape pomace | Electric field intensity: 1.2, 1.8, and 3.0 kV/cm Specific energy input: 18 kJ/kg Pulse number: 200–2000 Pulse width: 100 μs |
| [104] |
Grape pomace | Electric field intensity: 13.3 kV/cm Specific energy input: 0–564 kJ/kg Frequency: 0.5 Hz |
| [105] |
Grape peel | Specific energy input: 289.8 (PEF-I) and 37.8 W (PEF-II) Pulse number: 25.2 (PEF-I) and 9.7 (PEF-II) Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 6 μs |
| [106] |
Plum peel | Specific energy input: 228 (PEF-I) and 17.8 W (PEF-II) Pulse number: 25.2 (PEF-I) and 9.7 (PEF-II) Frequency: 10 Hz Pulse width: 6 μs |
| [106] |
Waste/By-Product | Extraction Process Parameters | Major Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Blueberry peel | Microwave power: 500 W Temperature: 40–100 °C Irradiation time: 2–40 min Solvent: Choline chloride:lactic acid (1:1) containing 25% (v/v) water |
| [121] |
Blueberry bagasse | Microwave power: 525 and 700 W Irradiation time: 3 min Solvent: Acidified water |
| [122] |
Fig peel | Microwave power: 400 W Temperature: 40–115 °C Irradiation time: 5–35 min Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixtures (0–100% ethanol) |
| [123] |
Eggplant peel | Microwave power: 100–300 W Irradiation time: 5–15 min Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixtures (55–95% ethanol) |
| [40] |
Black soybean seed coat | Microwave power: 340–680 W Irradiation time: 2.5–7.5 min Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (20–60% ethanol) |
| [42] |
Grape pomace | Microwave power: 600–1000 W Irradiation time: 5–10 min Solvent: Acidified water |
| [124] |
Grape pomace | Microwave power: 300–600 W Irradiation time: 1–3 min Solvent: Water |
| [125] |
Grape pomace | Microwave power: 100–300 W Irradiation time: 10–15 min Solvent: Choline chloride:citric acid (2:1) containing 10–50% (v/v) water |
| [126] |
Bilberry pomace | Microwave power: 300–600 W Irradiation time: 1–16 min Solvent: Solvent-free |
| [50] |
Sour cherry peel | Microwave power: 350–500 W Irradiation time: 0.5–1.5 min Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixtures (20–80% ethanol) |
| [49] |
Blackcurrant bagasse | Microwave power: 385–700 W Irradiation time: 10–20 min Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixtures (0–90% ethanol) |
| [51] |
Peach pomace | Microwave power: 180–900 W Irradiation time: 10–50 s Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixture (70% ethanol) |
| [127] |
Onion peel | Microwave power: 700–1000 W Irradiation time: 3–5 min Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (40–75% ethanol) |
| [44] |
Black rice bran | Microwave power: 298–800 W Irradiation time: 13–147 s Solvent: Acidified water |
| [45] |
Black carrot pomace | Microwave power: 340–680 W Irradiation time: 5–15 min Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (10–30% ethanol) |
| [39] |
Waste/By-Product | Extraction Process Parameters | Major Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Blueberry peel | Ultrasound nominal power: 100 and 500 W Processing time: 40 min Temperature: 40 °C Solvent: Five natural deep eutectic solvents Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 20 kHz |
| [121] |
Blueberry pomace | Ultrasound nominal power: 400 W Processing time: 15–35 min Temperature: 50–70 °C Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixture (70% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Probe |
| [169] |
Jabuticaba by-product | Ultrasound intensity: 1.1–13.0 W/cm² Processing time: 3 min Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (0–100% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 19 kHz with a diameter of 13 mm |
| [53] |
Jabuticaba by-product | Power density: 50 and 60 W/L Processing time: 10–40 min Solvent: Acidified water (pH 1.5, 3.0, and 7.0) Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath at 25 and 40 kHz |
| [167] |
Black chokeberry waste | Ultrasound nominal power: 0–100 W Processing time: 0–240 min Temperature: 20–70 °C Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (0–50% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath at 30.8 kHz |
| [54] |
Blackberry waste | Ultrasound nominal power: 1500 W Processing time: 15 min Temperature: 4 °C Solvent: Water Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 20 kHz with a diameter of 25 mm |
| [170] |
Blackberry by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: 580 W Processing time: 90 min Temperature: 80 °C Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixtures (50% and 70% ethanol) and acidified water (pH 2) Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath at 37 kHz |
| [52] |
Pomegranate by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: 70–210 W Duty cycle: 20–80% Processing time: 1–10 min Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixture (50% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 20 kHz |
| [171] |
Eggplant by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: Not specified Processing time: 15–45 min Temperature: 25 and 50 °C Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixtures (70% and 96% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath |
| [41] |
Eggplant by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: Not specified Processing time: 15–45 min Temperature: 50–70 °C Solvent: 50–90% (v/v) methanol or 2-propanol in water Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath at 12.5, 25, and 37.5 kHz |
| [172] |
Grape pomace | Ultrasound nominal power: 150–300 W Processing time: 2.5–10 min Temperature: 25–55 °C Solvent: Water Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 20 kHz with a diameter of 13 mm |
| [173] |
Raspberry by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: 100–500 W Pectinase dosage: 0.05–0.25% Processing time: 10–50 min Temperature: 40–60 °C Solvent: Acidified hydroethanolic mixture (60% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Probe |
| [166] |
Mulberry by-product | Ultrasound nominal power: 200–400 W Pectinase dosage: 0.15–0.25% Processing time: 60–120 min Temperature: 40–60 °C Solvent: Acidified water Ultrasonic equipment: Ultrasound bath |
| [55] |
Peach waste | Ultrasound nominal power: 80–400 W Processing time: 20–120 s Temperature: 25–55 °C Solvent: Hydroethanolic mixture (70% ethanol) Ultrasonic equipment: Probe at 24 kHz with a diameter of 10 mm |
| [127] |
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Arruda, H.S.; Silva, E.K.; Peixoto Araujo, N.M.; Pereira, G.A.; Pastore, G.M.; Marostica Junior, M.R. Anthocyanins Recovered from Agri-Food By-Products Using Innovative Processes: Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Their Application in Food Systems. Molecules 2021, 26, 2632. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092632
Arruda HS, Silva EK, Peixoto Araujo NM, Pereira GA, Pastore GM, Marostica Junior MR. Anthocyanins Recovered from Agri-Food By-Products Using Innovative Processes: Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Their Application in Food Systems. Molecules. 2021; 26(9):2632. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092632
Chicago/Turabian StyleArruda, Henrique Silvano, Eric Keven Silva, Nayara Macêdo Peixoto Araujo, Gustavo Araujo Pereira, Glaucia Maria Pastore, and Mario Roberto Marostica Junior. 2021. "Anthocyanins Recovered from Agri-Food By-Products Using Innovative Processes: Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Their Application in Food Systems" Molecules 26, no. 9: 2632. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092632
APA StyleArruda, H. S., Silva, E. K., Peixoto Araujo, N. M., Pereira, G. A., Pastore, G. M., & Marostica Junior, M. R. (2021). Anthocyanins Recovered from Agri-Food By-Products Using Innovative Processes: Trends, Challenges, and Perspectives for Their Application in Food Systems. Molecules, 26(9), 2632. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092632