4.6 Review

High Hydrostatic Pressure to Increase the Biosynthesis and Extraction of Phenolic Compounds in Food: A Review

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27051502

Keywords

phenolic compounds; high hydrostatic pressure; reactive oxygen species; biosynthesis; extraction; stress response; cell wall modification

Funding

  1. CONACyT [A1-S-45034]

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Phenolic compounds from fruits and vegetables have beneficial properties for human health, such as antioxidant, anticancer, and anti-inflammatory effects. High Hydrostatic Pressure (HHP) treatment of vegetable products has been found to increase phenolic content by facilitating their extraction from cellular tissues and activating their biosynthetic pathways.
Phenolic compounds from fruits and vegetables have shown antioxidant, anticancer, anti-inflammatory, among other beneficial properties for human health. All these benefits have motivated multiple studies about preserving, extracting, and even increasing the concentration of these compounds in foods. A diverse group of vegetable products treated with High Hydrostatic Pressure (HHP) at different pressure and time have shown higher phenolic content than their untreated counterparts. The increments have been associated with an improvement in their extraction from cellular tissues and even with the activation of the biosynthetic pathway for their production. The application of HHP from 500 to 600 MPa, has been shown to cause cell wall disruption facilitating the release of phenolic compounds from cell compartments. HPP treatments ranging from 15 to 100 MPa during 10-20 min at room temperature have produced changes in phenolic biosynthesis with increments up to 155%. This review analyzes the use of HHP as a method to increase the phenolic content in vegetable systems. Phenolic content changes are associated with either an immediate stress response, with a consequent improvement in their extraction from cellular tissues, or a late stress response that activates the biosynthetic pathways of phenolics in plants.

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