4.6 Article

Protective Effect of Ultrasound-Processed Amazonian Sapota-do-Solimoes (Quararibea cordata) Juice on Artemia salina Nauplii

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr10091880

Keywords

toxicity; non-thermal technology; catalase; superoxide dismutase; lipid peroxidation; fruit juice

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior-(CAPES) [001]
  2. CNPq [350023/2020-4]
  3. F.U.N.C.A.P
  4. National Institute of Science and Technology for Tropical Fruit-INCT-FT
  5. Central Analitica UFC/CT-INFRA-FINEP/Pro-Equipamentos-CAPES/CNPq-SisNano-MCTI2019 [442577/2019-2]
  6. CNPq

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This study found that sapota-do-Solimoes juice processed by ultrasound showed no toxic effects on Artemia salina, rather demonstrated a protective effect. However, the juice fibers caused some damage to the animal's body.
Juice processing by non-thermal technology has been extensively studied, aiming at microbial inactivation and quality improvement. However, the knowledge about the possible toxic effects that those technologies can produce in foodstuffs due to the production of reactive oxygen species is still unknown. In this study, sapota-do-Solimoes juice processed by ultrasound (2, 6, and 10 min) was evaluated by a toxicity test and protective effect through stress biomarkers (catalase, superoxide dismutase, and lipid peroxidation) using Artemia salina nauplii. The non-thermal processed juice was nontoxic to A. salina. However, the juice fibers imparted some damage to the animal's body. The ultrasound-processed juice (2 and 6 min) decreased the A. salina mortality to 30% compared to the control assay with H2O2 where mortality was 80% after 48 h of exposure. However, after 72 h of exposure, the A. salina was entirely degraded by H2O2-induced toxicity. Furthermore, the catalase and superoxide dismutase presented the highest activity after A. salina was exposed to the unprocessed juice. Thus, sapota-do-Solimoes juice processed by the ultrasound could promote a protective effect on A. salina, revealing this technology's potential to enhance juice features without toxicity.

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