4.7 Article

Changes in the Phytochemical Profile and Antioxidant Properties of Prunus persica Fruits after the Application of a Commercial Biostimulant Based on Seaweed and Yeast Extract

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232415911

Keywords

bioactive compounds; cellular antioxidant activity; radical scavenging activity; reducing power; polyphenols; liquid chromatography; mass spectrometry; Expando (R); seaweed extracts; yeast extracts

Funding

  1. University of Turin, Italy
  2. [RILO-2021]
  3. [RILO-2022]

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The application of a biostimulant based on algae and yeast extracts showed significant effects on the peach trees, reducing ripening time, increasing fruit size, and boosting the content of bioactive compounds. This study highlights the importance of plant biostimulants in sustainable agriculture.
Plant biostimulants are formulations that are experiencing great success from the perspective of sustainable agriculture. In this work, we evaluated the effect derived from the application of a biostimulant based on algae and yeast extracts (Expando (R)) on the agronomic yield and nutraceutical profile of two different cultivars (Sugar Time and West Rose) of Prunus persica (peach). Although, at the agronomic level, significant effects on production yields were not recorded, the biostimulant was able to reduce the ripening time, increase the fruit size, and make the number of harvestable fruits homogeneous. From a nutraceutical point of view, our determinations via spectrophotometric (UV/Vis) and chromatographic (HPLC-DAD-MS/MS) analysis showed that the biostimulant was able to boost the content of bioactive compounds in both the pulp (5.0 L/ha: +17%; 4.0 L/ha: +12%; 2.5 L/ha: +11%) and skin (4.0 L/ha: +38%; 2.5 L/ha: +15%). These changes seem to follow a dose-dependent effect, also producing attractive effects on the antioxidant properties of the fruits harvested from the treated trees. In conclusion, the biostimulant investigated in this work proved to be able to produce more marketable fruit in a shorter time, both from a pomological and a functional point of view.

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