4.7 Article

Integrated Secondary Metabolomic and Antioxidant Ability Analysis Reveals the Accumulation Patterns of Metabolites in Momordica charantia L. of Different Cultivars

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241914495

Keywords

antioxidant activity; bitter gourd; flavonoids; metabolites; phenolic acids

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Bitter gourd is a valuable source of bioactive compounds, including phenolic acids, flavonoids, and triterpenoids. Different cultivars of bitter gourd have varying levels of these compounds, but there are significant correlations among the different cultivars. Metabolomic analysis identified numerous secondary metabolites in bitter gourd, with flavonoids and phenolic acids being the most abundant. Several metabolites were found to be closely associated with antioxidative capacity. These findings indicate that bitter gourd has medicinal potential and can be used for developing novel molecules.
Bitter gourd (Momordica charantia L.) contains rich bioactive ingredients and secondary metabolites; hence, it has been used as medicine and food product. This study systematically quantified the nutrient contents, the total content of phenolic acids (TPC), flavonoids (TFC), and triterpenoids (TTC) in seven different cultivars of bitter gourd. This study also estimated the organic acid content and antioxidative capacity of different cultivars of bitter gourd. Although the TPC, TFC, TTC, organic acid content, and antioxidative activity differed significantly among different cultivars of bitter gourd, significant correlations were also observed in the obtained data. In the metabolomics analysis, 370 secondary metabolites were identified in seven cultivars of bitter gourd; flavonoids and phenolic acids were significantly more. Differentially accumulated metabolites identified in this study were mainly associated with secondary metabolic pathways, including pathways of flavonoid, flavonol, isoflavonoid, flavone, folate, and phenylpropanoid biosyntheses. A number of metabolites (n = 27) were significantly correlated (positive or negative) with antioxidative capacity (r >= 0.7 and p < 0.05). The outcomes suggest that bitter gourd contains a plethora of bioactive compounds; hence, bitter gourd may potentially be applied in developing novel molecules of medicinal importance.

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