4.7 Article

Resveratrol treatment controls microbial flora, prolongs shelf life, and preserves nutritional quality of fruit

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 1526-1530

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf048426a

Keywords

fruit spoilage; fruit shelf life; fungi; microbial flora; antioxidant; dietary antioxidant element; nutritional content; water content

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Resveratrol is known as a grapevine secondary metabolite with fungicide activity. Its exogenous application on harvested grapes resulted in the reduction of microbial flora growth, and consequently, prolonged shelf life, without affecting the nutritional quality of the fruit. Resveratrol treatment also resulted in being effective on fruit that normally does not accumulate such metabolites as, for example, tomatoes, apples, avocado pears, and peppers. As a result, all treated fruits maintained their post-harvest quality and health longer than the untreated ones. This study demonstrates the potential use of resveratrol as a natural pesticide to reduce post-harvest fungi development on a broad spectrum of fruit types.

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