4.5 Article

Effect of combined treatments of high-pressure and natural additives on carotenoid extractability and antioxidant activity of tomato puree (Lycopersicum esculentum Mill.)

Journal

EUROPEAN FOOD RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 219, Issue 2, Pages 151-160

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00217-004-0926-1

Keywords

tomato puree; high-pressure; natural additives; carotenoids; radical scavenging; lipid oxidation; response surface methodology; combined treatments

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High-pressure is a new food processing technology aimed at achieving consumer demands for fresher products with reduced microbiological levels. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of combined treatments of high-pressure and natural additives (citric acid and sodium chloride) on lutein, lycopene, lycopene epoxide, gamma- and beta-carotene content, and vitamin A value, and on the in vitro antioxidant activity of tomato puree. The methods used to evaluate the antioxidant activity were the measurement of the DPPH. radical scavenging and the inhibition of lipid oxidation (linoleic acid/CuSO4 system). The experimental design comprised a response surface methodology according to a central composite face-centred design. The variable ranges were 50-400 MPa, sodium chloride 0-0.8%, and citric acid 0-2%. Total carotenoid content showed the best extraction when pressure was increased up to 400 MPa without sodium chloride and citric acid. The effect of the moderately high-pressure treatment (under 200 MPa) on the structure of the cellular tomato matrix may lead to the different release of various carotenes on the basis of their chemical features and chromoplast location. Radical scavenging activity was higher in the aqueous extract than the organic extract of tomato puree. Significant correlation (P<0.05) was found between the total carotenoid content and the radical scavenging activity and inhibition of lipid oxidation by the organic extract of tomato puree. In conclusion, applying the highest range of pressures (without additives) increased the carotenoid extractability. Further human studies are needed to clarify the effect of high-pressure treatment on the bioavailability of tomato puree constituents.

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