Evaluation of the potential to increase the recovery of phenolic compounds with antioxidant and antidiabetic activities from mango leaves by fermentation pre-treatment and ultrasound-assisted extraction via sonotrode
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Aznar Ramos, María José; De Montijo Prieto, Soumi; Razola-Díaz, María del Carmen; Martín-García, Beatriz; Jiménez Valera, María Manuela; Ruiz-Bravo López, Alfonso; Verardo, Vito; Gómez-Caravaca, Ana MaríaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Mango leaves By-products Phenolic compounds
Fecha
2025-12-01Referencia bibliográfica
Aznar-Ramos, M. J., De Montijo-Prieto, S., Razola-Díaz, M. del C., Martín-García, B., Jiménez-Valera, M., Ruiz-Bravo, A., Verardo, V., & Gómez-Caravaca, A. M. (2025). Evaluation of the potential to increase the recovery of phenolic compounds with antioxidant and antidiabetic activities from mango leaves by fermentation pre-treatment and ultrasound-assisted extraction via sonotrode. Industrial Crops and Products, 237(122125), 122125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2025.122125
Patrocinador
ERDF / Ministry of Science and Innovation - State Research Agency (project PID2022–141237OB-I00); MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ - FEDER, EU (project RTI2018–099835-A-I00); Research Fellowships from the Government of Spain (FPU22/03192; FPU19/02009)Resumen
This study focused on enhancing phenolic compounds recovery from mango leaves by using two non-thermal
methods: lactic acid bacteria fermentation and ultrasound-assisted extraction via sonotrode. Optimal ultrasound conditions were established using a Box-Behnken model and response surface methodology. The established conditions showed higher phenolic content extraction if compared with ultrasonic bath and Soxhlet (1.5
and 2 times, respectively). Fermentation with different lactic acid bacteria strains allowed determining 58 polar
compounds through HPLC-ESI-TOF-MS, including 11 compounds tentatively identified for the first time in
mango leaves. Combining both techniques significantly increased total phenolic compounds from 20 % to 52 %,
except with La. plantarum CECT 9567-C4. Antioxidant activity improved significatively by up to 7 % postfermentation with La. plantarum CECT 748 T. Additionally, Le. brevis CECT 5354 and La. plantarum CECT
9567-C4 also showed enhanced α-amylase inhibition, suggesting antidiabetic potential. Thus, fermentation
pretreatment with selected bacteria is able to produced phenolic-rich extracts with enhanced antioxidant and
antidiabetic activity from mango leaves. Further techno-economic and in vivo analyses will be necessary to
confirm these preliminary data.





