Extraction, Characterization, and Bioactivity of Phenolic Compounds—A Case on Hibiscus Genera
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Duque Soto, Carmen María; Expósito Almellón, Xabier; Borras Linares, María Isabel; Lozano Sánchez, JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Bioactive compounds Hibiscus sabdariffa Green extraction HPLC-MS Bioaccessibility
Date
2023-02-24Referencia bibliográfica
Duque-Soto, C.; Expósito-Almellón, X.; García, P.; Pando, M.E.; Borrás-Linares, I.; Lozano-Sánchez, J. Extraction, Characterization, and Bioactivity of Phenolic Compounds—A Case on Hibiscus Genera. Foods 2023, 12, 963.[ https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12050963[
Patrocinador
Red Revalif (Scientific Latin America Program, FORCYT, OEI EU Grants for International Research Networks; JA PREDOC_00110. X.E.-A. for the grant Red Revalif, FORCYT, OEI-EU Grants.Résumé
Phenolic compounds have recently gained interest, as they have been related to improve ments in health and disease prevention, such as inflammatory intestinal pathologies and obesity.
However, their bioactivity may be limited by their instability or low concentration in food matri ces and along the gastrointestinal tract once consumed. This has led to the study of technological
processing with the aim of optimizing phenolic compounds’ biological properties. In this sense,
different extraction systems have been applied to vegetable sources for the purpose of obtaining
enriched phenolic extracts such as PLE, MAE, SFE, and UAE. In addition, many in vitro and in vivo
studies evaluating the potential mechanisms of these compounds have also been published. This
review includes a case study of the Hibiscus genera as an interesting source of phenolic compounds.
The main goal of this work is to describe: (a) phenolic compound extraction by designs of exper iments (DoEs) applied to conventional and advanced systems; (b) the influence of the extraction
system on the phenolic composition and, consequently, on the bioactive properties of these extracts;
and (c) bioaccessibility and bioactivity evaluation of Hibiscus phenolic extracts. The results have
pointed out that the most used DoEs were based on response surface methodologies (RSM), mainly
the Box–Behnken design (BBD) and central composite design (CCD). The chemical composition of
the optimized enriched extracts showed an abundance of flavonoids, as well as anthocyanins and
phenolic acids. In vitro and in vivo studies have highlighted their potent bioactivity, with particular
emphasis on obesity and related disorders. This scientific evidence establishes the Hibiscus genera as
an interesting source of phytochemicals with demonstrated bioactive potential for the development
of functional foods. Nevertheless, future investigations are needed to evaluate the recovery of the
phenolic compounds of the Hibiscus genera with remarkable bioaccessibility and bioactivity.