1. Antioxidant and antibacterial properties of endogenous phenolic compounds from commercial mustard products
- Author
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Michael Eskin (Human Nutritional Sciences) Rick Holley (Food Science), Usha Thiyam-Hollander (Human Nutritional Sciences) Peter Eck (Human Nutritional Sciences), Fahmi, Ronak, Michael Eskin (Human Nutritional Sciences) Rick Holley (Food Science), Usha Thiyam-Hollander (Human Nutritional Sciences) Peter Eck (Human Nutritional Sciences), and Fahmi, Ronak
- Abstract
This study investigated the antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of endogenous phenolic compounds in Oriental (Brassica junceae) and yellow (Sinapis alba) mustard seeds. Phenolics in selected Canadian mustard products (seeds/ powder/ flour) were extracted using Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE) and their corresponding sinapate profiles were established through HPLC-DAD analysis. The antioxidant capacity of each extract was assessed by DPPH assay and correlated with the total phenolic content (TPC) measured using the Folin–Ciocalteau method. Sinapine was the major phenolic compound in all the samples analysed, with negligible amounts of sinapic acid. The sinapine content, expressed as sinapic acid equivalents (SAE), ranged from 5.36 × 103 ± 0.66 to 14.44 ± 0.43 × 103 µg SAE/g dry weight of the samples, with the highest in the yellow mustard seed extract and lowest in Oriental mustard powder. The level decreased in the following order: yellow mustard seed > Oriental mustard seed > yellow mustard bran > Oriental mustard bran > yellow mustard powder > Oriental mustard powder. Extracts from yellow mustard seeds had the highest TPC (17.61× 103 ± 1.01 µg SAE/g), while Oriental mustard powder showed the lowest TPC with 4.14 × 103 ± 0.92 µg SAE/g. The DPPH radical scavenging activity of mustard methanolic extracts ranged between 36% and 69%, with the following order for both varieties: ground mustard seed > mustard bran > mustard powder. The antioxidant activities of the extracts correlated with their TPC (correlation coefficients were ≥ 0.72).This study confirmed that Canadian yellow and Oriental mustard varieties and their products are rich sources of endogenous phenolic compounds. The antimicrobial effectiveness of Oriental (1071 ppm sinapine) and yellow (1200 ppm sinapine) mustard seed phenolic extracts, and of sinapic acid standard in two different concentrations (1200, 3000 ppm) against five strains of E. coli O157:H7 (02-0627, 02-0628, 02-0304, 00-3581and non m
- Published
- 2016