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Influence of sequential exogenous pretreatment and contact ultrasound-assisted air drying on the metabolic pathway of glucoraphanin in broccoli florets

Authors :
Beini Liu
Yang Tao
Sivakumar Manickam
Dandan Li
Yongbin Han
Ying Yu
Dongfeng Liu
Source :
Ultrasonics Sonochemistry, Vol 84, Iss , Pp 105977- (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

In this investigation, the combinations of exogenous pretreatment (melatonin or vitamin C) and contact ultrasound-assisted air drying were utilized to dry broccoli florets. To understand the influences of the studied dehydration methods on the conversion of glucoraphanin to bioactive sulforaphane in broccoli, various components (like glucoraphanin, sulforaphane, myrosinase, etc.) and factors (temperature and moisture) involved in the metabolism pathway were analyzed. The results showed that compared with direct air drying, the sequential exogenous pretreatment and contact ultrasound drying shortened the drying time by 19.0–22.7%. Meanwhile, contact sonication could promote the degradation of glucoraphanin. Both melatonin pretreatment and vitamin C pretreatment showed protective effects on the sulforaphane content and myrosinase activity during the subsequent drying process. At the end of drying, the sulforaphane content in samples dehydrated by the sequential melatonin (or vitamin C) pretreatment and ultrasound-intensified drying was 14.4% (or 26.5%) higher than only air-dried samples. The correlation analysis revealed that the exogenous pretreatment or ultrasound could affect the enzymatic degradation of glucoraphanin and the generation of sulforaphane through weakening the connections of sulforaphane-myrosinase, sulforaphane-VC, and VC-myrosinase. Overall, the reported results can enrich the biochemistry knowledge about the transformation of glucoraphanin to sulforaphane in cruciferous vegetables during drying, and the combined VC/melatonin pretreatment and ultrasound drying is conducive to protect bioactive sulforaphane in dehydrated broccoli.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13504177
Volume :
84
Issue :
105977-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.07f79a85d47e44f79871e969a28a009a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2022.105977