Artículo
Bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds in fermented strawberry-orange-apple-banana smoothies with lactobacilli
Méndez Galarraga, María Paula
; Pirovani, Maria Elida; Vinderola, Celso Gabriel
; Van de Velde, Franco
; Pirovani, Maria Elida; Vinderola, Celso Gabriel
; Van de Velde, Franco
Fecha de publicación:
03/2025
Editorial:
Elsevier
Revista:
Food Bioscience
ISSN:
2212-4292
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
The increasing prevalence of milk intolerance and dietary regimes avoiding dairy products have driven the growth of nondairy beverages with probiotics. Fruit smoothies enriched with lactic acid bacteria emerge as innovative alternatives. This study investigated the aptitude of a strawberry-orange-apple-banana smoothie to be fermented with the locally sourced potential probiotic Lactiplantibacillus plantarum LpAv (LpAv) and the commercial strain Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) under natural (pH = 3.5) or an adjusted pH (pH = 5.0). Moreover, the impact of incubation (37 ◦C for 18 h) and storage (28 d at 5 ◦C) of inoculated smoothies on the general quality and content and the in vitro intestinal and colonic bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds werestudied. Lactobacilli did not ferment smoothies at pH = 3.5 but were an effective probiotic-delivering medium during storage (loads 7 log CFU/mL). Contrarily, smoothies at pH = 5.0 were fermented by lactobacilli, reaching bacteria levels of 9 log CFU/mL, with minimal reductions over storage. Fermentation increased the levels of some phenolic compounds such as ellagic acid (control: 0.4, LpAV: 0.6, LGG: 1.0 mg/100 mL), maintained or reduced the levels of others such as the anthocyanin pelargonidin-3-O-glucoside (control: 4.5, LpAV: 2.2, LGG: 2.6 mg/100 mL). However, the total bioaccessibility (intestinal plus colonic) of mainly phenolic compounds increased after fermentation and throughout the storage despite the observed degradations. Pelargonidin-3-O-glucoside intestinal bioaccessibility was 10 and 16 times higher than control in LpAv and LGG fermented smoothies, respectively. This study demonstrated the positive effects of fermentation on improving the phenolic compound bioaccessibility and highlights the potential of fruit smoothies as lactobacilli carriers.
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Articulos(CCT - SANTA FE)
Articulos de CTRO.CIENTIFICO TECNOL.CONICET - SANTA FE
Articulos de CTRO.CIENTIFICO TECNOL.CONICET - SANTA FE
Citación
Méndez Galarraga, María Paula; Pirovani, Maria Elida; Vinderola, Celso Gabriel; Van de Velde, Franco; Bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds in fermented strawberry-orange-apple-banana smoothies with lactobacilli; Elsevier; Food Bioscience; 65; 3-2025; 1-9
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