Plants (Dec 2021)

Betalains in Edible Fruits of Three Cactaceae Taxa—<i>Epiphyllum</i>, <i>Hylocereus</i>, and <i>Opuntia</i>—Their LC-MS/MS and FTIR Identification and Biological Activities Evaluation

  • Michaela Barkociová,
  • Jaroslav Tóth,
  • Katarzyna Sutor,
  • Natalia Drobnicka,
  • Slawomir Wybraniec,
  • Boris Dudík,
  • Andrea Bilková,
  • Szilvia Czigle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10122669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 2669

Abstract

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Epiphyllum, Hylocereus, and Opuntia plants belong to the Cactaceae family. They are mostly known as ornamental plants but also for their edible fruits, which can potentially be sources of betalains, such as betanin, a natural pigment used in the food industry, e.g., under the European label code E 162. The aim of this work was the identification of betalains (using LC-MS/MS), evaluation of total betalain content (spectrophotometrically), analysis of functional groups (using FT-IR), evaluation of antioxidant activity (using DPPH, ABTS, FRAP, DCFH-DA, and reducing power methods) and evaluation of antimicrobial activity (S. aureus, E. coli, and C. albicans) in fruits of Epiphyllum, Hylocereus, and Opuntia taxa. A total of 20 betalains were identified in the studied Cactaceae fruits. The Epiphyllum pink hybrid had the highest values of total betalains amongst all samples. The highest antioxidant activity was observed in the Epiphyllum pink hybrid, in Opuntia zacuapanensis and O. humifusa fruits. The antimicrobial activity assay showed that cacti fruits were not able to effectively inhibit the growth of E. coli, S. aureus, or C. albicans. Our results prove that these fruits are good sources of natural pigments—betalains. They do not contain toxic compounds in significant amounts and they exhibit antioxidant activity.

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