Molecules (Jun 2021)

Classical Food Quality Attributes and the Metabolic Profile of Cambuci, a Native Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest Fruit

  • Poliana Cristina Spricigo,
  • Banny Silva Barbosa Correia,
  • Karla Rodrigues Borba,
  • Isabela Barroso Taver,
  • Guilherme de Oliveira Machado,
  • Renan Ziemann Wilhelms,
  • Luiz Henrique Keng Queiroz Junior,
  • Angelo Pedro Jacomino,
  • Luiz Alberto Colnago

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26123613
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 12
p. 3613

Abstract

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The cambuci is a native Brazilian fruit from the Atlantic Forest biome. A soft and astringent pulp, a green color, and a sweet aroma are its main characteristics. Classical food quality attributes (fresh fruit mass, fruit height, diameters, total soluble solid, titratable acidity, and ratio) and the metabolic profile from ten accessions from three different locations were analyzed herein by analytical methods (refractometry and neutralization titration) and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Concerning sugar content, sucrose was the predominant compound, with glucose and fructose alternating in second, depending on the accession. Citric acid was the most relevant acid, followed by shikimic and quinic acids in quite variable amounts. These three main acids vary in amounts for each accession. Ascorbic acid content emerges as an important quality attribute and makes this fruit nutritionally attractive, due to values comparable to those contained in citric fruits. The main amino acids identified in cambuci were glutamic acid individually or in comprising the tripeptide glutathione (glutamic acid, cysteine, glycine). The quality diversity of the evaluated accessions suggests the potentiality of cambuci use in future breeding programs.

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