Título
Phenolic Compounds in Agro-Industrial Waste of Mango Fruit: Impact on Health and Prebiotic Effect – a Review
11627/657911627/6579
Autor
Nicolás García, Mayra
Borrás Enríquez, Anahí Jobeth
González Escobar, Jorge Luis
Calva Cruz, Oscar de Jesús
Pérez Pérez, Viridiana
Sánchez Becerril, Mayra
Resumen
The fruit processing industry generates huge amounts of waste annually, causing severe environmental problems. Mango processing produces around 20 million tons of wastes from the non-consumed fraction, mainly peels and seeds, which constitute 30–60% of the fruit weight. However, various phytochemicals found in these residues have been implicated in preventing cancer and also cardio-metabolic and gastrointestinal diseases. Particularly, phenolic compounds hold a promising potential to be utilized as modulatory agents of the human gut microbiota (prebiotics-like actions). This review article mainly discusses the effect of phenolics from mango wastes on gut microbiota modulation and its beneficial repercussions for human health. Moreover, it also discusses the importance of phenolic compounds of mango peel and seed kernel residues, their extraction, identification, and quantification.
Fecha de publicación
2023Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.31883/pjfns/159361Área de conocimiento
CIENCIAS DE LA NUTRICIÓNColecciones
Editor
Institute of Animal Reproduction and Food Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences in OlsztynPalabras clave
Mango processingMango wastes
Phytochemicals
Biological properties
Gut health