Abstract

The Opuntia ficus indica (L.) (OFI) is used as a nutritional and pharmaceutical agent in various dietary and value added products. This study underlines the possible use of native prickly pear cladode powder as a functional ingredient for health-promoting food production. To summarise, chemical characterization of polyphenols, minerals and soluble dietary fibre was performed; furthermore, the antioxidant activity and bioaccessibility of polyphenols and minerals were assessed. Eleven compounds between phenolic acids and flavonoids were identified, with piscidic acid and isorhamnetin derivatives being the most abundant. Opuntia’s dietary fibre was mainly constituted of mucilage and pectin, and was composed of arabinose, galactose, glucose, mannose, rhamnose, and xylose sugars. The polyphenols’ bioaccessibility was very high: piscidic acid at 200%, eucomic and ferulic acids >110% and flavonoids from 89% to 100%. The prickly pear cladode powder is also a source of minerals, as cations (calcium, sodium, potassium and magnesium) and anions (sulphate and chloride), with high magnesium bioaccessibilty (93%). OFI powder showed good capacity of radical scavenging measured by DPPH and ABTS methods, with 740 and 775 μmol Trolox/100 g OFI, respectively. Finally, the presented results allow the consideration of this natural product as a source of several essential nutrients, with a possible use in the food industry as a functional ingredient.

Highlights

  • The Opuntia ficus indica (L.) Miller (OFI), known as the nopal cactus or prickly pear, is a dicotyledonous angiosperm plant originally from South America

  • Opuntia ficus indica powder was characterized for its polyphenol content by HPLC with Diode

  • The results presented here suggest the possible use of natural OFI cladode powder for the enrichment of widely consumed foods, such as bread, pasta, biscuits, for functional food industrial application

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Summary

Introduction

The Opuntia ficus indica (L.) Miller (OFI), known as the nopal cactus or prickly pear, is a dicotyledonous angiosperm plant originally from South America. It belongs to the Cactaceae family, which contains about 130 genera and nearly 1500 species [1]. This plant can grow in arid and semi-arid climates all over the world with great economic potential. About 70,000 ha have been devoted to OFI cultivation in Tunisia, 100,000 ha in Italy and 300,000 ha in Brazil, in addition to large areas in Algeria, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and South and North Africa [2]. In North Africa, instead, Molecules 2020, 25, 2176; doi:10.3390/molecules25092176 www.mdpi.com/journal/molecules

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