Abstract

The metabolite profiles and antioxidant activity of Dendrobium catenatum Lindley leaf, a new functional ingredient for food product development, were evaluated in samples that had been prepared using various methods, including freeze-drying, hot-air drying, rolling before drying, steaming before drying, steaming and rolling before drying, and drying at 100, 80, and 60 °C. The concentrations of polysaccharides and flavonoids, as well as the antioxidant capacity of each sample, were determined. Furthermore, two nucleosides, four amino acids, one monoaromatic compound, and eight flavonoids were identified in dried leaves using high-performance liquid chromatography–diode array detector–electrospray ionization–multistage mass spectrometry (HPLC-DAD-ESI-MSn) and ultraviolet (UV) spectral analyses. The content of polar compounds such as cytidylic acid, arginine, tyrosine, and hydroxybenzoic acid hexose increased dramatically during hot-air-drying and rolling-before-drying treatments, while flavonol C-glycosides remained stable throughout the various treatments and drying temperatures. Rolling before drying at 100 °C was identified as the most suitable process when manufacturing tea products from D. catenatum leaves. This process resulted in a high-antioxidant-activity and visually appealing tea. This report details a potential strategy that should be applied in the manufacturing processes of high-quality products from D. catenatum leaves.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDendrobium catenatum Lindley (synonym D. officinale Kimura et Migo) is one of the most valuable Chinese medicinal and edible herbs, and its dried stem is used as a crude drug named Tiepi Shihu [1]

  • Dendrobium catenatum Lindley is one of the most valuable Chinese medicinal and edible herbs, and its dried stem is used as a crude drug named Tiepi Shihu [1]

  • These results indicated that flavonoids areinthe in the leaves indicated flavonoids are the major antioxidants themajor leavesantioxidants of D. catenatum, which is of D. catenatum, which isreports consistent with previous reports [9,21,22]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Dendrobium catenatum Lindley (synonym D. officinale Kimura et Migo) is one of the most valuable Chinese medicinal and edible herbs, and its dried stem is used as a crude drug named Tiepi Shihu [1]. It has been widely used as a tonic in China and other Southeast. The cultivation area of D. catenatum in China is more than 13,000 ha, with an output value over 2 billion dollars It has become one of the fastest developing

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call