Abstract

BackgroundArgan oil is traditionally produced by cold pressing in South-western Morocco where rural population uses it as edible oil as well as for its therapeutic properties which give them in counterpart valuable income. Given the economical interest of this oil, several attempts of fraudulency have been registered in the world global market leading to loss of authenticity. Our purpose is to launch a program of Tunisian Argan oil valorization since trees from this species have been introduced sixty years ago in Tunisia. The first step was thus to characterize the physicochemical properties and determine the chemical composition of Tunisian Argan oil in order to assess its quality.MethodsPhysicochemical parameters of oil quality were determined according to the international standard protocols. Fatty acid content analysis of Argan oils was performed by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrophotometry. A comparative study was realized among Tunisian, Moroccan and Algerian samples differing also by their extraction procedure. The impact of geographical localisation on the fatty acids composition was studied by statistical and modeling Bayesian analyses.ResultsPhysicochemical parameters analysis showed interestingly that Tunisian Argan oil could be classified as extra virgin oil. Argan oil is mainly composed by unsaturated fatty acids (80%), mainly oleic and linoleic acid (linoleic acid was positively influenced by the geographical localization (r = 0.899, p = 0.038) and the P/S index (r = 0.987, p = 0.002)) followed by saturated fatty acids (20%) with other beneficial compounds from the unsaponifiable fraction like polyphenols and carotenoids. Together with fatty acid content, these minor components are likely to be responsible for its nutraceutical properties and beneficial effects.ConclusionTunisian Argan oil displayed valuable qualitative parameters proving its competitiveness in comparison with Moroccan and Algerian oils, and could be therefore considered as extra virgin edible oil for nutraceutical purposes as well as for cosmetic use.

Highlights

  • Argan oil is traditionally produced by cold pressing in South-western Morocco where rural population uses it as edible oil as well as for its therapeutic properties which give them in counterpart valuable income

  • Our work aims to valorize Tunisian Argan oil, in comparison with the Moroccan and Algerian oils, and to highlight its beneficial nutritional, nutraceutical and cosmetological effects according its physicochemical properties and fatty acid content

  • Our comparative analysis between several Argan oils showed that their physicochemical properties and chemical composition depend on the origin and the extraction procedure

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Summary

Introduction

Argan oil is traditionally produced by cold pressing in South-western Morocco where rural population uses it as edible oil as well as for its therapeutic properties which give them in counterpart valuable income. Able to live over 200 years and being well adapted to arid climate, Argan tree would play an important ecological role in protecting against sandy lands progression and wind erosion [4]. It has multiple purposes, virgin oil production from its fruits seeds which produces economical benefits for rural population. The most important product of the tree is an edible oil extracted from the fruit kernels by diverse extraction processes (traditional, industrial, by press or organic solvent) It has an excellent food quality and a high marketable value, but is used in traditional medicine, pharmacology and more recently in cosmetology [2]

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