Horizon Europe 2021–2027 research and innovation program under grant agreement ID 101060130 (TwinPrebioEnz)

Link to this page

Horizon Europe 2021–2027 research and innovation program under grant agreement ID 101060130 (TwinPrebioEnz)

Authors

Publications

Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics

Petrov Ivanković, Anja; Ćorović, Marija; Milivojević, Ana; Simović, Milica; Banjanac, Katarina; Veljković, Milica; Bezbradica, Dejan

(Taylor and Francis Ltd., 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Petrov Ivanković, Anja
AU  - Ćorović, Marija
AU  - Milivojević, Ana
AU  - Simović, Milica
AU  - Banjanac, Katarina
AU  - Veljković, Milica
AU  - Bezbradica, Dejan
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/7384
AB  - Fruit pomaces are agro-industrial by-products obtained in large quantities by the juice production industry, hence their reutilization is a suitable way to minimize environmental impact by transforming them into different value-added products. Considering the wide abundance and bioactive potential of berries pomaces, raspberry, strawberry, blackcurrant, and chokeberry pomace were chosen to examine and compare polyphenol content, antioxidant activity, and skin prebiotic capacity of their extracts. Extracts of 5.28 to 13.39 mg GAE ⋅ g−1 DM total polyphenol content were obtained, with significant differences in polyphenol abundance between classes. Relative antioxidant capacity index and global antioxidant score revealed that the blackcurrant pomace extract exhibited the highest antioxidant capacity. Staphylococcus epidermidis growth was promoted by lower extract concentrations, while higher concentrations showed inhibitory effects. On the other hand, Staphylococcus aureus was inhibited more strongly and no stimulation was detected in the tested concentration range (.025–.1 mg GAE ⋅ mL−1). In co-cultured experiments, a S. aureus/S. epidermidis rebalancing effect was proven for all tested extracts, whereas the best prebiotic capacity of 2.84 was achieved at.05 mg GAE⋅ mL−1 of raspberry pomace extract. In conclusion, berry pomace extracts could be valorized by extraction of their phytochemicals which are potent antioxidants and emerging prebiotics for topical application.
PB  - Taylor and Francis Ltd.
T2  - International Journal of Fruit Science
T1  - Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics
EP  - 101
IS  - 1
SP  - 85
VL  - 24
DO  - 10.1080/15538362.2024.2322743
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Petrov Ivanković, Anja and Ćorović, Marija and Milivojević, Ana and Simović, Milica and Banjanac, Katarina and Veljković, Milica and Bezbradica, Dejan",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Fruit pomaces are agro-industrial by-products obtained in large quantities by the juice production industry, hence their reutilization is a suitable way to minimize environmental impact by transforming them into different value-added products. Considering the wide abundance and bioactive potential of berries pomaces, raspberry, strawberry, blackcurrant, and chokeberry pomace were chosen to examine and compare polyphenol content, antioxidant activity, and skin prebiotic capacity of their extracts. Extracts of 5.28 to 13.39 mg GAE ⋅ g−1 DM total polyphenol content were obtained, with significant differences in polyphenol abundance between classes. Relative antioxidant capacity index and global antioxidant score revealed that the blackcurrant pomace extract exhibited the highest antioxidant capacity. Staphylococcus epidermidis growth was promoted by lower extract concentrations, while higher concentrations showed inhibitory effects. On the other hand, Staphylococcus aureus was inhibited more strongly and no stimulation was detected in the tested concentration range (.025–.1 mg GAE ⋅ mL−1). In co-cultured experiments, a S. aureus/S. epidermidis rebalancing effect was proven for all tested extracts, whereas the best prebiotic capacity of 2.84 was achieved at.05 mg GAE⋅ mL−1 of raspberry pomace extract. In conclusion, berry pomace extracts could be valorized by extraction of their phytochemicals which are potent antioxidants and emerging prebiotics for topical application.",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
journal = "International Journal of Fruit Science",
title = "Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics",
pages = "101-85",
number = "1",
volume = "24",
doi = "10.1080/15538362.2024.2322743"
}
Petrov Ivanković, A., Ćorović, M., Milivojević, A., Simović, M., Banjanac, K., Veljković, M.,& Bezbradica, D.. (2024). Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics. in International Journal of Fruit Science
Taylor and Francis Ltd.., 24(1), 85-101.
https://doi.org/10.1080/15538362.2024.2322743
Petrov Ivanković A, Ćorović M, Milivojević A, Simović M, Banjanac K, Veljković M, Bezbradica D. Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics. in International Journal of Fruit Science. 2024;24(1):85-101.
doi:10.1080/15538362.2024.2322743 .
Petrov Ivanković, Anja, Ćorović, Marija, Milivojević, Ana, Simović, Milica, Banjanac, Katarina, Veljković, Milica, Bezbradica, Dejan, "Berries Pomace Valorization: From Waste to Potent Antioxidants and Emerging Skin Prebiotics" in International Journal of Fruit Science, 24, no. 1 (2024):85-101,
https://doi.org/10.1080/15538362.2024.2322743 . .
1