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Post-Harvest Atmospheric Pressure and Composition Modify the Concentration and Bioaccessibility of α - and β -Carotene in Carrots and Sweet Potatoes.

Batoul HamiehPatrick BorelSana RaoucheLaurie BruzzeseNabil AdjriouCharlotte HalimiGregory MarconotGuillian GilletJean-Claude RostainRégis GuieuCharles Desmarchelier
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Provitamin A (proVA) carotenoid synthesis and degradation are strongly influenced by environmental factors, including during post-harvest storage. Hypobaric and hyperbaric storages increase the shelf-life of many crops, but their effects on proVA carotenoids are not known. Our aim was to investigate the effects of modifications of atmospheric pressure and composition on α - and β -carotene concentration and bioaccessibility during the post-harvest storage of carrots and sweet potatoes. Vegetables were stored for 11-14 days at 20 °C in the dark in chambers with modified pressure and O 2 concentrations. In carrots, α - and β -carotene concentrations increased significantly during storage, but compared to the control, they were significantly lower in hyperbaria (-23 and -26%, respectively), whereas they did not differ significantly in hypoxia and hypobaria. In sweet potatoes, α - and β -carotene concentrations decreased significantly during storage, but neither hypoxia, hypobaria nor hyperbaria led to any significant change compared to the control. There was a significant increase for carrot α - and β -carotene bioaccessibility in hypobaria and hyperbaria, while there was a significant decrease for sweet potato β -carotene bioaccessibility in hypobaria/hypoxia and normobaria/hypoxia (-45% and -65% vs. control, respectively). Atmospheric pressure and composition during the post-harvest storage of carrots and sweet potatoes modified the concentration and bioaccessibility of proVA carotenoids.
Keyphrases
  • health risk assessment
  • endothelial cells
  • particulate matter
  • heavy metals
  • drinking water
  • health risk
  • climate change