Macro micronutrients and Antioxidant Potentials of Plants and Fungal based Food from Tawang Area Arunachal Pradesh India
Author(s) -
C. Rajendran,
M Praveena,
Mallesha,
Venkatasubbaiah Rashmi,
K. R. Anilakumar
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
defence life science journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.135
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2456-379X
pISSN - 2456-0537
DOI - 10.14429/dlsj.4.13811
Subject(s) - pepper , micronutrient , mushroom , biology , nutrient , horticulture , proximate , botany , food science , chemistry , ecology , organic chemistry
Certain variety of plants such as vegetables, spices and seaweed are abundantly being grown in high altitude area of Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh, India. Therefore, four different vegetables, spices and seaweed were taken from that particular cold region viz., finger millet, nori seaweed, pepper corn, bean along with edible higher fungi, mushroom have been selected based on the higher consumption of people of Northeast India for the proximate analysis, mineral, antioxidant and its potentials and vitamin contents. The nutritional studies conducted on the plant foods and fungi, mushroom in Northeast is spares with very few reports are available. For this reason, this study was undertaken to determine the macro and micro nutrients and antioxidant potential of these plant foods. Common bean showed higher percentage of protein with 35.09 per cent and fat percentage of the finger millet is higher (9.20 %) as compared to other varieties from other regions (1-1.5 %). Higher crude fibre was assessed in mushroom with 47.77 per cent followed with pepper corn (38.42 %), bean with 30.98 per cent, and finger millet (5.14 %). Calcium was higher in finger millet with 225.0 mg per 100g whereas iron content was higher in mushroom with 652.0 mg followed with beans (543.0 mg), pepper corn (408.0 mg per 100 g). Higher amount of polyphenols observed in finger millet with 8.71 μg gallic acid equivalent (GAE)/mg and highest total flavonoids in pepper corn with 48.19 μg rutin (RU) equivalent per gram of dried extract. Likewise, highest FRAP in finger millet noticed with 72.0 μg of FeSO4 equivalent/mg and reducing power (ascorbic acid equivalent/mg) in mushroom (244.0) and pepper corn (242.0). All samples had higher metal chelating activity at IC50 between 86.6583.38. Similarly, higher amount of vit B6 was noted in pepper corn with 197.0 mg while lowest in seaweed with 1.76 mg/100gm, respectively.
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