ID | 119603 |
Author |
Kawakami, Retsuo
Tokushima University
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Mukai, Rie
Tokushima University
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Matsumura, Takumi
Tokushima University
Fujii, Haruki
Tokushima University
Jinbo, Kurumi
Tokushima University
Sogawa, Ryutaro
Tokushima University
Hashimura, Nene
Tokushima University
Ohashi, Koichi
Tokushima University
|
Keywords | low-temperature air plasma
food processing
harvested onions
polyphenols
reactive oxygen and nitrogen species
onion cells
|
Content Type |
Journal Article
|
Description | We present a new food processing method to increase the content of polyphenols, which are a type of health-promoting food component, in harvested onions using atmospheric-pressure low-temperature plasma technologies. Harvested onions were locally irradiated for different times with a low-temperature air plasma jet generated near atmospheric pressure and stored in the dark for various periods. The plasma-irradiated area was 7 mm2. The plasma irradiation was performed without removing the onion peel. After storage following plasma irradiation, the onion was peeled and cut into the outer, middle, and inner parts, analysing polyphenol content at each edible onion part, namely the bulb. The polyphenol content in the onions irradiated for 30 min and stored for 3 days increased over that of unirradiated onions stored for the same period. This increase occurred regardless of the bulb parts. Neither the plasma-irradiated onions without storage nor the air gas-irradiated onions without air plasma irradiation exhibited a higher polyphenol content. In particular, quercetin aglycone, quercetin 4’-O-glucoside, quercetin 3-O-glucoside, and quercetin 3,4’-O-glucoside were increased in the polyphenol content, contributing to an increase in the antioxidative activity. NO3− and NO2− were introduced into water under an onion peel by air plasma irradiation for 30 min and decreased after 3 days of storage but remained. However, no H2O2 was introduced. The plasma-introduced NO3− was distributed throughout the onion owing to the plasmodesmata serving as channels for cell-to-cell transports of molecules. These results suggest that the increased polyphenol content originates from the transcriptional factors acting in stress responses to the plasma-introduced NO3− and NO2−, not the electric field-induced electroporation, in onion cells. The present study provides valuable insights into interactions between low-temperature air plasma jets and onion cells.
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Journal Title |
Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
|
ISSN | 13616463
00223727
|
NCID | AA12441235
AA00704905
|
Publisher | IOP Publishing
|
Volume | 57
|
Issue | 47
|
Start Page | 475201
|
Published Date | 2024-08-29
|
Remark | This is the Accepted Manuscript version of an article accepted for publication in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6463/ad71db.
論文本文は2025-08-29以降公開予定 |
EDB ID | |
DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
language |
eng
|
TextVersion |
その他
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departments |
Science and Technology
Bioscience and Bioindustry
|