Effect of Individual and Selected Combined Treatments With Saline Solutions and Spent Engine Oil on the Processing Attributes and Functional Quality of Tomato (Solanum lycopersicon L.) Fruit: In Memory of Professor Leila Ben Jaballah Radhouane (1958-2021)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
The results showed that soil electrical conductivity, (EC2: 7 dS/m) increased soluble
solids, lycopene content, total phenolic content, hydrophilic and lipophilic radical
scavenging activities (HRSA and LRSA) by 14.2, 149, 20, 46.4, and 19.0%, respectively,
compared with control. Under 0.5% spent engine oil (SEO), flavonoid content decreased
by 21.7% compared with the control. HRSA and LRSA of fruits subjected to EC2/SEO1
treatment were, respectively, 45.9 and 35.5% lower than control. The a*/b* ratio was
positively and significantly (P < 0.01) correlated with b-carotene (R = 0.78), lycopene
(R = 0.68), total vitamin C (R = 0.71), a-tocopherol (R = 0.83), g-tocopherol (R = 0.66),
HRSA (R = 0.93), LRSA (R = 0.80), and soluble solids (R = 0.84) suggesting that it
may be a promising indicator of fruit quality in areas affected by such constraints. The
research revealed that combined stresses induce responses markedly different from
those of individual treatments, which strain the need to focus on how the interaction
between stresses may affect the functional quality of tomato fruits.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
carotenoids; flavonoids; phenolic; radical scavenging activity; vitamin C; salt stress; soil pollution; tocopherols
List of contributors:
Durante, Miriana
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