Abstracts
Fruits of Capsicum species (peppers) accumulate high amounts of ascorbic acid or vitamin C. C. chinense occurs in the Midwest and Northeast regions and the Amazon Basin (where its greatest genetic diversity is found). The objective of the present work was to quantify the vitamin C content in peppers of 22 accessions of C. chinense 'Habanero' from the Breeding Program of Embrapa Vegetable Crops. Vitamin C was extracted from mature fruits with TCEP-HCl (tris 2-carboxyethyl-phosphine hydrocloride) and its content determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Vitamin C content ranged from 54.1 to 129.8 mg/100 g. Accessions were divided into four heterogeneous groups of diversity. Vitamin C content of the first group varied between 116.2 and 129.8 mg/100 g; the second group ranged from 94.0 to 104.6 mg/100 g; the third group ranged from 76.7 to 87.5 mg/100 g; and the fourth group ranged from 54.1 to 66.6 mg/100 g. These results highlight the diversity of C. chinense collection in terms of vitamin C content.
Pepper; ascorbic acid; genetic resource; high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)
Os frutos de Capsicum possuem elevados teores de ácido ascórbico ou vitamina C. A pimenta (C. chinense) ocorre nas regiões Centro-Oeste e Nordeste e na Bacia Amazônica (onde está localizada a sua maior diversidade genética). O objetivo deste trabalho foi quantificar o teor de vitamina C em 22 acessos de C. chinense do grupo varietal 'Habanero', procedentes do programa de melhoramento genético da Embrapa Hortaliças. A vitamina C foi extraída de frutos maduros com TCEP-HCl (tris 2-carboxyethyl-phosphine hydrocloride) e os teores foram determinados por cromatografia líquida de alta eficiência (CLAE). Os teores de vitamina C variaram entre 54,1-129,8 mg/100g. Foram formados, com base no teor de vitamina C, quatro grupos heterogêneos de diversidade. Os teores do primeiro grupo variaram entre 116,2-129,8 mg/100 g; o segundo variou entre 94,0-104,6 mg/100 g; o terceiro entre 76,7-87,5 mg/100 g; e o quarto entre 54,1-66,6 mg/100 g. Esses resultados evidenciam a diversidade dessa coleção de C. chinense para os teores de vitamina C.
Ácido ascórbico; recurso genético; cromatografia líquida de alta eficiência (CLAE)
RESEARCH PESQUISA
Vitamin C content in Habanero pepper accessions (Capsicum chinense)
Teor de vitamina C em acessos de pimenta (Capsicum chinense) do grupo varietal Habanero
Ana Flávia P TeodoroI; Rosa de BN AlvesI; Leandro B RibeiroI; Karina ReisII; Francisco José B ReifschneiderII; Maria Esther de N FonsecaII; Joseane P da SilvaI; Tânia da S Agostini-CostaI
IEmbrapa Recursos Genéticos e Biotecnologia, C. Postal 02372, 70770-900 Brasília-DF; rbelem@cenargen.embrapa.br; tania@cenargen.embrapa.br
IIEmbrapa Hortaliças, C. Postal 218, 70351-970 Brasília-DF; mesther@cnph.embrapa.br; fjbr@cnph.embrapa.br
ABSTRACT
Fruits of Capsicum species (peppers) accumulate high amounts of ascorbic acid or vitamin C. C. chinense occurs in the Midwest and Northeast regions and the Amazon Basin (where its greatest genetic diversity is found). The objective of the present work was to quantify the vitamin C content in peppers of 22 accessions of C. chinense 'Habanero' from the Breeding Program of Embrapa Vegetable Crops. Vitamin C was extracted from mature fruits with TCEP-HCl (tris 2-carboxyethyl-phosphine hydrocloride) and its content determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Vitamin C content ranged from 54.1 to 129.8 mg/100 g. Accessions were divided into four heterogeneous groups of diversity. Vitamin C content of the first group varied between 116.2 and 129.8 mg/100 g; the second group ranged from 94.0 to 104.6 mg/100 g; the third group ranged from 76.7 to 87.5 mg/100 g; and the fourth group ranged from 54.1 to 66.6 mg/100 g. These results highlight the diversity of C. chinense collection in terms of vitamin C content.
Keywords: Pepper, ascorbic acid, genetic resource, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).
RESUMO
Os frutos de Capsicum possuem elevados teores de ácido ascórbico ou vitamina C. A pimenta (C. chinense) ocorre nas regiões Centro-Oeste e Nordeste e na Bacia Amazônica (onde está localizada a sua maior diversidade genética). O objetivo deste trabalho foi quantificar o teor de vitamina C em 22 acessos de C. chinense do grupo varietal 'Habanero', procedentes do programa de melhoramento genético da Embrapa Hortaliças. A vitamina C foi extraída de frutos maduros com TCEP-HCl (tris 2-carboxyethyl-phosphine hydrocloride) e os teores foram determinados por cromatografia líquida de alta eficiência (CLAE). Os teores de vitamina C variaram entre 54,1-129,8 mg/100g. Foram formados, com base no teor de vitamina C, quatro grupos heterogêneos de diversidade. Os teores do primeiro grupo variaram entre 116,2-129,8 mg/100 g; o segundo variou entre 94,0-104,6 mg/100 g; o terceiro entre 76,7-87,5 mg/100 g; e o quarto entre 54,1-66,6 mg/100 g. Esses resultados evidenciam a diversidade dessa coleção de C. chinense para os teores de vitamina C.
Palavras-chave: Ácido ascórbico, recurso genético, cromatografia líquida de alta eficiência (CLAE).
Peppers of the genus Capsicum were already used in the diet of pre-Colombian American peoples in many recipes, generally as part of sauces or as spice (Reifschneider & Ribeiro, 2008). Capsicum chinense occurs in the Brazilian Midwest and Northeast regions and in the Amazon Basin (where its greatest genetic diversity is found).
Several bioactive substances are present in fruits of hot and sweet pepper plants, especially the alkaloid capsaicin (that gives pungency), vitamin E, pro-vitamin A carotenoids, flavonoids and other secondary metabolites with antioxidant properties (Perucka & Materska, 2003; Matsufuji et al., 2007; Oboh & Rocha, 2007; Sun et al., 2007; Topuz & Ozdemir, 2007; Menichini et al., 2009). Fresh peppers are also excellent sources of ascorbic acid (vitamin C), which participates in several antioxidant processes in plants besides acting in the prevention of human chronic diseases, including certain types of cancer, coronary disorder, arteriosclerosis and cataracts (Howard et al., 2000).The hot peppers (including several representatives of C. chinense) have great importance in the American continent and in tropical regions of the world. These products are essential in Mexican, African and Asian cuisines. In Brazil, C. frutescens (malagueta pepper) and C. chinense (pimenta de cheiro), are irreplaceable ingredients in several regional dishes. The acarajé and vatapá in Bahia state, the chicken with okra in Minas Gerais state, the duck with tucupi in Pará state and the fish stew and chowder in several coastal cities of the Northeast and Southeast are some examples (Ribeiro & Henz, 2008).
Other lesser known varieties, like "Habanero", have begun to gain a greater importance in Brazil. The varietal group of hot peppers like "Habanero" presents, nowadays, a growing demand in North America and European Economic Community. The high value of this product in the international market is a result of an offer historically lower to the demand and, for this reason, has aroused the interest of national private groups in the development of processed products in this segment.
The Brazilian germplasm collection of peppers like "Habanero" is very diverse (Carvalho et al., 1999). From the perspective of plant breeding, the characterization of the accessions with higher vitamin C content is interesting. Because of the red pigmentation of several samples of pepper, vitamin C content determined by classical method of dichlorophenolindophenol (DCFI) may suffer interference at the turning point. In this context, the aim of this work was to evaluate the methodology by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) (Fontanaz et al., 2006) and quantify vitamin C content in 22 accessions of Habanero peppers (C. chinense) from the Breeding Program of Embrapa Vegetable Crops.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Twenty two accessions of C. chinense "Habanero" from the Breeding Program of Embrapa Vegetable Crops were evaluated (Table 1). Planting was done in the field, in April 2009, at Embrapa Vegetable Crops, Brasília, Federal District. The fertilization was carried out according to the recommendations for the pepper crop and the plot spacing in the field was 0.4 m between plants and 0.8 m between rows. Five plants were grown per accession. In September, about 30 to 40 mature fruits were harvested per accession. In the Chemistry of Natural Products Laboratory at Embrapa Genetic Resources and Biotechnology, the fruits were selected (about 20 fruits per accession), washed, dried with paper towels, wrapped in kraft paper bags and plastic and stored at 40C until the time of extraction.
Each sample (about 20 fruits per accession) was homogenized with skin and seed in hammer mill IKA®. About 10 g of pepper pulp (three replications per sample) were weighed directly in a 100-mL volumetric flask. The vitamin C was extracted and analyzed using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), as described by Fontanaz et al. (2006). Briefly, the extraction was done with 40 mL of TCEP-HCI (tris 2-carboxyethyl-phosphine hydrocloride), adding about 30 mg of takadiastase with incubation at 300C for 30 min; the volume was completed up to 100 mL with 1% trichloroacetic acid (TCA). The extract was filtered through paper and filter Millex LCR 13 mm with a modified PTFE membrane and it was analyzed using HPLC.
The equipment used was a chromatograph (HPLC) Varian® equipped with a quaternary pump, automatic injector and photodiode array detector controlled by software Galaxie®, using LiChospher column RP-18, 5 μm, 4.6x250 mm; isocratic elution 1 mL/min; detection at 265 nm; injection volume of 20 μL. Mobile phase: 1.6 g of decylamine: 80 mL of acetonitrile: 100 mL of 0.25 M sodium acetate pH 5.4: water up to 1000 mL; 50 mg of TCEP-HCl in the final solution. The ascorbic acid identification was made by co-chromatography with standard and through comparison of the spectral profile provided by a diode array detector.
The quantification of the vitamin C content in the different accessions of C. chinense was carried out using external calibration curve, which was linear using six concentrations of ascorbic acid (Sigma®) ranging from 0.3 to 1.5 mg mL-1 (r= 0.999).
For the statistical analysis, Euclidian distant matrices between the accessions were determined, used as a measure of dissimilarity for the cluster analysis of genotypes by the average distance method (UPGMA, Unweighted Pair-Group Method using an Arithmetic Average). The analysis of variance (ANOVA) at 5% significance was used to test the hypothesis of the difference between the mean vectors of each group.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The HPLC analytical methodology used in this work (Fontanaz et al., 2006) showed extract stability and enabled the determination of vitamin C interference-free from colorful compounds or from other antioxidants (Figure 1). In Figure 1 only the chromatogram of accession CNPH '15027' was presented because the chromatograms of all the evaluated accessions showed the same chromatographic profile. The extraction solution used in HPLC method for analysis (with TCEP/TCA) showed the advantage of higher stability, when stored under refrigeration and protected from the light, if compared to the extraction using only acid solution (TCA).
The vitamin C contents ranged from 54.1 to 129.8 mg/100 g (Table 1). Based on vitamin C content, four heterogeneous groups of diversity were formed (Figure 2). The contents of the first group ranged from 116.2 to 129.8 mg/100 g, with average of 123.5±8.9 mg/100 g; the second group ranged from 94.0 to 104.6 mg/100 g, with average of 98.1±6.2 mg/100 g; the third group ranged from 76.6 to 90.0 mg/100 g, with average of 82.0±4.8 mg/100 g; the fourth group ranged from 54.1 to 66.6 mg/100 g, with average of 61.4±5.4 mg/100 g.
According to Lutz & Freitas (2008), the vitamin C content in Brazilian peppers, like "dedo-de-moça" (C. baccatum), biquinho, cumari-do-Pará, murupi (C. chinense), de-cheiro, de-bode, malagueta (C. frutescens) and jalapeño (C. annuum) ranges from 52.0 mg/100 g (jalapeño and dedo-de-moça) to 134.0 mg/100 g (murupi); the ascorbic acid contents determined in 17 accessions of Capsicum Breeding Program of Embrapa Vegetable Crops, Brasília, through the titrimetric method of Tillmans, ranged from 22.0 to 148.0 mg/100 g. The evaluation of a green and red cultivar of C. chinense var. Habanero grown in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul state, showed 10.4 and 15.3 mg/100 g of vitamin C, respectively (Oboh et al., 2007). For peppers grown in the United States, two Habanero cultivars (cv. Francisca and cv. Red Savina) showed vitamin C contents of 122.0 and 115.0 mg/100 g, respectively (Howard et al., 2000). However, an extensive study of North American Germplasm, consisting of 216 different C. chinense accessions from North, South and Central America (Jarret et al., 2009) showed a greater range of variation for ascorbic acid contents (30.0 to 1466.0 mg/100 g, with average of 391 mg/100 g) and pointed that Habanero varietal group can be further improved with respect to that trait.
The ascorbic acid and vitamin C, besides nutritional potential, contain antioxidant properties and it is present in high concentrations in several types of peppers. Maturation and storage conditions can also affect the stability and accumulation of vitamin C in fruits of Capsicum, besides genetic diversity (Howard et al., 2000; Jimenez et al., 2003). However, all the peppers used in this experiment were grown under the same controlled field conditions, allowing, this way, a comparative analysis.
The results showed variation in vitamin C contents in the accessions of this collection of C. chinense Habanero varietal group and also indicated potential to improve this variety for this vitamin. Some accessions showed vitamin C above the current daily recommendation for human diet, which is between 75 and 90 mg (Chen et al., 2003). Thus, the in natura consumption or the consumption in spicy sauces with higher antioxidants contents may contribute to these daily values to be achieved in a larger number of consumers.
(Received on November 22, 2011; accepted on November 9, 2012)
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
12 Apr 2013 -
Date of issue
Mar 2013
History
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Received
22 Nov 2011 -
Accepted
09 Nov 2012