Search results for "Fruit"

showing 10 items of 859 documents

Factors affecting the presence of ochratoxin A in wines.

2006

Ochratoxin A (OTA) are synthesized mainly by different species of Aspergillus and Penicillium being its human toxicological effects reflected in different countries due to the consumption of different foods and beverages such as red, white, rose, and special wines. This review presents an overview of the direct (meteorological conditions, grape cultivation, and wine-making techniques) and indirect (latitude, year of production, use of pesticides, presence of spoilage microorganisms, conditions of storage of the harvested grapes, type of maceration, and conditions of fermentation), factors affecting the presence of OTA in wines.

Ochratoxin AFood HandlingClimateFood ContaminationWineIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringOchratoxinschemistry.chemical_compoundMaceration (wine)VitisFood scienceMycotoxinOchratoxinWinebiologydigestive oral and skin physiologyPenicilliumfood and beveragesAgricultureGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationOchratoxinsAspergilluschemistryFruitPenicilliumFermentationFood ScienceFood contaminantCritical reviews in food science and nutrition
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Occurrence and legislation of mycotoxins in food and feed from Morocco

2009

Mycotoxins are natural food and feed contaminants, mainly produced by moulds of genera Aspergillus, Penicillium and Fusarium. The number of mycotoxins known to exert toxic effect on human and animal health is constantly increasing as well as the legislative provisions taken to control their presence in food and feed. Morocco, a North African country, surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean, has a climate characterized by high humidity and high temperature which favor growth of moulds. This paper gives an overview about the contamination levels and the occurrence of some mycotoxins (e.g. aflatoxins, ochratoxin A, and Fusarium toxins) in cereals, bread, milk, spices, wine, oliv…

Ochratoxin AFusariumAflatoxinDried fruitbiologybusiness.industrydigestive oral and skin physiologyfood and beveragesFood safetybiology.organism_classificationToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundGeographychemistryFood sciencebusinessMycotoxinZearalenoneFood ScienceBiotechnologyFood contaminantFood Control
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The loss of the inducible Aspergillus carbonarius MFS transporter MfsA leads to ochratoxin A overproduction

2014

Ochratoxin A (OTA), a nephrotoxic compound produced by certain Aspergillus and Penicillium species, is one of the most abundant mycotoxins in food commodities. Aspergillus carbonarius is the main source of OTA in wine, grape juice and dried vine fruits. Although many studies have focused on OTA production by A. carbonarius, little is known about the genes related to OTA production and transport. We have found a transporter that belongs to the major facilitator superfamily (MfsA) which is highly expressed with a 102-fold induction in an ochratoxigenic A. carbonarius strain compared to a low OTA producer strain. The encoding mfsA gene shows similarity to the multidrug efflux transporter flu1 …

Ochratoxin AOchratoxin productionGrapesGenes FungalMolecular Sequence DataWineAspergillus carbonariusBiologyMicrobiologyMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundGene Expression Regulation FungalmfsAPromoter Regions GeneticOverproductionCandida albicansMycotoxinMajor facilitator superfamily transportersAspergillusBinding SitesBase Sequencefood and beveragesTransporterGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationOchratoxinsMajor facilitator superfamilyOxidative StressAspergilluschemistryFruitEffluxGene DeletionFood ScienceInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
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Survey of mycotoxins in dates and dried fruits from Tunisian and Spanish markets

2015

Abstract In an effort to enforce the knowledge on mycotoxin occurrence and co-occurrence in dates and dried fruits, 228 samples purchased from Tunisian and Spanish markets were subjected to multi-mycotoxin liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis of 16 mycotoxins. At least one mycotoxin was detected in 160 samples (70%). The frequency of contaminated samples was 83%, 80%, 64%, 59% and 26% for dates, dried vine fruits, figs, apricots and plums, respectively but none of the analyzed samples contained detectable levels of fumonisins (FB1, FB2, FB3) or T-2 toxin (T2). The incidence and levels of mycotoxins varied in samples. The most prevalent mycotoxin was enniat…

Ochratoxin Achemistry.chemical_compoundAflatoxinchemistryDried fruitFood scienceBiologyContaminationMycotoxinFood ScienceBiotechnologyEnniatin BFood Control
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Bactrocera oleae. Fattori naturali di controllo

2019

Bactrocera oleae. Natural control factors. Natural control factors (parasitoids and climatic factors) influencing the olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae, are analysed comparing two different areas of cultivated and wild olives, Sicily and the Western Cape of South Africa. Bactrocera oleae has a similar level of parasitization in both areas, much higher in wild olives than in cultivated ones. Climatic conditions are much more important than climatic factors, influencing the growth of olive fruit fly populations, producing a higher level of infestation in more humid and rainy productive seasons.

Olive fruit fly Parasitoids Relative humidity Temperature Rain Psyttalia concolor Psyttalia lounsburyi Bracon celer Utetes africanus Psyttalia humilis Olive infestationSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicata
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Influence Of within-tree and environmental factors On fruit quality of cactus Pear (O. ficus-Indica)

2010

Introduction. Opuntia ficus-indica fruit quality was studied, in the main sites for cactus pear cultivation in Italy, with the ultimate goal of understanding the main sources of variability and increasing crop value. Materials and methods. A first study was carried out in 2006 on mature Opuntia ficus-indica trees, cvs. Gialla and Rossa, grown in ten commercial orchards located in the main sites for their cultivation in Italy. Trees were managed to produce an out-of-season crop in October, through the removal of the spring flush at bloom time, during the first week of June. Trees had a similar crop [(52 ± 10) kg of fruits•tree-1], and no more than six fruits were left on each of the fruiting…

Opuntia ficus-indica variety trials fruits yeld factors site factorsSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni Arboree
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Economic and Technical Feasibility of Betanin and Pectin Extraction from Opuntia ficus-indica Peel via Microwave-Assisted Hydrodiffusion

2019

Investigating the feasibility of betanin and pectin extraction from Opuntia ficus-indica peel via microwave-assisted hydrodiffusion and gravity, this study identifies selected important economic and technical aspects associated with this innovative production route starting from prickly pear fruit discards. Which benefits would be derived from this process? Would production be limited to Opuntia-growing countries or, likewise to what happens with dried lemon peel chiefly imported from Argentina, would production take place abroad also? Can distributed manufacturing based on clean extraction technology compete with centralized production using conventional chemical processes?

Opuntia ficus-indicafood.ingredientSettore CHIM/10 - Chimica Degli AlimentiPectinGeneral Chemical EngineeringOpuntia ficusbetainMicrowave assistedArticlelcsh:Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundfoodBetanin and Pectin Extraction Opuntia ficus-indica Microwave-Assisted HydrodiffusionbioeconomyBetaninpectinLemon peelExtraction (chemistry)circular economyGeneral ChemistryPulp and paper industryTechnical feasibilitylcsh:QD1-999chemistryPrickly Pear Fruitmicrowave assisted hydrodiffusionEnvironmental science
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Comparative training procedures to learn odor descriptors: effects on profiling performance

1999

Three groups of ten naive assessors were recruited to perform an odor profiling of 10 orange juices using 8 odor descriptors, These panels differed on the way they learned each descriptor. Group 1R learned to match one descriptor with one external standard; group 3R learned to associate one descriptor with 3 external standards; group 0R defined by itself the 8 descriptors from a set of orange juices. Results showed that the use of one standard per descriptor seemed to be only efficient when the standard was typical of the odor perception in the orange juices. Learning one odor concept with 3 standards led to redundant use of discriminant descriptors and failed on the agreement among assesso…

Orange juice0303 health sciencesOdor perception030309 nutrition & dieteticsbusiness.industryComputer science[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Pattern recognition04 agricultural and veterinary sciences040401 food scienceSensory analysisSensory Systems[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]03 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologyOdorProfiling (information science)Statistical analysisFruit juiceArtificial intelligencebusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSFood Science
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In vitro culture of albedo tissue from fruits of Citrus sinensis cv. Washington Navel: Effect of fruit age and orange juice

1994

SUMMARYCallus from citrus fruit explants has been used to study different aspects of fruit physiology. However, growth responses of callus derived from citrus fruit tissues are not always comparable with those of intact fruit; there are, for example, differences in nutritional requirements. Results with tissues cultivated in vitro seem to depend on a variety of environmental and internal factors. In the present work albedo tissue from fruits of Citrus sinensis cv. Washington Navel of different age has been used as a source of explants. The growth (fresh weight) of the calli was dependent on the age of the fruit from which the explants were taken, as well as on the addition of orange juice t…

Orange juicePlant growthHorticultureCallusFresh weightBotanyfood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologyIn vitroCitrus × sinensisCitrus fruitExplant cultureJournal of Horticultural Science
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Carotenoid Profile Modification during Refrigerated Storage in Untreated and Pasteurized Orange Juice and Orange Juice Treated with High-Intensity Pu…

2006

A comparative study was made of the evolution and modification of various carotenoids and vitamin A in untreated orange juice, pasteurized orange juice (90 degrees C, 20 s), and orange juice processed with high-intensity pulsed electric fields (HIPEF) (30 kV/cm, 100 micros), during 7 weeks of storage at 2 and 10 degrees C. The concentration of total carotenoids in the untreated juice decreased by 12.6% when the juice was pasteurized, whereas the decrease was only 6.7% when the juice was treated with HIPEF. Vitamin A was greatest in the untreated orange juice, followed by orange juice treated with HIPEF (decrease of 7.52%) and, last, pasteurized orange juice (decrease of 15.62%). The decreas…

Orange juicechemistry.chemical_classificationVitaminCitrusFood HandlingChemistryHigh intensityFood preservationPasteurizationGeneral ChemistryCarotenoidslaw.inventionBeveragesCold Temperaturechemistry.chemical_compoundElectricitylawFood PreservationFruitFruit juiceFood scienceVitamin AGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesCarotenoidJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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