Pomegranate peel, accounting for 35–50% of the fruit weight, is an underutilized agri-food by-product. This study applied, for the first time, fermentation with Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a simple and sustainable strategy to simultaneously obtain tannin-rich extracts and polysaccharide fractions with potential prebiotic activity. Peels from two cultivars, Wonderful and G1, differing in peel thickness, were subjected to three fermentation protocols (air- and not air-exposed) and monitored at 25 °C over 48 and 72 h. HPLC-DAD analysis showed that yeast-inoculated fermentation increased total tannin concentration in dry extracts (up to 70%) without inducing chemical modifications to tannin profiles. As determined by Dynamic Light Scattering, fermentation promoted significant depolymerization of native polysaccharides, while DOSY-1H-NMR analyses revealed the presence of reduced molecular weight fractions down to 26 kDa. In vitro growth assays confirmed that fermented polysaccharides were more efficiently utilized as a carbon source by Bifidobacterium breve and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum compared to non-fermented controls, likely thanks to polysaccharide depolymerization induced by fermentation. The study demonstrated that air-exposed S. cerevisiae fermentation was an effective process alternative to chemical or enzymatic hydrolysis for modifying pomegranate peel pectin directly within a complex matrix, while simultaneously enhancing tannin recovery. This approach represents a possible sustainable strategy for pomegranate peel valorization into functional ingredients.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fermentation of Pomegranate Peel By-Product Yields Tannin-Rich Extracts and Potentially Prebiotic Polysaccharides / Khatib, Mohamad; Cecchi, Lorenzo; Zonfrillo, Beatrice; D'Agostino, Silvia; Bertelli, Davide; Truzzi, Eleonora; Pagliarini, Elia; Di Gioia, Diana; Bellumori, Maria; Mulinacci, Nadia. - In: FOODS. - ISSN 2304-8158. - ELETTRONICO. - 15:(2026), pp. 605.0-605.0. [10.3390/foods15040605]
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fermentation of Pomegranate Peel By-Product Yields Tannin-Rich Extracts and Potentially Prebiotic Polysaccharides
Khatib, Mohamad;Cecchi, Lorenzo;Zonfrillo, Beatrice;D'Agostino, Silvia;Bellumori, Maria;Mulinacci, Nadia
2026
Abstract
Pomegranate peel, accounting for 35–50% of the fruit weight, is an underutilized agri-food by-product. This study applied, for the first time, fermentation with Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a simple and sustainable strategy to simultaneously obtain tannin-rich extracts and polysaccharide fractions with potential prebiotic activity. Peels from two cultivars, Wonderful and G1, differing in peel thickness, were subjected to three fermentation protocols (air- and not air-exposed) and monitored at 25 °C over 48 and 72 h. HPLC-DAD analysis showed that yeast-inoculated fermentation increased total tannin concentration in dry extracts (up to 70%) without inducing chemical modifications to tannin profiles. As determined by Dynamic Light Scattering, fermentation promoted significant depolymerization of native polysaccharides, while DOSY-1H-NMR analyses revealed the presence of reduced molecular weight fractions down to 26 kDa. In vitro growth assays confirmed that fermented polysaccharides were more efficiently utilized as a carbon source by Bifidobacterium breve and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum compared to non-fermented controls, likely thanks to polysaccharide depolymerization induced by fermentation. The study demonstrated that air-exposed S. cerevisiae fermentation was an effective process alternative to chemical or enzymatic hydrolysis for modifying pomegranate peel pectin directly within a complex matrix, while simultaneously enhancing tannin recovery. This approach represents a possible sustainable strategy for pomegranate peel valorization into functional ingredients.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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