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Fruit-based food products enhance functional properties. This research is the first to examine fluctuations in biofunctional substances (isoflavone; CLA; GABA) and biological abilities (antioxidant; antidiabetic) in soy-milk (SM) and soy-yogurts (SY) using Lactobacillus strains with kiwifruit juice (0 → 5 → 10 %). Total isoflavones significantly decreased with 1231.9 → 539.3 (0 %), 1304.8 → 658.5 (5 %), and 1448.0 → 830.4 μg/g (10 %) between SMs and SYs supplemented with kiwifruit juice, while isoflavone-aglycones (genistein > daidzein > glycitein) increased considerably with 57.6 → 498.3, 64.4 → 611.5, and 78.7 → 771.3 μg/g. CLA increased, with the most abundant -9, -11 isomer (> 65 %) in SYs: nd → 1.8 (10 %) > nd → 1.0 (5 %) > nd → 0.8 mg/g (0 %). Moreover, SYs exhibited higher GABA contents than SMs in the following order: 0.7 → 1.6 (10 %) > 0.6 → 1.1 (5 %) > 0.7 → 0.9 mg/g (0 %). Antioxidant abilities were enhanced in SYs (500 μg/mL extracts) with increased kiwifruit juice, showing predominant activities at 10 % concentration: ABTS (65.5 → 93.5 %) > DPPH (49.9 → 86.9 %) > hydroxyl (35.6 → 70.4 %). Antidiabetic effects against enzyme inhibitions (α-glucosidase: 45.7 → 76.0 % > pancreatic lipase: 18.2 → 72.3 % > α-amylase: 8.6 → 65.7 %) exhibited similar patterns as antioxidant results. Thus, fermented SYs containing kiwifruit juice may be considered excellent sources of health benefits using soybeans.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fochx.2025.102889 | DOI Listing |
Food Chem X
August 2025
Department of Smart Green Resources, Dong-A University, 37, Nakdong-daero 550 beon-gil, Saha-gu, Busan, 49315, Republic of Korea.
Fruit-based food products enhance functional properties. This research is the first to examine fluctuations in biofunctional substances (isoflavone; CLA; GABA) and biological abilities (antioxidant; antidiabetic) in soy-milk (SM) and soy-yogurts (SY) using Lactobacillus strains with kiwifruit juice (0 → 5 → 10 %). Total isoflavones significantly decreased with 1231.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2025
Department of Biotechnology, University of Verona, Strada Le Grazie, Verona, Italy.
Plant-based diets are associated with both physical health and psychological wellbeing. Recent evidence suggests that kiwifruit positively affects cognitive functions and mood, but the bioactive components responsible for this are unknown. In this work, we combined two predictive preclinical models of depression (TST and FST) with untargeted metabolomics to evaluate the antidepressant activity of green kiwifruit in mice and to identify the fruit bioactive phytochemicals responsible for this effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Food Microbiol
October 2025
Department of Food Science and Engineering, College of Food Science and Engineering, Changchun University, No.6543, Satellite Road, Changchun 130022, China.
Mathematical models can be used to predict the kinetics of microbial inactivation in Actinidia arguta juice (AAJ) during ultra-high pressure (UHP) treatment. The inactivation of E. coli, S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Res Int
August 2025
Teagasc Food Research Centre, Moorepark, Fermoy, Ireland.
Human studies over the past three decades have consistently shown that lowering the pH of starch-rich meals can significantly attenuate postprandial glycaemia. Based on our previous in vitro studies demonstrating the substantial contribution of salivary α-amylase during oro-gastric digestion of neutral-pH, starch-rich meals, we hypothesized that this effect is primarily mediated by the premature, acid-induced inhibition of salivary α-amylase during oral and/or gastric digestion. This study aimed to test this hypothesis by examining the starch digestion kinetics of food combinations from three independent human studies assessing the impact of combining acidic foods (white wine vinegar, pomegranate juice or kiwifruit) with bread or breakfast cereal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutr Rev
May 2025
Madsen Building, School of Physics, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Humans spend approximately one third of their life asleep but, as counterintuitive as it may sound, sleep is far from being a quiet state of inactivity. Sleep provides the opportunity to perform numerous biological and physiological functions that are essential to health and wellbeing, including memory consolidation, physical recovery, immunoregulation, and emotional processing. Yet, sleep deprivation, chronic sleep restriction, and various types of sleep disorders are all too common in modern society.
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