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 cerevisiaeas 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.
Khatib, M., Cecchi, L., Zonfrillo, B., D’Agostino, S., Bertelli, D., Truzzi, E., et al. (2026). Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fermentation of Pomegranate Peel By-Product Yields Tannin-Rich Extracts and Potentially Prebiotic Polysaccharides. FOODS, 15(4), 1-21 [10.3390/foods15040605].
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fermentation of Pomegranate Peel By-Product Yields Tannin-Rich Extracts and Potentially Prebiotic Polysaccharides
Elia Pagliarini;Diana Di Gioia;
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 cerevisiaeas 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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