Bárbara Ribeiro
University of Porto
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Featured researches published by Bárbara Ribeiro.
Food Chemistry | 2008
Bárbara Ribeiro; Rosário Lopes; Paula B. Andrade; Rosa M. Seabra; Rui Gonçalves; Paula Baptista; Inês Quelhas; Patrícia Valentão
A comparative study of the organic acids and phenolics composition and of the total alkaloids content of entire wild edible mushrooms (Russula cyanoxantha, Amanita rubescens, Suillus granulatus and Boletus edulis) and correspondent caps and stipes was performed. All species presented oxalic, citric, malic and fumaric acids, with A. rubescens exhibiting the highest total organic acids content. Organic acids were preferably fixed in the cap. Among phenolics, only p-hydroxybenzoic acid was found in A. rubescens and S. granulatus, in very low amounts. B. edulis was the species that presented the highest total alkaloid amounts. Except for this species, alkaloids mainly accumulated in the cap. All of the species exhibited a concentration-dependent scavenging ability against DPPH(·). B. edulis revealed the highest antioxidant capacity. The cap seemed to be the part with highest antioxidant potential. Some relationships between chemical composition and antioxidant capacity were considered.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Bárbara Ribeiro; Paula B. Andrade; Branca M. Silva; Paula Baptista; Rosa M. Seabra; Patrícia Valentão
A comparative study on the amino acid composition of 11 wild edible mushroom species (Suillus bellini, Suillus luteus, Suillus granulatus, Tricholomopsis rutilans, Hygrophorus agathosmus, Amanita rubescens, Russula cyanoxantha, Boletus edulis, Tricholoma equestre, Fistulina hepatica, and Cantharellus cibarius) was developed. To define the qualitative and quantitative profiles, a derivatization procedure with dabsyl chloride was performed, followed by HPLC-UV-vis analysis. Twenty free amino acids (aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine, serine, threonine, glycine, alanine, valine, proline, arginine, isoleucine, leucine, tryptophan, phenylalanine, cysteine, ornithine, lysine, histidine, and tyrosine) were determined. B. edulis and T. equestre were revealed to be the most nutritional species, whereas F. hepatica was the poorest. The different species exhibited distinct free amino acid profiles. The quantification of the identified compounds indicated that, in a general way, alanine was the major amino acid. The results show that the analyzed mushroom species possess moderate amino acid contents, which may be relevant from a nutritional point of view because these compounds are indispensable for human health. A combination of different mushroom species in the diet would offer good amounts of amino acids and a great diversity of palatable sensations.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Bárbara Ribeiro; Paula B. Andrade; Paula Baptista; Lillian Barros; Isabel C.F.R. Ferreira; Rosa M. Seabra; Patrícia Valentão
The aim of this work was to find the most useful inorganic nitrogen source to enable Leucopaxillus giganteus to become a more nutritious mushroom, regarding organic acid and phenolic composition and total alkaloids content. For these, the influence of NH 4NO 3,NaNO 2, KNO 3,, and (NH 4) 2HPO 4 on the organic acid production was determined by HPLC-UV and total alkaloid content was assessed by a spectrophotometric method, after precipitation by Dragendorffs reagent. The results showed that L. giganteus presented an organic acid profile composed of oxalic, cis-aconitic, citric, and fumaric acids, citric acid being the major one. The quantitative organic acid profile and total alkaloid content were affected by the nitrogen source and depended on the developmental stage of mycelium and nitrogen availability. Despite being present in all samples, no phenolic compound could be identified.
The Open Chemical and Biomedical Methods Journal | 2011
Bárbara Ribeiro; Paula Guedes de Pinho; Paula B. Andrade; Carla Oliveira; António César Silva Ferreira; Paula Baptista; Patrícia Valentão
Carotenoids are biologically active phytochemicals present as micro-components in fruits and vegetables, being responsible for their yellow, orange and red colors. The chromatographic behavior and the UV absorption spectrum provided by HPLC-DAD analysis constitute the clues for their identification. Mushrooms are of increasing importance in modern nutrition and medicine, due to the presence of metabolites with pharmacological potential. In this work, samples of wild and commercial mushroom species (Agaricus bisporus, Amanita caesarea, Amanita rubescens, Boletus edulis, Cantharellus cibarius, Fistulina hepatica, Hydnum rufescens, Hygrophorus agathosmus, Pholiota nameko, Pleurotus ostreatus, Russula cyanoxantha, Suillus bellini, Suillus bovinus, Suillus granulatus, Suillus luteus, Tricholoma equestre and Tricholoma portentosum) were screened by HPLC-DAD for the presence of carotenoids. By applying this methodology to 22 samples, comprising either lyophilized or fresh materials, only � -carotene was found and just in C. cibarius species. The occurrence of this pigment in other three of the analyzed species previously described raises some questions about the methodology used.
Microchemical Journal | 2009
Bárbara Ribeiro; Paula Guedes de Pinho; Paula B. Andrade; Paula Baptista; Patrícia Valentão
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
P. Guedes de Pinho; Bárbara Ribeiro; Rui Gonçalves; Paula Baptista; Patrícia Valentão; Rosa M. Seabra; Paula B. Andrade
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2007
Bárbara Ribeiro; Patrícia Valentão; Paula Baptista; Rosa M. Seabra; Paula B. Andrade
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2006
Bárbara Ribeiro; Joana Rangel; Patrícia Valentão; Paula Baptista; Rosa M. Seabra; Paula B. Andrade
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2005
Patrícia Valentão; Paula B. Andrade; Joana Rangel; Bárbara Ribeiro; Branca M. Silva; Paula Baptista; Rosa M. Seabra
Food Chemistry | 2007
Bárbara Ribeiro; Joana Rangel; Patrícia Valentão; Paula B. Andrade; J.A. Pereira; Hanna Bölke; Rosa M. Seabra