Delineating bioactive properties of sweet pepper advanced breeding lines adapted to Indian mid-Himalayas: A Chemometric approach
Downloads
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5958/0974-0112.2019.00105.1Keywords:
Capsicum annuum, antioxidant activity, principal component analysis, Agglomerative hierarchical clusteringIssue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 Indian Journal of Horticulture

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Abstract
Malnutrition, heart, respiratory and pulmonary diseases are becoming most critical in Mid Himalaya. Vegetables rich in micronutrients, antioxidants and bioactive compounds can help to solve the issue. Sweet pepper is one of the best choices but as it is a warm and humid loving crop and bioactive compounds are highly varied with attitude and temperature condition, the study was conducted to identify promising antioxidant rich sweet pepper lines adapted to hill condition. Thirty eight advanced breeding lines (ABLs) of sweet pepper were evaluated for variations in total polyphenol, total carotenoids, ascorbic acid and antioxidant activity in mid Himalayan region. Antioxidant activity was measured using two in vitro assays viz. 2, 2-diphenyl-1-icrylhydrazyl (DPPH) 2,2′-Azino-bis(3-Ethylbenzothiazoline-6-Sulfonic Acid) (ABTS). Additionally colour parameter capsanthin, pungency compound capsaicin and fruit firmness were evaluated. Among ABLs, significant differences (p ≤ 0.05) were obtained with respect to antioxidant composition and antioxidant activity. Ascorbic acid and total phenol varied from 39.42 - 85.12 mg/100 g and 13.01 - 71.24 mg GAE /100g fresh weight (fw) respectively, while ABTS % Inhibition and DPPH % Inhibition varies from 10.95-80.05 and 11.19-49.18 respectively. Chemometric tools like principal component analysis (PCA) and agglomerative hierarchical clustering (AHC) were applied to understand possible classification sweet pepper ABLs based on bioactive antioxidant compounds, antioxidant potentiality and fruit firmness. PCA revealed that the first two components represented 67.78% of the total variability in the total variation. AHC classified cultivars into four main groups on the basis of the measured parameters. Results suggested that VLCP-16-1, VLSM-3 and Mukteshwar for Vitamin C; VLCP-16-57, VLCP-16-54, Mukteshwar and VLCP-16-52 for polyphenols, VLCP-16-54, VLCP-16-57, VLCP-2016-52 and showed highest antioxidant activity. The result will help in advance breeding of sweet pepper for development of nutritionally rich varieties.
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- Satyabrata Pradhan, A.K. Goswami, S.K. Singh, Jai Prakash, Suneha Goswami, Chinnusamy V., Akshay Talukdar, Vartika Srivastava, Arun Kumar, Physiological and biochemical alterations due to low temperature stress in papaya genotypes , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 74 No. 04 (2017): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- S.M. Charan, Saji Gomez, K.B. Sheela, P. Meagle Joseph, C.V. Sruthi, Quality characteristics and antioxidant activity of passion fruit (Passiflora edulis Sims.) accessions , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 75 No. 02 (2018): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Prerna Nath, Eldho Varghese, Charanjit Kaur, Optimization of enzymatic maceration for extraction of carotenoids and total phenolics from sweet pepper using response surface methodology , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 72 No. 04 (2015): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Arpita Srivastava, Vinukonda Rakesh Sharma, Madhusmita Dishri, Archana Dikshit, Manisha Mangal, Pritam Kalia, Inheritance of fruit attributes in chilli pepper , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 76 No. 01 (2019): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- R.P.S Dalal, B.S Beniwal, Identification of component traits as selection criteria to improve fruit yield in Indian jujube (Zizyphus mauritiana Lamk.) , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 71 No. 03 (2014): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Pushpendra Kumar, Shruti Sethi, R.R. Sharma, Eldho Varghese, Effect of edible coatings on eating and functional quality of Japanese plum cv. Santa Rosa , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 73 No. 03 (2016): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Hira Singh, T.S. Dhillon, A.S. Sidhu, S.S. Gosal, Studies on in vitro propagation in hot pepper , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 68 No. 02 (2011): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- P. Murugesan, S. Gopakumar, Variation in phenotypic characteristics of ASD Costa Rica hybrids of oil palm in India , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 67 No. 02 (2010): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Sabina Islam, A.D. Munshi, Ravinder Kumar, T.K. Behera, S.K. Lal, Gene effects studies in sponge gourd for earliness, yield and its component traits , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 70 No. 04 (2013): Indian Journal of Horticulture
- Avilekh Bhardwaj, A.K Bhardwaj, K.B Bhushan, Rohit Kumar, Ashish R.Warghat, Tsering Stobdan, Genetic diversity studies of apricot of trans-himalaya based on morphological and SARP markers , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 78 No. 01 (2021): Indian Journal of Horticulture
<< < 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Kumari Shubha, Shri Dhar, Aniruddha Maity, Rohan Kumar Raman, Anirban Mukherjee, Influence of leaf architecture on morpho-phenological and yield related traits of garden pea , Indian Journal of Horticulture: Vol. 78 No. 02 (2021): Indian Journal of Horticulture
