Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: Renewable source of bioactive compounds

Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: Renewable source of bioactive compounds

Accepted Manuscript Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: renewable source of bioactive compounds Rocio Campos-Vega, Karen H. Nieto-Figueroa, B. Dave O...

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Accepted Manuscript Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: renewable source of bioactive compounds Rocio Campos-Vega, Karen H. Nieto-Figueroa, B. Dave Oomah

PII:

S0924-2244(17)30751-3

DOI:

10.1016/j.tifs.2018.09.022

Reference:

TIFS 2329

To appear in:

Trends in Food Science & Technology

Received Date: 27 November 2017 Revised Date:

20 September 2018

Accepted Date: 21 September 2018

Please cite this article as: Campos-Vega, R., Nieto-Figueroa, K.H., Oomah, B.D., Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: renewable source of bioactive compounds, Trends in Food Science & Technology (2018), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2018.09.022. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

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Abstract Background

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Cocoa Pod Husk (CPH) is the main by-product from the coca industry constituting 67-76 % of the cocoa fruit weight. This waste represents an important, and challenging, economic, environmental renewable opportunity, since ten tons of wet CPH are generated for each ton of dry cocoa beans.

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Scope and Approach

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This review highlights the value that can be added to this industrial co-product to generate new pharmaceutical, medical, nutraceuticals or functional food products. Key Findings and Conclusions

The quality and functionality of cocoa pod husk (CPH) has being improving through processing (fermentation, enzymatic hydrolysis, and combustion, among others), guiding to

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their use as source of volatile fragrance compounds, lipase extraction, skin whitening, skin hydration and sun screening, ruminants’ food, vegetable gum, organic potash, antibacterial and nanoparticles synthesis with antioxidant and larvicidal activities. However, their

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exploration to produce high-value-added products, specially for the food industry, is limited

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as well as their potential health benefits. Cocoa pod husk, the main by-product from cacao industry (up to 76%), is an abundant, inexpensive, and renewable source of bioactive compounds like dietary fiber, pectin, antioxidant compounds, minerals and theobromine, justifying their valorization. This review highlights the value addition that can be achieved with this valuable industrial co-product to generate new pharmaceutical, medical, nutraceuticals or functional food products. Keywords: Cocoa by-product; Antioxidants; Dietary fiber; Pectin.

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Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) pod husk: renewable source of bioactive compounds

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Rocio Campos-Vegaa*, Karen H. Nieto-Figueroaa and B. Dave Oomahb

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Programa de Posgrado en Alimentos del Centro de la República (PROPAC), Research and Graduate Studies in Food Science, School of Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, 76010 Santiago de Querétaro, Qro, Mexico. b

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Rocio Campos-Vega: [email protected] B. Dave Oomah: [email protected] Karen H. Nieto-Figueroa: [email protected] * Corresponding author: Tel.: (55) 1921200 Ext 5590.

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Retired, formerly with the National Bioproducts and Bioprocesses Program, Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Summerland, BC V0H 1Z0, Canada.

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Abbreviations

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50W

Pectin obtained by aqueous extraction in a water bath at 50 °C for 90 min

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5-ASA

5-aminosalicylic acid

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ABTS

2,2′-azinobis (3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)

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ADF

Acid detergent fiber

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BHT

Butylated hydroxytoluene

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CHPFR

Cocoa hull product from fermented and roasted beans

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CKPFR

Cocoa kernel product from fermented and roasted beans

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CLEA

Cross-linked enzyme aggregate

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CPE

Cocoa pod extract

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CPH

Cocoa pod husk

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CPHE-AgNPs

Cocoa pod husk extract synthesized with silver nanoparticles

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DA

Degree of acetylation

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DE

Degree of esterification

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DPPH

2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl

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EE

Epicatechin equivalent

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FRAP

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GAE

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HM

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IC

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IL

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LDL

Low-density lipoprotein

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LM

Low methoxy pectin

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Ferric reducing antioxidant power

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Gallic acid equivalent

High methoxy pectin Inhibitory concentration

Interleukin

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MCC

Microcrystalline cellulose

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MIC

Minimum inhibitory activity

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NA-HYP

Nitric acid extracted (pH 3.5, 100 °C, 30 min) high performance pectin

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NDF

Neutral detergent fiber

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NO

Nitric oxide

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NSP

Non-starch polysaccharides

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OP

Optimized pectin extracted with nitric acid (pH 1.5, 100 °C, 30 min)

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ORAC

Oxygen radical absorbance capacity

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Pas

Proanthocyanidins

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PDMS

Polydimetylsiloxane

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RE

Rutin equivalent

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ROS

Reactive oxygen species

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SPME

Solid-phase microextraction

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TcANR

Anthocyanidin reductase

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TcANS

Anthocyanidin synthase

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TcLAR

Leucoanthocyanidin reductase

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TDF

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TE

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TEAC

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TNF-α

Tumor necrosis factor-α

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TSH 565

Trinidad selection hybrid 565

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WAP

Weeks after pollination

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Total dietary fiber

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Trolox equivalent

Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity

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1. Introduction

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Theobroma cacao L. is claimed to be the only commercially cultivated and most prominent in

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the market among the 22 species of the Theobroma genus (World Agriculture, 2011). The

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Theobroma cacao tree probably originated from divergent areas in Central and South America;

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the Upper Amazon region (10,000 – 15,000 years ago), the upper Orinoco region of north east

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Colombia and North West Venezuela, the Andean foothills of North West Colombia, Central

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America from southern Mexico (Chiapas-Usumacinta) to Guatemala (Young, 1994). However,

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Central and South American countries account for only about 14% of the current (2016, latest

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available data) world cocoa production compared to those from African countries (⅔ of world

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production) (FAO, 2018). Three countries, Cote D’Ivoire, Ghana and Indonesia together

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cultivate and produce 61 and 67%, respectively of globally traded cocoa, whereas the top ten

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countries account for ~93% of total world cocoa production (Table 1). Global cocoa production

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is estimated at 4.59 million tonnes for 2017/2018 (ICCO, 2018). In 2016, the annual production

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of cocoa, in decreasing order, by the eight largest cocoa producing countries were Côte D’Ivoire,

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Ghana, Indonesia, Nigeria, Ecuador, Cameroon, Brazil and Malaysia. These countries together

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produced about 4.23 million tonnes, representing ~ 95% of the world production (ICCO, 2015).

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The cocoa bean constitutes one third (33%) of the fruit weight, leaving behind 67% of the fruit as

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CPH as a waste by-product (Oddoye, Agyente-Badu & Gyedu-Akoto, 2013) (Fig.1). In other

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words, ten tons of wet CPH are generated for each ton of dry cocoa beans, thereby representing a

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serious disposal problem and an underexploited resource (Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz,

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2011). Pods are fully developed (100-350 mm long, 0.2-1 kg wet weight) from pollinated

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flowers after 5-6 months. Three of the major cocoa diseases ((black pod, pod rot and cocoa pod

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borer), also known as the disease trilogy (Evans, 2007) affect the pod specifically resulting in

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significant crop loss (Fowler & Coutel, 2017). Several initiatives have therefore been undertaken

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to counter the severe crop loss, for example, development of varieties with thicker cuticle that

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are more resistant to the common black pod rot and/or other pathogens (Fowler & Coutel, 2017).

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Pod size, type and index (> 60 pods/tree, low disease incidence) are discriminating

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morphological characteristics among cocoa genotypes and therefore variation on pod traits

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(mainly pod size; length, width, thickness) may be associated with different morpho-geographic

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groups (Ballesteros, Logos & Ferney, 2015).

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The pod has been described as a natural laminated material consisting of three distinctly different

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layers: epicarp, mesocarp and endocarp (outer, middle and inner pericarp, respectively) (Fig.1).

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The endocarp is a soft whitish tissue protecting the delicate cocoa beans in a well-lubricated

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inner chamber; the mesocarp displays a hard-composite structure able to hold the cocoa beans in

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place even under high impact; and the outermost relatively soft layer is the yellow cover (when

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ripe) that is directly exposed to sunshine, after which it turns black indicating rot due to

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degradation (Babatope, 2005). These three distinct layers have been analyzed for their chemical

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composition and compared to the whole CPH when incorporated as feed component in broiler

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chick diets (Sobamiwa & Longe, 1994). High proportion of ash (47% CPH), hemicellulose

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(50%) and minerals (K, Ca and P) (41-66%) predominated in the epicarp; fiber (crude, NDF and

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ADF-44-48%) and cellulose (53 %) in the mesocarp; protein (50%), crude fat (50%) and pectin

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(59%) in the endocarp (Table 2). The epicarp was the most limiting portion of CPH in the

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feeding trial, presumably due to the antagonistic inhibitory effect of lignin and pectin on CPH

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utilization in broiler diets (Sobamiwa & Longe, 1994).

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Cocoa pod vary in color (from green [Forastero] to red [Criollo] or variable [Trinitario, the

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Forastero x Criollo hybrid]) and thickness when ripe depending on their clone. Pod color is a

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reflection of the exocarp (the outer 1-3 mm layer fruit tissue of pods harvested 18 weeks after

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pollination [18WAP]). This exocarp accumulates high levels of soluble and insoluble

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proanthocyanidins [PAs] (170 and 8 mg/g dw, respectively) compared with flowers, leaves and

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seeds due to highly expressed PAs synthesis genes [anthocyanidin synthase (TcANS),

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anthocyanidin reductase (TcANR) and leucoanthocyanidin reductase (TcLAR)]. Furthermore,

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epicatechin and catechin contents in the exocarp (18WAP) were: ~30 and 0.5 mg/g dry weight

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(dw), respectively (Liu et al., 2013); such information is unavailable for the pericarp.

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100 2. Composition

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The CPH constitutes 67-76% of the whole fruit by weight. It has been extensively investigated as

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poultry and/or livestock feed because of its protein (5.9-9.1%), fiber (22.6-35.7%), crude fat

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(1.2-10%) and mineral contents, among others (Oddoye, Agyente-Badu & Gyedu-Akpto, 2013).

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Fresh manually chopped CPH (~ 1 cm thick) had the following percent composition: organic

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matter 87, which includes crude protein, fiber, fat and nitrogen free extract (8.4, 55.7, 2.5 and

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20.6%, respectively). The fiber fraction consisted of neutral and acid detergent fibers (80.7 and

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74.6%), hemicellulose (6.0), cellulose (35.3) and lignin (38.8) with up to 40% in vitro

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digestibility (dry and organic matter) (Laconi & Jayanegara, 2015). However, total carbohydrate,

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total dietary fiber and lignin contents of CPH vary widely (Table 3). Moreover, chemical

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composition depends upon the pretreatment used to process CPH, described in the next sections.

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2.1. Drying methods

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The moisture content of fresh CPH is about 90% (Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011),

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therefore quick drying is essential to prevent deterioration; this is achieved by slicing the fresh

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pods, drying to ~65% moisture, grinding into pellets and drying the pellets to 10% moisture prior

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to storage (Oddoye, Agyente-Badu & Gyedu-Akpto, 2013). However, the type and conditions of

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drying can affect CPH composition. For example, dry milled (< 1 mm) CPH has low lipids

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(1.5% db), high ash (6.7%), protein (8.6%), total dietary fiber (36.6%) composed primarily of

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insoluble fiber (74%) and soluble phenolics (4.6%) with carbohydrates and Klason lignin

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accounting for 32.3% and 21% of CPH, respectively (Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011).

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CPH dried in a circulated air oven (80 °C, 1 day) and ground to a fine powder (22 µm) contained

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cellulose (26.4%), lignin (24.2%), hemicellulose (8.7%), carbohydrate (17.5%), ash (9%), crude

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protein (2.1%), fat (1.5%) and moisture (10.5%) (Chun, Husseinsyah & Yeng, 2016). Oven dried

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(40-45 °C) milled (< 1.68 mm) CPH contained ~ 60% total dietary fiber, predominantly non-

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starch polysaccharides (NSP) (42%), soluble sugars (13%), proteins (N x 6.25 = 9%), ash (8%),

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fat (2%), phenolics (7% dw) and minerals (0.5-6%, mainly K, P, Ca and Mg); the reducing

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sugars consisted mainly of fructose with some glucose (~ 64% of total soluble sugar). The ratio

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of insoluble to soluble dietary fiber (4.2) in addition to high water retention and swelling

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capacities (6.5 g/g and 7.3 mL/g) suggests that CPH may be suitable for improving bowel transit

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time (Yapo et al., 2013). In contrast, air dried, ground (0.40-0.45 mm) CPH had high cellulose

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(35.4% db), hemicellulose (37%), ash (12.3%), moisture (14%) and low lignin (14.7%) contents.

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The high (74%) hollocellulose [cellulose + hemicellulose] of air dried CPH indicates its

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potentially excellent quality performance for the pulp and paper industry (Daud et al., 2013).

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Hemicellullose and lignin contents increased (27 and 14%, respectively), whereas cellulose

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content decreased (10.7%) when boiled CPH was compared with directly dehydrated (48 °C, 48

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h) and milled CPH (< 1 mm). For boiling, pods were washed, chopped into ~2.5 cm pieces,

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completely covered with water and heated (98 °C, 10 min), drained and dehydrated (48 °C, 72 h)

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(Pérez et al., 2015).

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Several studies focused on improving CPH feed quality by reducing its high fiber and increasing

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protein contents. In this context, fresh anaerobically treated CPH (7 days, 3% molasses with

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Phanerochaete chrysoporium inoculum that produces lignin degrading enzymes) significantly

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increased protein content (19%, p < 0.05) concomitantly reducing crude fiber and lignin contents

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(18%, p < 0.01). Ammoniated cocoa pod with 1.5% urea increased hemicellulose content the

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most (2.2x) and reduced crude fiber content (8%), presumably by reducing its physical strength,

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disrupting the silicified cuticular barrier and cleavages of some lignin-carbohydrate bonds. Cow

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rumen exposure (3% w/w, anaerobic conditions for 7 days) reduced crude fiber, crude fat and

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lignin contents (27.5, 92 and 12.6%, respectively) of fresh CPH (Laconi & Jayanegara, 2015).

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Ground (< 250 µm) CPH treated with 0.1 M NaOH (solid to liquid ratio 50 g/L, room

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temperature, 1 h) incurred 26.6% weight loss, primarily due to lignin removal and changed its

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structure from compact and smooth to more porous and rough surface increasing its adsorption

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capacity (Pua et al., 2013). Such alkalization generally encourages dairy feed intake, increases

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buffering capacity and reduces the initial acid load of the diet thereby enabling more feed in the

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ration without triggering acidosis. CPH crude protein and total soluble carbohydrates increased

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(36%) with concomitant reduction in crude fiber, hemicellulose, cellulose, lignin and total

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tannins (17, 21, 26, 17 and 88%, respectively) on solid-state fermentation (Pleurotus ostreatus

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with 0.075% MnCl2 [w/w], 5 weeks) (Alemawor et al., 2009a). Solid state fermentation of CPH

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with Rhizopus stolonifera LAU 07 increased protein (95%) and reduced fiber (7.2%) contents

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(Lateef et al., 2008). Ten days’ fermentation with Phanerochaete chrysosporium significantly (p

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< 0.05) increased crude protein of CPH compared to unfermented CPH enabling the highest

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lignin degradation (39%) and efficient CPH bioconversion (Suparjo & Nelson, 2017). Other

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fermentation such as Rhizopus oryzae (28 °C, 6 days) of CPH and rice bran (1:9 ratio mixed

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substrate, sterilized at 121 °C, 15 min) also increased CPH protein content (14-15%), and free

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amino acids (glutamic acid 34x, aspartic acid 3.7x, alanine 4.6x and valine 1.2x) (Sriherwanto et

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al., 2016). Furthermore, enzyme cocktails (Pentopan MonoBG + Viscozyme L; Viscozyme L +

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Pectinex 5XL and Pentopan MonoBG + Viscozyme L + Pectinex 5XL) effectively maximized

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sugar release (42-53%) from CPH with a corresponding reduction (7-14%) in crude fiber and

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NSP enhancing its use in poultry feed (Alemawor et al., 2009b). In vitro natural fermentation

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(washed pods, sun-dried for 14 days and milled into powder; anaerobic fermentation for 3 days

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at room temperature) increased protein (22-116%), ash (11-31%), fat (68-75%), moisture (49-

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142%) and flavonoid (29-101%) contents of pod husk depending on cocoa clones (Criollo,

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Forastero, Trinitario). The fermentation improved CPH by reducing crude fiber (59-73%),

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phytate (20-81%) and tannin (41-87%) with negligible changes in carbohydrate contents of CPH

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(Shodehinde & Abike, 2017).

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CPH was investigated to develop and transfer appropriate technologies for animal feed

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production as part of a pilot scale production and commercialization of cocoa by-products in

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Ghana in a ten-year project (ICCO/CFC/CRIC, September 1993-July 2003). Full annual

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production capacity was about 5,500 tonnes of pelletized animal feed from CPH. The cost

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benefit and financial viability analysis indicated that the production of animal feed from CPH

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was unlikely to be economically feasible or profitable (Adomako, 2006). However, a recent

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study showed that sun dried CPH can be used at high inclusion rate (20%) to achieve similar

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feed intake and live weight gains with rabbits fed maize-based diets. In addition, CPH was

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economically beneficial compared to maize in feeding growing rabbits (Esong et al., 2015).

186 2.3. Biomass

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CPH ash has been extensively investigated particularly for its potential application as partial

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replacement of and/or combination with fertilizers, biogas and biofuels (Dias, 2014). However,

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the high ash content can inhibit the combustion process since oxygen cannot easily penetrate the

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ash to reach the burning biomass (Martínez-Ángel, Villamizar-Gallardo& Ortíz-Rodríguez,

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2015). Potassium (2.5-4% db) is the predominant CPH mineral, often up to 7% (db) in CPH from

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cocoa grown in Ghana accounting for nearly three-quarters (~70%) of the total ash weight

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(Donkoh et al., 1991). Although the high potassium concentration has been exploited for soap

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production, it can lead to potential fouling problems and consequently to formation of deposits

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and agglomerations when fired in boilers for combustion or in the gasification process

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(Martínez-Ángel, Villamizar-Gallardo& Ortíz-Rodríguez, 2015). Other important CPH minerals

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(Ca, 0.3-0.8%; Mg, 0.02-0.06%; P, 0.04-0.12%; S, 0.02-0.05% and Si, 0.5% db) together

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accounts for 19.9, 21.9 and 27.4% of ash weight (Dias, 2014; Martínez-Ángel, Villamizar-

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Gallardo& Ortíz-Rodríguez, 2015). High proportion of ash and minerals (47 and 41-66% of the

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total pod, respectively) predominate in the epicarp, the most lignified cocoa pod pericarp

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(Sobamiwa & Longe, 1994).

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The ten-year project (ICCO/CFC/CRIC) also investigated potash (ash) production from CPH for

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soft soap manufacturing. The potash from CPH is high in potassium carbonate content and as

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such makes better soap than others in the market. Potash production from CPH was deemed a

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profitable venture based on economic analysis (Adomako, 2006).

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207 2.4. Proteins

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The protein characteristics of CPH have not been adequately investigated. Reports on the protein

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characteristics of CPH are scarce and limited probably due to its reduced growth, food utilization

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efficiency and/or protein efficiency ratio observed earlier in animal diets (Donkoh, Atuahene,

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Wilson & Adomako, 1991; Fagbenro, 1995). One hundred and forty-four proteins were

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identified from 700 protein spots detected in CPH proteome by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS in

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combination with 2-DE analysis (Awang, Karim & Mitsui, 2010). Almost half of the identified

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proteins (48%) are involved in primary and energy metabolism functioning as housekeeping

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proteins. These proteins are involved in general cellular processes related to glycolysis (enolase,

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triose-phosphate isomerase, phosphoglycerate kinase), Calvin cycle, and Tricarboxylic acid cycle

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(malate dehydrogenase). Six proteins including leucoanthocyanidin dioxygenase and

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anthocyanidin reductase, cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase and polyphenol oxidase pertained to

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the phenylpropanoid pathway responsible for the production of secondary metabolites (lignins,

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flavonoids, and phytoalexins). Caffeic acid 3-O-methyltransferase and polyphenol oxidase

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involved in lignin synthesis were differentially expressed in the two clones, LAF17 with smooth

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and waxier pod surface and the cocoa pod borer-resistant ICS39 clone with harder and thicker

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sclerotic layer (Awang, Karim & Mitsui, 2010).

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2.4.1 Amino acids

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The average protein content in CPH (generally ~ 8.5%) is lower than those previously reported

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in cocoa bean husk (15%) (Bonvehí & Coll, 1999). Data on amino acids is limited to a single

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report (Donkoh et al., 1991) of CPH compared to an earlier (1984) study. CPH protein has

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higher (10-15%) levels of total and essential amino acids and above half (~ 56%) of the total

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amino acid content of bean husk (Table 4 and 5) due to asparagine, alanine, arginine, glycine,

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glutamine, lysine, serine, threonine and tyrosine concentrations. CPH had twice the acidic

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(aspartic + glutamic acids) and basic (arginine + histidine + lysine) amino acids, proline and

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valine content of bean husk, whereas the levels of histidine, leucine and methionine were similar

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in both husks. CPH protein has higher Fischer ratio and lower content of aromatic amino acids

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than those of cocoa bean husk. The lysine/arginine ratio, a determinant of the cholesterolaemic

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and atherogenic effects of protein, is low for CPH protein, but higher than those of cocoa bean

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husk. A soluble cocoa fiber product (0.79 PER, contributing 28 g protein/kg diet) obtained by

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enzymatic treatment of cocoa bean husk reduced the negative effects of dietary-induced

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hypercholesterolemia in an animal model (Ramos et al., 2008).

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The biological value (37.6%) of bean husk (Bonvehí & Coll, 1999) corresponds to the apparent

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digestibility of fresh and sun-dried cocoa pod husk (37.8 and 32.1%, respectively) reflected in

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their nitrogen retention (17 and 12.2%, respectively) in sheep rations containing 53% (dm) CPH

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(Wong & Hassan, 1988). In addition to protein, CPH also contains theobromine (~ 0.2%), a

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commercially significant appetite stimulant for ruminants (Trout, Zoumas & Tarka, 1978).

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2.5. Pectin

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2.5.1. Extraction methods and properties

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Hot water extracted pectic material from CPH contains galacturonic acid (27%), galactose

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(21%), rhamnose and arabinose, whereas ammonium oxalate (0.5%) extraction resulted in

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depolymerized pectin (Blakemore, Dewar & Hodge, 1966). Pectin has also been extracted with

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mild acetic acid (0.2 N, pH 2.8, 1:3 w/v) from ripe CPH with higher yield (8-11%, db) than those

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reported earlier (Dittmar, 1958 cited in Adomako, 1972) from sun dried CPH (5.3-7.1%). The

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acetic acid extracted pectin had the following composition: ash (8.9-9.8% comprising Ca and K

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as major components), protein (1.1%), galacturonic acid (62%), galactose (4.65%), rhamnose

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(2.9%), arabinose (1.7%) and xylose (1.2%) with carbohydrate composition similar to apple

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pectin (Adomako, 1972).

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Investigation of CPH pectins intensified after a hiatus of almost four decades, particularly in a

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series of studies by the Brazilian group (Vriesmann et al., 2011-2017). Nitric acid (pH 1.5, 100

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°C, 30 min) extraction from CPH produced highly esterified (56.5% degree of esterification

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[DE]) and acetylated (17.1% degree of acetylation [DA]) pectin (9.8%, db yield) with uronic

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acid (66%), homogalacturonan and rhamnogalacturonans; this pectin is considered high methoxy

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(HM) pectin (Vriesmann, Teófilo & Petkowicz, 2011). Hot aqueous extraction (50 °C [50W] and

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100 °C [boiling water], 90 min, 1:25, w/v) was used in a follow up study to obtain 7.5 and 12.6%

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pectin from milled and dried CPH (Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011). The water soluble

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pectins were highly acetylated (19.2 and 29% DA), composed of low methoxy

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homogalacturonans (37 and 42.3% DE) with rhamnogalacturonan insertions exhibiting non-

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Newtonian shear-thinning behavior (Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011). CPH treatment

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(aqueous citric acid pH 3, 95 min, 95 °C) yielded 10.1% (db) pectin with low moisture (2.7%),

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high carbohydrate (64%), protein (13.8%), low phenolics (9.4%), low-methoxy, highly

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acetylated homogalaturonan (DE, 40.3%; DA, 15.9%) containing 65% uronic acid and exerting

272

non-Newtonian shear –thinning behavior (Vriesmann, Teófilo & Petkowicz, 2011). The pectin

273

forms gels under low pH/high sucrose content, suggesting applications as additive in acidic

274

conditions. Similar highly acetylated (DA, 17%) CPH pectin was obtained by optimized nitric-

275

acid-mediated extraction of CPH and the best gel properties were observed at 1.32% galacturonic

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acid equivalent concentration, 60% sucrose and pH 2.7, demonstrating its use as a gelling and

277

thickening agent (Vriesmann & Petkowicz, 2013). High yield (10.7%, db) of CPH pectin (DE,

278

41%; DA, 17.6%) was obtained with nitric acid extraction (pH 3.5, 100 °C, 30 min) under reflux

279

with high uronic acid (59.2%), significant proportions of galactose (20.3%) and rhamnose

280

(11.6%). The large pectic molecule was purported to be primarily responsible for its gelling

281

properties; forming gels at low pH (< 2.5) and water activity (1% w/v; 60% v/v ethylene glycol)

282

(Vriesmann & Petkowicz, 2017). Pectin extracted with hot acid (nitric acid [pH 3, 100 °C, 30

283

min]) or citric acid [pH 3, 95 °C, 95 min]) had similar chemical composition (65% uronic acid,

284

8.2% rhamnose, 16.7% galactose, 40.3% DM and 15.9% DA) (Vriesmann & Petkowicz, 2017).

285

Extraction conditions greatly affect yield and chemical properties of CPH pectins (Table 6).

286

Thus, pectin yield from cocoa husks varied (3.4-7.6%) with uric acid content ranging from 31-

287

65% and degree of methylation (7-58%) depending on solvent and extraction conditions (Chan

288

& Choo, 2013). For example, the highest pectin yield (7.6%) is obtained with hot citric acid

289

(1.25, w/v; pH 2.5, 95 °C, 3h), whereas hot water under similar conditions (1.25 w/v; 95 °C, 3h)

290

extracts pectin with the highest uronic acid (65%) content. Furthermore, pectin yield increases

291

significantly (p < 0.05) with reduction in substrate –extractant ratio (from 1:25 to 1:10 w/v)

292

using citric acid at pH 2.5. Water and hydrochloric acid extracted low methylated (LM) pectin

293

(7.2-39.3% DM), whereas citric acid (1:25 w/v, pH 2.5, 1.5 h) produced wide degree of

294

methylation range and high methylated (HM) pectin (58%) (Chan & Choo, 2013). Similarly,

295

acidified (1N HNO3) water treatment (1:25 w/v, 75 °C, 90 min) differing in pH (1, 2 or 3)

296

produced CPH pectins varying in yield (3.7-8.6%), galacturonic acid content (51-75%),

297

galactose (5.2-13.9%), total neutral sugars (7.9-24.3%), calcium (48.6-155.7 µmol/g), degree of

298

methylation (37-52%), DA (3.2-9.8%), intrinsic viscosity (162-304 mL/g) and viscosity-average

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molecular weight (43-82 kDa) (Yapo & Koffi, 2013). Hydrochloric acid (1.58 M) extraction (62

300

°C, 4.8 h) produced CPH pectin (yield =11.7%) with high DE (58.5%) and galaturonate content

301

(49.9%) (Hutomo, Rahim & Kadir, 2016). The highest CPH pectin yield (23.3% db) was

302

obtained with hot water (1.05 g/mL) extraction in a water bath (50 °C); the pectin had low

303

moisture (0.2%), ash (1%), high DE (26.8%) and swelling (357, 275 and 360 swelling index in

304

0.1M HCl, phosphate buffer [pH 6.8], and distilled water, respectively) (Adi-Dako et al., 2016).

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305 2.5.2. Applications

307

The hot water soluble pectin had Hausner ratio of 1.17, compressibility index of 14.6% and angle

308

of repose ~38° indicating good flow properties. It was predominantly rich in potassium (2.27%),

309

magnesium (0.22%), phosphorous (0.096%) and sulphur (0.094%), copper (10.9% of minor

310

elements), zinc (8.3%) and nickel (3.7%). The pectin exhibited dose-dependent moderate

311

antimicrobial activity (minimum inhibitory activity-MIC) against Staphylococcus aureus and

312

Escherichia coli (MIC: 0.5-1 mg/mL); Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis, and

313

Salmonella typhi (MIC: 1-2 mg/mL); and Shigella spp (Adi-Dako et al., 2016). Freeze-dried hot

314

water extracted CPH pectin (26.8% DE) and 4% hot aqueous citric acid soluble pectin showed

315

no toxicity on the major haematological indices, bilirubin levels and the spleen when

316

administered up to 71.4 mg/kg in Sprague Dawley rats for 90 days (Adi-Dako et al., 2018). CPH

317

pectin can therefore be safely incorporated in pharmaceutical formulations as natural polymer

318

excipients.

319

The high methoxy pectin obtained by nitric acid was used to prepare microparticles containing 5-

320

aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) for drug delivery to the colon. The microparticles (1:1, 2:1, 3:1 and

321

4:1) obtained by spray drying showed better drug retention with increased pectin content

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(Vriesman, 2012). Saponification of this high methoxy pectin promoted distinct increase in

323

biological activities; it triggered the secretion of pro-(NO, TNF-α and IL-12) and anti- (IL-10)

324

inflammatory mediators in peritoneal microphages demonstrating its application as an immune

325

modulator (Amorim et al., 2016).

326

CPH gums have been described as essentially acidic protein-polysaccharide containing 3-5%

327

protein with galactose, glucose, rhamnose, arabinose, galacturonic acid, and glucuronic acid in

328

1:0.21:1.9:0.2: 4.2:1.3 molar ratios with high (35-40%) uronic acid content. Crude gum yield

329

(9.1% of dry CPH) similar to reported polysaccharide yields (8-11%, dw) had high potassium ion

330

(9.6% dw) concentration similar to previously observed CPH ash content (9%) (Figueira, Janick

331

& BeMiller, 1994). Alcohol extracted gum (5.25%) (sun dried samples were boiled twice with

332

70% EtOH, then extracted twice with boiling 70% MeOH) from CPH exhibited pseudoplastic

333

behavior obeying the power law flow model with high viscosity (1053 mPas at 5%

334

concentration) similar to karaya gum (1160 mPas at 3% concentration) (Samuel, 2006). CPH

335

gum can potentially substitute costly karaya gum, at least partly in many formulations.

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2.6. Phenolics and antioxidants

338

2.6.1. Effect of the extraction methods

339

Total phenolic content of CPH ranged between 46 to 57 mg gallic acid equivalent (GAE)/g dry

340

matter (Karim et al., 2014b). However, lower total phenolic (2.1-3.7 mg GAE/g) has been

341

reported depending on the location of cocoa growth and solvent system used in extraction. For

342

example, methanol: acetone extracted higher total phenolic of CPH from two locations (Cone

343

and Taura) in Ecuador (3.53 and 3.65 mg GAE/g) than ethanol (2.07 and 2.27 mg GAE/g) that

344

was reflected in their antioxidant activities (38 and 44 µM TE/g ABTS, 34 µM TE/g DPPH and

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4.6 µM TE/g FRAP) compared to ethanol (24 µM TE/g ABTS, 18 and 21 µM TE/g DPPH and 2

346

µM TE/g FRAP) (Martínez et al., 2012). Acetone-water (7:3 v/v) and ethanol (70%) extracted

347

CPH phenolics (94.92 and 49.92 mg GAE/g extract, respectively) with the acetone extract

348

exhibiting antifungal activity against Fusarium oxysporum (Mu’nisa, Pagarra & Maulana, 2018).

349

Pods chopped into 1 cm2, sun dried and ground (1 mm) contained phenolic acid (19.6-49.5 mg

350

GAE/g) and flavonoid (4-22.4 mg rutin equivalent [RE]/g) depending on the clone (Karim et al.,

351

2014a). Several polyphenolic compounds were identified by LC-MS/MS in CPH extract (80%

352

aqueous ethanol, 40 °C, 30 min); phenolic acids (protocatechuic acid and its derivatives and p-

353

hydroxybenzoic acid), flavonoids (apigenin, rhamnetin, kaempferol derivatives, flavone

354

derivatives), luteolin, apigenin and linarin (Karim et al., 2014b). Some of these phenolics

355

quantified in fresh CPH consisted of catechin (36%), quercetin (21%), epicatechin (21%) and

356

gallic (11.3%), coumaric (6.5%) and protocatechuic (4.5% of total phenolic compounds) acids

357

(Valadez-Carmona et al., 2017). The total phenolics, flavonoid and flavonol contents of the fresh

358

CPH was 3.24 mg GAE/g, 0.97 mg and 0.34 mg epicatechin equivalent (EE)/g, dw respectively

359

(Valadez-Carmona et al., 2017).

360

Aqueous ethanol (80%) extract of the pod exhibited high antioxidant activity (0.26 and 0.57 EC50

361

for DPPH or 20.35 and 45.26 mg/ml) about four times lower than that of BHT. The extract (1 g)

362

also displays strong ferric reduction potential reducing 80 mol of Fe2+ from Fe3+ (Karim et al.,

363

2014a). Ethanol extract (50% aqueous ethanol) from a Colombian cocoa clone (TSH 565)

364

contained epicatechin (0.25-0.35 mg/g) and varied in antioxidant activity (FRAP 137-169 µM

365

TE/g; ABTS 116-230 µM TE/g; ORAC 252-343 µM TE/g) depending on the extraction process

366

(Sotelo, Alvis & Arrázola, 2015). Low- molecular weight soluble phenolics obtained by three

367

step sequential extraction exhibited strong antioxidant activities (85% DPPH inhibition, EC50 =

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25 g/g; 52 µM TE/g ABTS and 130 µM TE/g FRAP) significantly higher (p < 0.05) than those of

369

fermented and roasted cocoa hull and kernel products (Yapo et al., 2013). The antioxidant

370

capacity of fresh CPH was 30.6 and 15.1 µM TEAC/g (ABTs and DPPH assays, respectively)

371

similar to those reported earlier (38 and 33 µM TEAC/g for ABTS and DPPH, respectively,

372

(Martínez et al., 2012).

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373 2.6.2. Effect of processing method

375

Processing affects CPH polyphenolic content. For example, microwave drying (595 W, 11.5

376

min) increased total phenolics (3.4x), flavonoid (5.8x), flavonol (5.8x), phenolic compounds

377

(catechin 2.2x, quecetin 73%, epicatechin 3.3x, gallic acid 3.8x, coumaric acid 4.9x and

378

protocatechuic acid 5.9x) and antioxidant capacity (ABTS 2.9x and DPPH 3.9x) of CPH,

379

compared to hot air and freeze-drying (Valadez-Carmona et al., 2017). Pre-treatment to prevent

380

enzymatic (polyphenol oxidase) oxidation such as soaking (1% citric acid, 15 min) before sun

381

drying significantly (p < 0.05) increased total phenolic (24%) and flavonoid (13%) contents

382

compared to unsoaked sun dried CPH (Sartini, Asri & Ismail, 2017). Furthermore, ultrasound

383

(60 Hz, 2 h) extracted significantly (p < 0.05) higher phenolic than those obtained by agitation

384

(200 rpm, 6 h) (21-23 vs 16-19 mg GAE/g) (Sotelo, Alvis & Arrázola, 2015). Total phenolic

385

content (extracted by 50% (v/v) ethanol solution, 35 °C, 150 rpm, 2h) of dried (60 °C, 24 h) CPH

386

decreased 42% on sterilization (autoclave 120 °C, 20 min) and increased 37% after solid-state

387

fermentation with Rhizopus stolonifera NRRL 28169 ((30 °C, pH 5.5, 72 h), presumably due to

388

the generation of new bioactive molecules (Tiburcio, 2017). HPLC of aqueous ethanol extract of

389

CPH revealed the presence of 24 phenolic peaks with 3 major unidentified components

390

accounting for 72% of the total peak area compared to 14 peaks with 3 major peaks accounting

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for 81% of the total peak area (33% higher than CPH) in R. stolonifera fermented CPH.

392

Furthermore, CPH displayed higher concentrations of phenolic compounds compared to

393

fermented CPH although the latter exhibited superior antioxidant activity (DPPH and ORAC)

394

than CPH, presumably due to polyphenolic hydrolysis and/or transformation (Tiburcio, 2017).

395

Industrial fermentation such as those used for cocoa bean (6 days in wooden boxes) from

396

Mexican cocoa genotypes can be simulated (applied) to increase phenolic content of CPH similar

397

to those reported for cocoa bean husk (Hernández-Hernández et al., 2018). Total polyphenol and

398

tannin levels decreased by ≥ 11 and ≥ 89%, respectively after fungal treatment (Aspergillus niger

399

or Talaromyces verruculosus 0.15% w/w, moisture 1:3 w/v, 7 days) to eliminate theobromine

400

and reduce ochratoxin A content of CPH (Oduro-Mensah et al., 2018). Similar reduction in

401

phenolic concentration occurred on cocoa shell after solid state fermentation with Penicillium

402

roqueforti without affecting flavonol and anthocyanin contents, indicating significant

403

consumption of these metabolites during fermentation (Lessa et al., 2018). However, CPH

404

antioxidant capacity generally increased after solid state fermentation by Rhizopus stolonifera

405

LAU 07. The IC50 of the CPH substrates (fermented/unfermented – 5.5/14.7 mg/mL) increased

406

2.7 folds in DPPH-scavenging capacity (Lateef et al., 2008).

407

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2.7. Volatiles

409

A recent study (Tiburcio, 2017) identified 50 volatile compounds in CPH by SPME (5/95%

410

Carboxen/Polydimethylsiloxane, 75 µm) followed by desorption and separation on 95% PDMS,

411

5% phenyl GC column (30 m x 0.25 mm, 0.25 µm film thickness). These compounds consisted

412

of 16 alcohols, 11 hydrocarbons, 8 aldehydes, 7 ketones, 5 esters, 2 amines and isovaleric acid.

413

Solid-state fermentation of CPH with Rhizopus stolonifera NRRL 28169 (incubated in a rotatory

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shaker 100 rpm, 30 °C, pH 5.5, 7 days) reduced the number (from 50 to 33) of identified volatile

415

compounds. Thirteen volatile compounds [(2S,4S)-(+)-pentanediol, 1-methoxy-2-butanol, 2,3-

416

butanediol, epoxylinalol, phenylethyl alcohol, D-limonene, α-copaene, ethyl iso-allocholate,

417

methyl N-hydroxybenzenecarboximidoate, methyl salicylate, nonanal, octanal, and α-toluic

418

aldehyde] were present in both fermented and unfermented CPH (Table 7).

419

Ten volatiles in CPH are present in cocoa, five (2,3-butanediol, phenylethyl alcohol, nonanal, α-

420

toluic aldehyde and methyl salicylate) of which have been identified in both unfermented and

421

fermented CPH. 2,3-Butanediol imparts sweet chocolate notes reminiscent of the natural odor of

422

cocoa butter, whereas α-toluic acid (2-phenylacetaldehyde) and methyl salicylate confer floral

423

and nutty sensory perceptions, respectively (Aprotosoaie, Luca & Miron, 2016). Phenylethyl

424

alcohol (2-phenylethanol) is associated with the typical “floral” volatiles of dark chocolate

425

extracts resulting from microbial actions occurring during fermentation. It is also the most odor-

426

active compound in dried and fermented cocoa (Álvarez et al., 2016). Linalool, trans-linalool

427

oxide and isovaleric acid were identified only in nonfermented CPH.

428

phenylethanol are major alcohols in roasted nibs; linalool concentrations in cocoa vary with its

429

origin: West Africa (0-0.5 mg/kg), Malaysia (0-0.2 mg/kg) and Ghana (0.2-0.8 mg/kg). The

430

linalool/benzaldehyde ratio has been proposed as a flavor index for cocoa. Isovaleric acid has

431

been identified in fermented cocoa beans as a result of sugar metabolism. Benzyl alcohol, also

432

known as α-methylbenzyl alcohol and 1-hexanol were identified in the fermented CPH; the latter

433

confers fruity and green notes in cocoa (Aprotosoaie, Luca & Miron, 2016).

Linalool and 2-

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2.8. Other compounds

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The methyl ester of linoleic acid (9,12-octadecadenoic acid) is one of the three major

437

components of CPH ethanol (70%) extract (Mu’nisa, Pagarra & Maulana, 2018). Linoleic acid in

438

turn is the predominant (53% of the total peak area) component of bio-oil obtained from sun-

439

dried (1-2 weeks) and ground (< 1 mm) cocoa pod husks by pyrolysis (550-600 °C). The bio-oil

440

also contained palmitic, carboxymethoxy succinic, linolenic, hexanoic, caproic, pyruvic, azelaic

441

and caprylic acids (13.2, 5.6, 5.3, 3.8, 3.3, 2.2, and 2.0% of total peak area, respectively) (Adjin-

442

Tetteh et al., 2018). Linoleic acid was also present in petroleum extract (Soxhlet) of sundried (10

443

days) ground CPH powder along with other fatty acids (arachidic, palmitic, pentadecanoic,

444

stearic acids) and other compounds (Adewole et al., 2013).

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445 3. Uses and applications

447

3.1. Fragrance compounds

448

CPH impregnated with nitrogen sources has been used for the synthesis of volatile fragrance

449

compounds by a Rhizopus oligosporous strain. Solid-phase microextraction (SPME) coupled

450

with GC-MS revealed maximum abundance of volatile fragrance components when CPH was

451

fermented for 96 h (1 x 105 inoculum spores/g, 24 °C, 4-5 mm substrate thickness and pH 6.5).

452

The highest numbers and abundance of volatile compounds was obtained with L-phenylalanine

453

as the nitrogen source. This demonstrates CPH potential as an inert support for secondary

454

metabolite bioconversion by fungus strain, i.e. volatile fragrance components in a solid state

455

fermentation system (Norliza, 2006). Another study by the same group (Norliza & Rozita, 2006)

456

showed the release of three compounds, benzaldehyde, phenetyl alcohol and phenyl

457

acetaldehyde when CPH (1 mm) was mixed with L-phenylalanine (2.5, 3.0 and 3.5%, w/w) and

458

fermented with Rhizopus oligosporous for 4 days.

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Furthermore, many of the compound identified by Tiburcio (2017) in both fermented and

460

unfermented CPH [1-octen-3-ol, nonanal, octanal, α-terpineol, ionones, methyl salicylate, β-

461

hydroxybutyric acid methyl ester, α-methylbenzyl alcohol and rosefuran] are well-known

462

flavor/aroma compounds (Table 5).

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463 3.2. Skin & hair treatment

465

The skin whitening effect of CPH aqueous ethanol (80%) extract was demonstrated based on in

466

vitro mushroom tyrosinase assay and sun screening effect (UV-absorbance at 200-400 nm

467

wavelength) (Karim et al., 2014b). Resveratrol and fatty acids, such as linoleic acid, in CPH has

468

been reported to have in vitro skin whitening properties without adverse effects (Ohguchi et al.,

469

2003; Parvez et al., 2006). When tyrosinase enzyme activity is inhibited, melanin production is

470

reduced, resulting in a fairer skin (Karim et al., 2014b). The extract induced human fibroblast

471

cell proliferation at low concentration and displayed UVB sunscreen potential superior than

472

commercial UV-protecting agents (avenobenzone and octylmethoxycinnamate). It was also

473

highly effective against collagenase, better than kojic acid (a skin-lightening cosmetic product),

474

although lower against elastase and tyrosinase than pine bark extract (positive control, effective

475

in maintaining cellular function which affects the skin condition) (Karim et al., 2014b).

476

Application of gel from the CPE extract reduced in vivo skin wrinkles within 3 weeks and after 5

477

weeks (6.4, and 12.4%, respectively); skin hydration also increased (3%) after 3 weeks’

478

application (Karim et al., 2016).

479

Cocoa pod ash is a commercial ingredient used as a component of African Black Soap that in

480

turn is used in environmentally-free conditioning cleansing cream (Koiteh, 2013).

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3.3. Animal appetite stimulant

483

CPH stimulates appetite in ruminants due to the presence of theobromine (0.2-0.25% weight),

484

particularly at low theobromine (0.05-0.1%) inclusion in the feed. This commercially significant

485

appetite stimulation enables weight gain in a short time to bring animals to market sooner due to

486

increased feed consumption (Trout, Zoumas & Tarka, 1978). CPH contains approximately 0.15-

487

0.4% (w/w) theobromine limiting its inclusion to 13.7% (w/w) in animal feed due to the 300

488

mg/kg theobromine content limit imposed by the European Union (Oduro-Mensah et al., 2018).

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491

The pod may be used as a texturizing agent after drying (30-60% moisture) and grinding to

492

extremely small size (0.05-0.12 inch). Juice from the pods can be separated from the

493

parenchymatous tissues (cocoa fruit flesh representing 82% of the fruit) to form a pure

494

hydrocolloid derivative that can be used as conventional vegetable gum (Drevici & Drevici,

495

1980). The juice imparts high viscosity, preserves aroma, odor and color of products and

496

improves rheological properties due to its carbohydrate composition (galacturonic acid,

497

galactose, rhamnose, arabinose and xylose with galacturonic acid) (Drevici & Drevici, 1980).

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3.5. Antibacterial

500

Some CPH extracts are effective against two major bacteria responsible for most hospital

501

infections: Gram negative Salmonella choleraesuis (1 mg/mL MIC) and Gram positive

502

Staphylococcus epidermidis (2.5 mg/mL MIC). The extract also exhibited strong inhibitory

503

activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Santos et al., 2014). Fractionation (solvent partition)

504

of CPH extracts enabled identification of bioactive molecules such as phenols, steroids, or

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terpenes. The extract was prepared by air drying (3 months) chopped pieces of husks (1.5-2.5 cm

506

wide), pouring distilled water over the husks and collecting the aqueous extract that was dried

507

(room temperature, 72 h) and ground (< 1.5 mm). The dry crude water extract represents 0.16%

508

of the fresh CPH (Santos et al., 2014).

509

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3.6. Nanoparticles larvicidal & antioxidant

511

CPH extract synthesized with silver nanoparticles (CPHE-AgNPs) exhibited antioxidant activity

512

with potent larvicidal activity (70-100% at 10-100 µg/ml; 43.5 µg/ml LC50) against Anopheles

513

mosquito larvae at 10-100 µg/ml concentration. The CPHE-AgNPs exhibited high stability,

514

antioxidant activity (33-85% and 14-84% DPPH-free radical scavenging and ferric ion reducing

515

activities at 20-100 µg/ml; 49.7 IC50) and synergistically improved (43-100%) antibacterial

516

activities of cefuroxime and ampicillin. The nanoparticles effectively in vitro inhibited multidrug

517

resistant Klebsiella pneumonia and Escherichia coli isolates at 40 µg/ml concentration and also

518

inhibited Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Aspergillus

519

flavus, Aspergillus fumigatus and Aspergillus niger growth in emulsion paint (Lateef et al.,

520

2016).

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3.7. Encapsulating agent

523

CPH has also been investigated in green chemistry for the synthesis of nanoparticles against

524

multidrug resistant clinical bacteria because of its antioxidant, antimicrobial and larvicidal

525

activities (Lateef et al., 2016). Alpha-cellulose was obtained from CPH (26% yield) with 2.74%

526

ash, high crystallinity (27%), molecular weight (63,342) and 390 degree of polymerization

527

[glucose units] (Hutomo et al., 2012). CPH pectin may also serve as a suitable encapsulating

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528

agent alone or in combination with nanolignocellulose as demonstrated for citrus pectin to

529

protect probiotics in low pH fruit juice and gastrointestinal tract (Khorasani & Shojaosadati,

530

2017).

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533

Candida boidinii XM02G, isolated from cocoa cultivation areas, has been used to produce

534

xylitol from CPH. Xylitol was obtained in concentrations of 11.34 g.L-1, corresponding to a

535

yield (Yp/s) of 0.52 g.g-1 with a fermentation efficiency (ε) of 56.6% (Santana et al., 2018).

536

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3.9. Other valuable compounds

538

Ash (average yield 7.2%) from controlled combustion of CPH contained about 75% potash as

539

potassium carbonate with 1% impurities (iron, calcium and magnesium) that renders the organic

540

potash a premium product suitable for the pharmaceutical and food industries (Woode, 2015).

541

The high potassium content of CPH enables its use as a catalyst for biodiesel production due to

542

microstructural development when calcined at 700 °C for 4 h (Betiku et al., 2017). Carbonization

543

of dried and refined CPH with activated carbon reduces free fatty acid absorption (87%) of waste

544

cooking oil. This CPH can potentially be used as a potassium carbonate catalyst in the

545

transesterification process for biodiesel production from waste cooking oil (Rachmat, Mawarani

546

& Risanti, 2018). Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC - 5-10 µm rod-like shape, 11.635 nm

547

diameter and 74% crystallinity) was obtained by subjecting CPH to alkali treatment, bleaching,

548

and hydrochloric acid hydrolysis. This MCC can be used as a reinforcing agent with starch (2:8

549

mass ratio) and glycerol (20%) to produce high tensile strength (0.637 MPa) bioplastics (Lubis et

550

al., 2018).

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CPH can be hydrolyzed (1M HCl, 4 h, 75 °C) to yield maximum glucose (30.7%, w/v) that

552

produces ethanol (17.3 %, v/v) on fermentation (26 h) with Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Samah et

553

al., 2011).

554

Lipase extraction from CPH was achieved with the highest enzyme activity using response

555

surface methodology. Cross-linked enzyme aggregate (CLEA) was produced in the presence of

556

ammonium sulphate (30 mM) and stabilized/immobilized with glutaraldehyde (70 mM) and

557

bovine serum albumin (0.23 mM) (Yusof et al., 2016). The immobilized lipase had superior

558

stability in response to temperature (25-60 °C) and pH (5-10), and hydrophilic organic solvents

559

such as methanol (60%) compared to the free enzyme. The highest yield of lipase (11.43 U/ml)

560

was obtained with 7% CPH and 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8) (Khanahmadi et al.,

561

2015).

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CPH can be easily converted into valuable products similar to those proposed and commercially

564

viable for cocoa shells. In this context, the pyrolysis plant (GmbH, Germany) can industrially

565

produce 3 products: charcoal (65-75%) as the main product of low temperature (250-300 °C)

566

torrefaction/carbonization; pyrolysis fuel (30-50%) and charcoal (25-35%) at medium

567

temperature (300-550 °C) vaporization; syngas (60-80%) and charcoal (15-20%) at high

568

temperature (600-1000 °C) gasification (Voigt, 2017). The three products, charcoal, pyrolysis

569

fuel and non-condensable gas account for 38, 32 and 30% of the total output volume,

570

respectively from the pyrolysis process. Thus, charcoal (280 kg/h) and biofuel (230 L/h) are

571

produced from an infeed of CPH (1 t/h) amounting to 60,000 Euros equivalent to an annual

572

saving of 504 million Euros. Furthermore, the Bühler shell burning technology can save

573

producers up to 50% in total cocoa production costs by CPH combustion system thereby

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574

reducing their carbon footprint by up to 2800 t/a. Fig. 2 summarizes the potential applications of

575

CPH.

576 4. Potential health benefits

578

Notwithstanding the foregoing, the utilization of CPH to enhance the quality and functionality of

579

pharmaceutical and food products is limited. Moreover, no research is available on the health

580

benefits of bioactive compounds from CPH. Therefore, in this section the health benefits of these

581

compounds from other plants are presented.

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4.1. Pectins

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The readily available CPH can be used to recover value-added compounds such as pectins.

585

Pectins extracted from several plant by-products are widely used as gelling, thickening and

586

stabilizing agents and have several positive effects on human health, including lowering

587

cholesterol and serum glucose levels, reducing cancer and stimulating the immune response

588

(Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011).

589

Pectin favorably influences cholesterol levels in blood. It helps reduce blood cholesterol in a

590

wide variety of subjects and experimental conditions as comprehensively reviewed

591

(Sriamornsak, 2001). Consumption of at least 6 g/day of pectin is necessary to have a significant

592

effect in cholesterol reduction, lower amounts are ineffective (Ginter et al., 1979). Pectin acts as

593

a natural prophylactic substance against poisoning with toxic cations. It is effective in removing

594

lead and mercury from the gastrointestinal tract and respiratory organs (Kohn, 1982). Pectin’s

595

high water binding capacity provides a feeling of satiety, thus reducing food consumption.

596

Experiments showed a prolongation of the gastric emptying half-time from 23 to 50 minutes of a

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597

meal fortified with pectin (Holt et al., 1979). These attributes of pectin are used in the treatment

598

of overeating-related disorders (Di Lorenzo et al., 1988).

599 4.2. Minerals

601

Four minerals (K, P, Ca and Mg) detected in CPH are quantitatively important (0.5- 6.0%). The

602

presence of these CPH minerals which are required for maintaining vital functions in living

603

human cells makes it a potential source of those elements (Yapo et al., 2013).

604

Minerals are essential constituents of skeletal structures such as bones and teeth; play a key role

605

in the maintenance of osmotic pressure, and thus regulate the exchange of water and solutes

606

within the animal body; serve as structural constituents of soft tissues; they are essential for the

607

transmission of nerve impulses and muscle contraction; minerals play a vital role in the acid-base

608

equilibrium of the body, and thus regulate the pH of the blood and other body fluids; also serving

609

as essential components of many enzymes, vitamins, hormones, and respiratory pigments, or as

610

cofactors in metabolism, catalysts and enzyme activators (FAO, 2017).

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611 4.3. Dietary fiber

613

The total dietary fiber in CPH (59%) includes 11 and 48% of soluble and insoluble dietary fiber,

614

respectively (Yapo et al., 2013). CPH contains higher TDF compared to other dietary fiber

615

sources, such as citrus (35-37%), apple (51%) and banana (33-52%) by-products, but lower than

616

those of coconut fiber (63%), pea hull (75%) and yellow passion fruit rind (74-82%) by-products

617

(Yapo et al., 2013).

618

High dietary fiber intake increases stool weight and transit time which may deter large bowel

619

disorders such as constipation, diverticulitis and large bowel cancers (Elleuch et al., 2011). Most

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non-absorbed carbohydrates have laxative effects, both by increasing bacterial mass or osmotic

621

effects, and by water binding of unfermented fiber. The etiology of cancer involves both

622

inherited and environmental (dietary) factors. The overall evidence for an effect of total fiber

623

intake on the risk of colorectal cancer is not considered sufficient to serve as a basis for

624

guidelines on dietary fiber intake. However, individuals with lesser fiber intakes may have an

625

increased risk (Mudgil & Barak, 2013).

626

Recent observational studies consistently show an inverse association between dietary fiber

627

intake and the risk of coronary heart disease (Mudgil & Barak, 2013). Postulated mechanisms for

628

lower levels of total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol include alterations in

629

cholesterol absorption and bile acid re-absorption, and alterations in hepatic metabolism and

630

plasma clearance of lipoproteins (Theuwissen & Mensink, 2008). In some countries the evidence

631

for the cholesterol-lowering properties of certain viscous fibers, especially β-glucans from oats,

632

is considered sufficient for claims on the reduction of the risk of coronary heart disease (Mudgil

633

& Barak, 2013).

634

Some cohort studies inversely associate dietary fiber intake and the risk of developing type 2

635

diabetes (Chandalia, 2000). Furthermore, viscous fibers such as pectin and guar gum delay

636

gastric emptying, whereas slowly digested starch and resistant starch increase satiety in vivo

637

(Mudgil & Barak, 2013). Presumably other, as yet unidentified substances in such foods can

638

explain this; perhaps it is the overall combination of the dietary fiber, nutrients and bioactive

639

substances acting synergistically, that is critical to health. However, dietary fiber such as

640

resistant starch, non-digestible oligosaccharides and polydextrose may help to prevent and

641

alleviate bowel disorders, and decrease risk factors for coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes

642

(Kaczmarczyk, Miller & Freund 2012).

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643 4.4. Antioxidants compounds

645

Polyphenols are among the other bioactive compounds found in CPH. Polyphenolic compounds

646

usually accumulate in the outer parts of plants, such as shells, skins and husks (Vriesmann,

647

Amboni & Petkowicz, 2011). The total phenolic content of CPH is estimated at ∼7% and

648

significantly higher (p < 0.05) than in cocoa hull product from fermented and roasted beans

649

(CHPFR) (∼2-3%) and cocoa kernel product (CKPFR) (Yapo et al., 2013). Therefore, CPH can

650

be a potential source of antioxidant-dietary fiber-rich food, which may be used to compensate for

651

their shortage or complete lack in refined modern diets currently associated to various free

652

radical-induced disorders (Yapo et al., 2013).

653

Free radicals, or Reactive oxygen species (ROS), play a biochemical role in the development of

654

cancer, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, rheumatoid and inflammatory diseases. Metabolic

655

disease and environmental contaminants may increase ROS in tissues, leading to increased

656

oxidative stress in cells. However; antioxidants are able to ‘scavenge’ free radicals from the

657

body, reducing oxidative stress and the potential development or progression of many disease

658

states (Zumbé, 1998). Studies with procyanidins BI and B3 and (+)-catechin show that these

659

polyphenols are capable of trapping hydrophilic peroxyl radicals in vitro, and their radical

660

scavenging activity increases with polyphenol concentration (Ariga & Hamano, 1990).

661

Furthermore, antioxidant activity of polyphenols has been demonstrated in vitro to prevent lipid

662

peroxidation, a type of ROS induced cell injury and low density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation

663

(Zumbé, 1998).

664

The anti-genotoxic effect of catechin, epicatechin, gallocatechin and epigallocatechin have all

665

been demonstrated in vitro, protecting organisms such as S. typheriurn and E.coli against

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mutation following exposure to various known carcinogens. This protective, anti-genotoxic

667

effect of the polyphenols has also been demonstrated in in vitro studies of mammalian cells

668

exposed to such cancer inducers as nitrosamine, benzo[a]pyrene, aflatoxin BI, tobacco smoke

669

and smoked meat extracts. Furthermore, polyphenols prevent DNA damage in vitro and in vivo

670

following exposure to these types of compound (Agarwal & Mukhtar, 1996; Yang et al., 1996).

671

Bioactive compounds extracted from CPH can exert potential health benefits and may therefore

672

be an alternative source of these important components (Fig.3).

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673 Conclusions

675

There is an urgent need for practical and innovative ideas to use this low cost CPH and exploit its

676

full potential increasing the overall sustainability of the cocoa agro-industry. Since changes

677

towards better efficiency and sustainability can also involve actions to improve the valorization

678

of by-products and of food related waste, the large amounts of organic compounds (i.e. pectin,

679

antioxidants, dietary fiber and minerals) contents in the CPH justify its valorization. CPH is a

680

good source of nutraceuticals, however their use in food industry is minimal partly due to limited

681

research. CPH potential food applications include extraction of aroma compounds, vegetable

682

gums, or texturizing agents, among others.

683

This by-product can be tailored through processing for diverse functionality and bioactivity.

684

Furthermore, CPH should be explored as a functional ingredient generating healthy and

685

innovative functional food, cosmetic and medical products.

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Conflict of interest: The authors declare no competing interests.

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Acknowledgements

689

Author Karen Haydeé Nieto Figueroa, was supported by a scholarship from the Consejo

690

Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACyT-Mexico) [grant number 854976]. The funding

691

provided by UAQ (Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro) and CONACyT-Fondos Mixtos

692

(FOMIX-QRO-279751) are appreciated.

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Table 1 Cultivation and production of cocoa from top ten countries.

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%Total 27.96 16.51 16.69 7.10 8.22 7.06 4.45 1.23 1.70 1.63

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Adapted from FAO, 2018.

%Total 32.96 19.23 14.71 6.53 5.30 4.79 3.98 2.42 1.82 1.26

Cultivation (Hectares) 2,851,084 1,683,765 1,701,351 723,853 838,046 720,053 454,257 125,580 172,940 165,844

SC

Country Cote D'Ivoire Ghana Indonesia Cameroon Nigeria Brazil Ecuador Peru Dominican Republic Colombia

Production (Tonnes) 1,472,313 858,720 656,817 291,512 236,521 213,843 177,551 107,922 81,246 56,163

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Table 2 Structural composition of cocoa pods. CPH 80.2 9.1 5.9 22.6 61.0

Epicarp 82.8 10.1 5.0 17.3 62.0

Mesocarp 64.0 4.6 1.9 29.5 80.0

ADF Nitrogen-free Crude fat (ether extract) Cellulose Hemicellulose Lignin Pectin Ca K P Mg mg/kg Na Zn Fe Cu

50.0 62.2 1.2 35.0 11.0 14.6 6.1 0.32 3.18 0.15 0.22

45.0 66.8 0.8 30.0 17.0 15.0 5.1 0.58 4.61 0.16 0.39

70.0 63.7 0.3 57.5 10.0 12.0 2.1 0.19 1.56 0.06 0.10

9.1 64.9 197.1 13.2

6.0 23.5 106.3 5.6

7.2 30.8 112.4 7.1

103.2

21.3

31.9

33.6

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EP

Adapted from Sobamiwa & Longe (1994).

34.0 70.0 1.1 20.8 7.0 13.2 10.5 0.13 2.66 0.09 0.15

SC

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Mn

3.1 40.4 90.1 7.2

Endocarp 87.1 6.7 6.9 15.3 41.0

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Component (%) Moisture Ash Protein Crude Fiber NDF

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Table 3 Chemical composition (%) of cocoa pod husk. Reference

Moisture Protein

Ash

Lipid

Total carb

Vriesmann, Amboni 2011 Laconi & Jayanegara 2015 Esong et al., 2015 Lateef et al., 2008 Chun et al., 2016

8.5 NR 13.0 NR 10.5

8.6 8.4 8.0 8.2 2.1

6.7 NR 13.0 11.3 9.0

1.5 2.5 0.6 4.7 1.5

32.3 20.6 23.0 NR 17.5

36.6 55.7 50.0 18.3 NR

21.4 38.8 NR NR 24.24

Martínez et al., 2012

6.6

4.2

8.4

2.3

29.0

56.0

NR

Yapo et al., 2013

8.5

8.9

7.3

2.3

NR

59.0

19.4

Range

6.4-14.1

2.1-9.1

5.9-13.0

0.6-4.7

17.5-47.0

18.3-59.0

14.7-38.8

7.8

5.0

5.8

1.4

901

186

57.7

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Lignin

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TDF, total dietary fiber NR, not reported

SC

Variance

TDF

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0.74 0.35 0.26 NR 0.34 0.81 0.18 0.29 0.49 0.35 0.04 0.30 0.40 0.35 0.34 NR 0.18 0.40

Bean husk 1.50 0.80 0.70 NR 0.72 1.87 0.27 0.48 0.45 0.79 0.06 0.45 0.20 0.71 0.70 0.12 0.42 0.25

SC

CPH 0.80 0.44 0.22 0.09 0.29 0.77 0.21 0.24 0.43 0.40 0.05 0.37 0.38 0.41 0.30 0.04 0.21 0.44

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Amino Acids Aspartic acid Alanine Argininea Cystine Glycine Glutamic acid Histidinea Isoleucinea Leucinea Lysinea Methioninea Phenylalaninea Proline Serine Threoninea Tryptophan Tyrosine Valinea

EP

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Total amino acids 6.09 5.82 10.49 EAI (%) 43.70 45.5 39.56 BCAA 1.11 1.18 1.18 AAA 0.58 0.48 0.87 Fischer Ratio 1.91 2.46 1.36 Lysine/Arginine 1.82 1.35 1.13 Arg+Glu+His 1.20 1.25 2.84 Met+Cys 0.14 0.04 0.06 a Essential amino acids EAI, essential amino acid index BCAA (Val+Leu+Ile) AAA (Phe+Tyr) Fischer ratio (BCAA/AAA) NR, not reported Data for CPH from Donkoh, Atuahene, Wilson & Adomako, 1991 Cocoa husk data adapted from Bonvehi & Coll, 1999

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Table 4 Amino acid content (g/100 g) of coca pod husk and cocoa husk.

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Table 5

a

Referencec 19 28 66 58 25 63 34 11 35 339

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Cocoa huskb 18 32 53 53 21 58 47 8 55 345

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His Ile Leu Lys Met + Cys Phe + Tyr Thr Trp Val Total

mg amino acid/g protein Cocoa pod huska 27.4 24.3 31.3 39.2 56.1 66.2 52.2 47.3 18.3 5.4 75.7 64.9 39.2 45.9 5.2 57.4 54.1 362.8 347.3

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Essential and reference amino acid pattern of cocoa pod husk and cocoa husk

Adapted from Donkoh, Atuahene, Wilson & Adomako, 1991 Adapted from Bonvehi & Coll, 1999 c FAO/WHO/Expert Consultation (1990) reference pattern for 2-5-year old child

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Table 6 Cocoa pod pectin characteristics. NA-HYP 10.7 41.0 17.6 59.2 60.8 14.7 9.9 20.3 11.6 4.9 1.7 0.5 1.8

OP 9.8 56.6 17.1 66.0 69.9 3.6 3.9 16.8 10.0 2.8 2.7 0.7 tr

MOP 8.6 20.8 9.4 56.0 NR NR NR 19.7 18.0 3.0 2.5 0.8 1.0

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BW 12.6 42.6 19.2 44.6 51.9 5.5 8.3 25.4 14.4 5.7 5.0 1.9 3.1

SC

50W 7.5 37.0 29.0 45.1 55.8 9.6 9.8 21.7 21.4 4.5 4.6 1.9 0.9

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CA-HYP Yield 10.1 DE 40.3 DA 15.9 Uronic 65.1 Carbohydrate 64.0 Protein 13.8 Phenolic* 9.4 Gal 16.7 Rha 8.2 Glc 4.1 Ara 1.9 Xyl 1.4 Man 2.6

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Adapted from Vriesmann (2012) for CA-HYP; Vriesmann, Amboni & Petkowicz (2011) for 50W and BW and Vriesmann (2012) for OP and MOP; NR-not reported. CA-HYP and NA-HYP-citric and nitric acids high yield pectin, respectively; OP and MOP optimized and modified optimized nitric-acid extracted pectins from cocoa pod husk pectins; 50W and BW- water soluble pectins extracted from cocoa pod husk flour at 50 and 100 °C, respectively; DE-degree of esterification; DA-degree of acetylation. Values expressed as %, m/m, dry base. *Percentage of gallic acid.

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Table 7 Volatile compounds identified in cocoa pod husk (CPH), cocoa pod husk (CPHF) fermentation in solid-state (with Rhizopus stolonifera ) and cocoa.

+ +

EP

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+ + + + +

+**

+ +

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+ + + + + + +

Cocoa

+ + + +

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+

CPHF

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CPH

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Compounds ALCOHOLS 5-Methyl-2-hexanol (2S,4S)-Pentanediol E-Linalol pyranoxide 1,2-Pentanediol 11-Methyldodecanol 1-Hexanol 1-Isopropyl-1-butanol 1-Methoxy-2-butanol 1-Nonanol 1-Octen-3-ol 2,3-Butanediol 2,6-Dimethylcyclohexanol 2-Ethyl-1-hexanol 2-Ethyl-3-pentanol 3,4-Dimethylpent-2-en-1-ol Epoxylinalol Linalool n-Tridecanol Phenylethyl alcohol (2-Phenylethanol) Trans-linalool oxide α-Hydroxytoluene α-Methylbenzyl alcohol (Benzyl alcohol) α-Terpinol ALDEHYDES (E,E)-2,4-Heptadienal Heptanal Methocycitronellal Nonanal Octanal Trans-2-hexenal Trans-2-octenal α-Toluic aldehyde (2-Phenyl acetaldehyde) β-Cyclocitral KETONES n-Amyl methyl ketone 1-Phenylethanone

+

+*, **

+ +

+ + +

+*, ** +** +*’** +**

+ + + + + + + + + + +

+ + +

+*

+

+**

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

+ + + +

+

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+ + + + +

+ + + +

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AC C

+**

SC

+

+

+ +

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2-Dodecanone Pyrrole-α-methyl ketone Sulcatone trans-3-Octen-2-one β-Ionone ESTERS 1-Ethylpentyl acetate Ethyl iso-allocholate Methyl N-hydroxybenzenecarboximidoate Methyl salicylate Oxalic acid, bis(6-ethyloct-3-yl)ester β-Hydroxybutyric acid methyl ester ϒ-Hydroxybutyric acid cyclic ester ORGANIC ACIDS 10,12-Tricosadiynoic acid D,L-Mevalonic acid lactone Isovaleric acid HYDROCARBONS (-)-Aristolene 1,2,4-Trimethylcyclopentane 13-Phenylpentacosane 1-Heptadecene (+)-δ-Amorphene 2,6,10,15-Tetramethylptadecane 2-Cyclopropylidene-1,7,7-trimethylbicyclo[2,2,1]heptane 2-Ethylhexene 2-Methyl-n-hexacosane D-Limone Eicosane Heneicosane Isoledene Valerena-4,7(11)-diene α-Copane ϒ-Cadinene ϒ-Muurolene OTHERS Octanenitrile 1,4-Butanediamine Rosefuran

+

+**

+ + +

+

+ + + + + + + + + + + + +

+

+

+ + +

From Tiburcio, 2017, *From Alvarez et al., (2016), **From Aprotosoaie, Luca & Miron (2016)

Endocarp1

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SC

Mesocarp1

Pod shell/husk2

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67-76%

Mucilage/pulp2

AC C

Epicarp1

EP

TE D

8.7-9.9%*

Bean shell/husk2 2.1-2.3%

Bean1 21-23% (30-40 beans/pod)

Fig 1. The cocoa fruit structures1 and wastes2 (with information of Babatope, 2005; Oddoye, AgyenteBadu & Gyedu-Akpto, 2013; Awarikabey et al., 2014; Sobowale et al., 2015; Papalexandratou, & Nielsen, 2016; *By difference).

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Fig. 2. Potential applications of cocoa pod husk.

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Fig. 3. Potential health benefits of bio-compounds found in cocoa pod husk.

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Highlights

1. CPH is an important industrial waste from which no benefit has been taken yet.

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2. The investigation is limited to produce high-value-added products from CPH. 3. Bio compounds such as dietary fiber, pectins, antioxidants and minerals can be obtained from CPH.

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4. The extraction of this bio compounds may have applications in food industry, among others, because their potential health benefit.