Plenary presentation
8
CONVENTIONAL CROPS BYPRODUCTS AS SUSTAINABLE
RAW MATERIALS FOR NOVEL PHARMACEUTICAL AND
NUTRACEUTICAL PRODUCTS
Nazım Sekeroglu
1,3
* & Sevgi Gezici
2
1
Gaziantep University, Faculty of Science and Literature, Department Biology, 27310,
Gaziantep- Türkiye
2
Gaziantep University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Biology, 27310,
Gaziantep- Türkiye
3
Phytotherapy and Medicinal-Aromatic Plants Application and Research Center
(GAUN-FITOTABAUM), Gaziantep University, 27310 Gaziantep-Türkiye
*Corresponding Author: nazimsekeroglu@gantep.edu.tr ; nsekeroglu@gmail.com
Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs) are of important raw materials for the
production of novel pharmaceutical and nutraceutical products. Besides these special
plants, byproducts which are residues of conventional crops are important raw materials
in natural products production. These sustainable byproducts; the seeds (grape,
pomegranate, fig, pepper, tomato), kernels (olive, date, cherry, melon, sweet melon),
fruit stalks (cherry), fruit peels (pomegranate, citrus, apple)
and other parts of the
conventional crops. These sustainable organic ingredients are byproducts of the
conventional crops and have been used in traditional food recipes and folk medicine for
centuries. Therefore, new natural products can be produced from these residues that
offer
environmental, social and economic advantages thanks to their reuse. Recently,
scientific studies have rediscovered these materials with their rich phytochemical
constituents. The seeds and kernels covering the seeds contain fatty oils rich in
unsaturated fatty oils, which are rare ones. In this context, nervonic acid, a unique fatty
acid, in the olive kernels was firstly reported by Sekeroglu and Gezici.
Besides fatty
oils, these plant residues may also contain other phytochemicals like essential oils,
alkaloids, glycosides, tannins, flavonoids. While the grape seeds with distinguished
phytochemical constituents have been widely
used for pharmaceutical and
nutraceuticals products, pomegranate seed fatty oil with punicic acid (also called
trichosanic acid) content have also recently been started to use in cosmeceuticals,
recently. Moreover, fig seed fatty oil, a new source of omega-3 and gamma tocopherol,
have been rediscovered recently and started to be used in cosmetic and pharmaceutical
industries.
Besides its fatty oils, whole seeds and kernels have been included in
traditional food mixtures and traditional herbal coffees throughout long human history.
Melon and water melon seeds have been used for the breakfast za’atar in the southern
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