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Quality characteristics of the radish grown under reduced atmospheric pressure
Authors:Lanfang H. Levine  Patricia A. Bisbee  Jeffrey T. Richards  Michele N. Birmele  Ronald L. Prior  Michele Perchonok  Mike Dixon  Neil C. Yorio  Gary W. Stutte  Raymond M. Wheeler
Affiliation:1. Dynamac Corp., Mail Code: DYN-3, KSC, FL 32899, USA;2. USDA, Arkansas Children’s Nutrition Center, Little Rock, AR 72202, USA;3. NASA Johnson Space Center, Mail Code SF3, Houston, TX 77058, USA;4. University of Guelph, CESRF, Department of Environmental Biology, Guelph, Ont., Canada N1G 2W1;5. NASA Biological Sciences Office, Mail Code KT-B-1, KSC, FL 32899, USA
Abstract:This study addresses whether reduced atmospheric pressure (hypobaria) affects the quality traits of radish grown under such environments. Radish (Raphanus sativus L. cv. Cherry Bomb Hybrid II) plants were grown hydroponically in specially designed hypobaric plant growth chambers at three atmospheric pressures; 33, 66, and 96 kPa (control). Oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressures were maintained constant at 21 and 0.12 kPa, respectively. Plants were harvested at 21 days after planting, with aerial shoots and swollen hypocotyls (edible portion of the radish referred to as the “root” hereafter) separated immediately upon removal from the chambers. Samples were subsequently evaluated for their sensory characteristics (color, taste, overall appearance, and texture), taste-determining factors (glucosinolate and soluble carbohydrate content and myrosinase activity), proximate nutrients (protein, dietary fiber, and carbohydrate) and potential health benefit attributes (antioxidant capacity). In roots of control plants, concentrations of glucosinolate, total soluble sugar, and nitrate, as well as myrosinase activity and total antioxidant capacity (measured as ORACFL), were 2.9, 20, 5.1, 9.4, and 1.9 times greater than the amount in leaves, respectively. There was no significant difference in total antioxidant capacity, sensory characteristics, carbohydrate composition, or proximate nutrient content among the three pressure treatments. However, glucosinolate content in the root and nitrate concentration in the leaf declined as the atmospheric pressure decreased, suggesting perturbation to some nitrogen-related metabolism.
Keywords:Reduced atmospheric pressure   Hypobaria   Radish   Antioxidant   ORAC   Quality characteristics   Sensory   Glucosinolate
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