Journal of Food Quality

Increasing Nutritional Content through Physiological Interventions in Plant Commodities


Publishing date
01 Dec 2021
Status
Published
Submission deadline
13 Aug 2021

Lead Editor

1Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Guangzhou, China

2University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan

3Wuhan University, Wuhan, China

4Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Chile

5Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India


Increasing Nutritional Content through Physiological Interventions in Plant Commodities

Description

Most of the food products originating from plants are the main source of vitamins, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, antioxidants, and minerals for humans. Globally, humans have to feed mainly on plant-based food. Therefore, the nutritional contents of dietary commodities produced by plants play a key role in the health of human beings. Many chronic health problems such as obesity, cardiovascular disorders, and fitness issues adversely affecting the global human population indicate the relevance of the nutritional composition of human food. Food with poor nutritional content cannot fulfill our needs. Moreover, food processing can also cause a significant loss of nutritional contents in food, thus lowering the dietary value of our meals. In addition to the poor nutritional quality of our diet, the lack of physical exercise makes the problem more serious. As a result, humans can experience diabetes, circulatory disorders, hemorrhages, blood pressure issues, heart failure, and many other health problems.

Increasing the nutritional contents of plant food commodities can positively impact human health. Therefore, introducing food processing technologies with minimum loss of nutritional contents will be of great assistance to increase food quality. However, there is a crucial need for more research in this field. In recent years, research practices and techniques in this direction have significantly improved because of the large-scale use of modern research tools (e.g., transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics). These high-throughput techniques are more reliable and effective measures to elevate nutritional elements in plant commodities. The food processing industries have also undergone an evolutionary gradient of modern technologies. Further investigation of these technologies will help minimise nutritional losses during the stages of food processing.

The aim of this Special Issue is to solicit original research articles, as well as review articles, highlighting the purpose of producing nutritionally rich food commodities. Submissions focusing on the effect of microbial invasion on nutritional profiles of plants, and the effect of abiotic stress during postharvest periods are highly encouraged. We also hope to receive submissions unveiling physiological aspects of plant metabolism, inter-and intracellular communication, plant cell regulatory mechanisms, and nutritional responses towards external treatments. We hope that this Special Issue gathers research adhering to the improvement of nutritional contents in plant products and provides a platform to researchers working in increasing the nutritional contents of food with modern research techniques. Moreover, we wish that this Special Issue features research minimising the deleterious effects of food processing technologies on nutritional content.

Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:

  • Cell signalling and cellular communications regulating nutritional contents
  • Metabolic and physiological aspects of nutritional enrichment
  • Proteomics and transcriptomics behind nutritional enrichment
  • Effect of microbial infections on nutritional contents
  • New methods and condition of cultivation and storage for retention of nutritional contents
  • Transformation of new genes resulting in augmented nutritional contents
  • Effects of the food processing technologies on chemical, and functional properties of dietary contents
  • Novel ideas and amendments in the food processing technologies for improved nutrition

Articles

  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5590004
  • - Review Article

Potential Probiotics Role in Excluding Antibiotic Resistance

Irfan Ahmed | Zhengtian Li | ... | Shahzad Munir
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5535100
  • - Research Article

Foliar Application of Copper Oxide Nanoparticles Increases the Photosynthetic Efficiency and Antioxidant Activity in Brassica juncea

Ahmad Faraz | Mohammad Faizan | ... | Pravej Alam
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5539423
  • - Research Article

Foliar Application of Leaf Extracts of Glycyrrhiza uralensis Increases Growth and Nutritional Value of Chinese Flowering Cabbage Plants under Field Conditions

Waheed Akram | Sabin Fatima | ... | Guihua Li
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 3220013
  • - Research Article

A New Reference Plasmid “pGMT27” Provides an Efficient Transgenic Detection Method for Flue-Cured Tobacco

Jing Yu | Xiaolian Zhang | ... | Imran Haider Shamsi
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 1159567
  • - Research Article

Growth and Carotenoid Contents of Intercropped Vegetables in Building-Integrated Urban Agriculture

Jin-Hee Ju | Sun-Young Cho | ... | Kyung-Jin Yeum
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 5748495
  • - Research Article

Frying Time and Temperature Conditions’ Influences on Physicochemical, Texture, and Sensorial Quality Parameters of Barley-Soybean Chips

Huda Abdalrahman AL Jumayi | Amira M. G. Darwish
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 4977410
  • - Research Article

Exogenous Application of Ascorbic Acid Enhances the Antimicrobial and Antioxidant Potential of Ocimum sanctum L. Grown under Salt Stress

Neelma Munir | Sheza A. Khilji | ... | Zahoor A. Sajid
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 5540724
  • - Research Article

In Vitro Bioaccessibility of the Vitamin B Series from Thermally Processed Leafy African Indigenous Vegetables

Zipporah M. Onyambu | Mildred P. Nawiri | ... | Naumih M. Noah
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 5594183
  • - Research Article

Magnetic Field Stimulation Effect on Germination and Antioxidant Activities of Presown Hybrid Seeds of Sunflower and Its Seedlings

Shazia Anwer Bukhari | Muhammad Tanveer | ... | Nighat Zia-Ud-Den
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2021
  • - Article ID 9932762
  • - Research Article

Fruit Waste Substrates to Produce Single-Cell Proteins as Alternative Human Food Supplements and Animal Feeds Using Baker’s Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)

Asiri Nisansala Dunuweera | Dinusha Nayomi Nikagolla | Kapilan Ranganathan
Journal of Food Quality
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Acceptance rate18%
Submission to final decision116 days
Acceptance to publication16 days
CiteScore4.400
Journal Citation Indicator0.590
Impact Factor3.3
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