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Inhibitory effect of green coffee extracts on Rhizopus stolonifer: in-silico and in-situ evidence
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Inhibitory effect of green coffee extracts on Rhizopus stolonifer: in-silico and in-situ evidence

Heba Sayed Mostafa, Abdulrhman S. Shaker and Gamal Awad El-Shaboury
European food research & technology
2025

Abstract

Bread Green coffee beans GC-MS HPLC Molecular docking Rhizopus stolonifer
This study investigated the antimicrobial efficacy of Coffea arabica green bean extracts (methanol and ethanol) against six pathogens: Proteus mirabilis, Shigella flexneri, Staphylococcus aureus, Penicillium digitatum, Rhizopus stolonifer, and Aspergillus niger. Ethanol extract demonstrated significantly superior activity (p < 0.05) over methanol and controls, despite fewer compounds, attributed to higher concentrations of key bioactives identified via HPLC and GC–MS. Molecular docking identified hesperidin, diosmin, naringin, and rutin as key compounds responsible for antibacterial and antifungal activity, targeting topoisomerase ATPase and AmFPI-1 fungal protease, respectively. In-situ analysis showed that white wheat bread with ≥ 5% green coffee powder inhibited Rhizopus stolonifer growth for seven days at 30 °C, similar to the propionic acid effect. However, 10% green coffee negatively impacted the sensory attributes of bread samples, especially color and taste. This suggests green coffee is a potential natural preservative to extend the shelf life of bread while considering cost and consumer acceptability.

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Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.287 Dietary Stimulants
1.287.1516 Coffee and Caffeine
Web Of Science research areas
Food Science & Technology
ESI research areas
Agricultural Sciences
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