Academic Journal

Influence of the degree of polymerisation in the ability of catechins to act as anthocyanin copigments.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Influence of the degree of polymerisation in the ability of catechins to act as anthocyanin copigments.
المؤلفون: S. González-Manzano1, N. Mateus2, V. de Freitas2, C. Santos-Buelga1
المصدر: European Food Research & Technology. May2008, Vol. 227 Issue 1, p83-92. 10p.
مصطلحات موضوعية: *POLYMERIZATION, *CATECHIN, *ANTHOCYANINS, *MONOMERS
مستخلص: Abstract  The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of the degree of polymerisation of flavanols in their ability to act as anthocyanin copigments. With this aim, ethyl-bridged catechin derivatives were produced by reaction between catechin and acetaldehyde. Further fractionation in Toyopearl HW-40 allowed the separation of five fractions of increasing molecular size containing mixtures of compounds in the range from monomers to hexamers as established by LC-MS. The copigmentation assays were carried out in citrate-phosphate buffer solutions in 12% ethanol at pH 3.6, using malvidin 3-O-glucoside as pigment and increasing concentrations of the different catechin fractions to obtain copigment to pigment ratios ranging 0:1–20:1. Copigmentation was assessed from the modifications in the visible spectra of the solutions; chromatic analysis in the CIELAB colour space was used to characterise the copigmentation effect. It was found that all the compounds assayed were able to interact with the anthocyanin and induced changes in the colour of the solutions. The greatest effect was induced by oligomers containing 2–3 elementary catechin units, whereas monomers were the poorest anthocyanin copigments among the compounds checked. An interesting observation was that the formation of the copigmentation complexes was not and immediate process, but it required some time to attain the equilibrium, suggesting that the phenomenon was controlled thermodynamically rather than kinetically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
قاعدة البيانات: Academic Search Index