| Literature DB >> 24027653 |
Lee Suan Chua1, Norul Liza A Rahaman, Nur Ardawati Adnan, Ti Tjih Eddie Tan.
Abstract
The antioxidant activities based on the free radical scavenging, reducing power, and bleaching inhibition were investigated for the three commonly used honeys in Malaysia, namely, tualang, gelam, and acacia honey. The antioxidant capacity of the honey samples was correlated with their biochemical constituents such as total phenol, total flavonoid content, and total water-soluble vitamins (vitamin B1, B2, B3, B9, B12, and vitamin C). The total flavonoid content of honey samples was strongly correlated with the three antioxidative processes (r = 0.9276-0.9910). In contrast, the total water-soluble vitamins was found to be well correlated with the free radical scavenging activity (r = 0.8226). Vitamin B3 was likely to be in the highest concentration, which covered for 69-80% of the total vitamin content. A number of five phenolic acids, three flavonoids, and two organic acids had also been detected from the honey samples using UPLC-MS/MS, without sugar-removal procedure.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24027653 PMCID: PMC3763360 DOI: 10.1155/2013/313798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Methods Chem ISSN: 2090-8873 Impact factor: 2.193
Total phenols and total flavonoids in honey samples.
| Honey | aTPC (mg GAE /100 g honey) | bTFC (mg RE /100 g honey) | TFC/TPC | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | cSD | Mean | cSD | ||
| Tualang | 110.394 | 3.829 | 18.511 | 2.803 | 0.168 |
| Gelam | 159.743 | 9.004 | 32.886 | 0.780 | 0.206 |
| Acacia | 196.500 | 6.323 | 30.741 | 2.886 | 0.156 |
aTotal phenolic content in milligram of gallic acid equivalent per 100 gram of honey.
bTotal flavonoid content in milligram of rutin equivalent per 100 gram of honey.
cStandard deviation.
Water-soluble vitamins in honey samples.
| Water-soluble vitamins | aRt | Sensitivity (mg/kg) | Linearity (mg/kg) | Tualang | Gelam | Acacia | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (min) | bLOD | cLOQ | Concentration |
d
| Mean ± eSD (mg/kg honey) | |||
| Thiamine (vitamin B1) | 3.10 | 3.51 | 10.62 | 0–75 | 0.999 | <LOQ | 13.85 ± 0.24 | <LOQ |
| Riboflavin (vitamin B2) | 14.69 | 1.80 | 5.44 | 0–75 | 0.999 | <LOD | <LOQ | 11.85 ± 3.90 |
| Nicotinic acid (vitamin B3) | 1.83 | 4.76 | 14.42 | 0–250 | 0.999 | 170.38 ± 9.60 | 355.38 ± 56.11 | 134.67 ± 3.53 |
| Folic acid (vitamin B9) | 13.74 | 4.35 | 13.17 | 0–75 | 0.998 | <LOQ | <LOD | <LOD |
| Cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12) | 14.03 | 1.02 | 3.10 | 0–75 | 0.999 | <LOD | <LOQ | <LOD |
| Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) | 3.95 | 10.13 | 30.71 | 0–200 | 1.000 | 52.20 ± 3.29 | 67.36 ± 10.48 | 62.80 ± 8.60 |
aRetention time in minute.
bLimit of detection (3.3 standard deviation/slope of the calibration curve).
cLimit of quantitation (10 standard deviation/slope of the calibration curve).
dCorrelation coefficient.
eStandard deviation.
Phenolic acids, flavonoids, and organic acids detected from honey samples.
| Compound | aRt (min) | [M + H]+ | bHoney | Fragment ions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenolic acids | ||||
| Coumaric acid | 1.39 | 165 | T, G, A | 165/147(–H2O)/137(–CO)/123(–CO–CH2)/119(–H2O–CO)/109/95/91/78 |
| Caffeic acid | 1.40 | 181 | T, G, A | 181/163(–H2O)/153(–CO)/139(–CO–CH2)/125(–CO–2CH2)/111(–CO–3CH2)/99/79 |
| Ferulic acid | 1.50 | 195 | T, G, A | 195/177(–H2O)/167(–CO)/149(–H2O–CO)/135(–CO–CH3OH)/107(–2CO–CH3OH)/95 |
| Cinnamic acid | 1.51 | 149 | T, G, A | 149/131(–H2O)/121(–CO)/112/87 |
| Chlorogenic acid | 8.09 | 355 | T, G, A | 355/338(–OH)/337(–H2O)/313(–CO–CH2)/272/245(–4H2O–C3H2)/149 |
| Flavonoids | ||||
| Pinobanksin-3- | 7.20 | 329 | T, G | 329/311(–H2O)/293(–2H2O)/273/265(–CO)/245/179/167 |
| Pinobanksin-3- | 7.47 | 343 | T | 343/325(–H2O)/301/273/240 |
| Quercetin | 8.98 | 303 | T, G, A | 303/285(–H2O)/261(–C2H2O)/220/180(–1,2A)/152(–1,3A)/114/96 |
| Organic acids | ||||
| Fumaric acid | 0.90 | 117 | T, G, A | 117/116(–H)/99(–H2O)/89(–CO)/85/75/73(–CO2) |
| Gluconic acid | 1.10 | 197 | T, G, A | 197/179(–H2O)/161(–2H2O)/151(–H2O–CO)/136(–H2O–CO–CH3)/119(–H2O–CO–CH3–OH)/105/95 |
aRetention time in minute.
bT: tualang; G: gelam; A: acacia.
Figure 1Mass spectra of phenolic acids at the positive mode of enhanced product ion scan.
Antioxidant activity of honey samples.
| Honey |
aDPPH | bEC50 |
cFRAP | dCBI (%) | Kinetic equation of CBI |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | eSD | (mg/mL) | Mean | eSD | ||||
| Tualang | 9.650 | 0.570 | 48.896 | 52.386 | 5.192 | 35.81 |
| 0.868 |
| Gelam | 50.169 | 5.541 | 15.681 | 82.529 | 5.032 | 67.41 |
| 0.858 |
| Acacia | 29.983 | 6.064 | 29.846 | 82.386 | 5.930 | 74.66 |
| 0.812 |
a1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl scavenging activity in milligram of ascorbic acid equivalent in a 100 g of honey.
b50% scavenging activity of ascorbic acid was 8.611 µg/mL.
cFerric reducing/antioxidant power in milligram of Trolox equivalent in a 100 g of honey.
d β-carotene bleaching inhibition of butylated hydroxytoluene was 81.54%.
eStandard deviation of triplicate assay.
Correlation matrix between antioxidant activity and biochemical component.
| aTPC | bTFC | cTWSV | dDPPH | eFRAP | fCBI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| aTPC | 1 | |||||
| bTFC | 0.8375* | 1 | ||||
| cTWSV | 0.0052* | 0.5508 | 1 | |||
| dDPPH | 0.5728* | 0.9276 | 0.8226 | 1 | ||
| eFRAP | 0.9033 | 0.9910* | 0.4338* | 0.8691 | 1 | |
| fCBI | 0.9656* | 0.9508 | 0.2649 | 0.7662 | 0.9838 | 1 |
*Significant difference at P < 0.05 (two-tail t-test).
aTotal phenolic content.
bTotal flavonoid content.
cTotal water-soluble vitamins.
d1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl scavenging activity.
eFerric-reducing antioxidant power.
f β-carotene bleaching inhibition.