| Literature DB >> 26059144 |
Andrea Bunea1, Mirjana Andjelkovic2, Carmen Socaciu1, Otilia Bobis1, Madalina Neacsu1, Roland Verhé3, John Van Camp4.
Abstract
The carotenoid and phenolic acid contents in fresh, stored and processed (blanched, frozen and boiled) spinach were comparatively determined by spectrophotometric and HPLC analyses. The major carotenoids identified after HPLC analysis in saponified samples were lutein (37-53μg/kg), β-carotene (18-31μg/kg), violaxanthin (9-23μg/kg) and neoxanthin (10-22μg/kg). These carotenoids were all affected by storage and/or heating. The content of carotenoids was best preserved after storage for one day at 4°C. The total phenolic content in the fresh spinach was 2088mg GAE/kg FW. After LC-MS analysis three phenolic acids were identified and quantified. These being ortho-coumaric acid (28-60mg/kg FW), ferulic acid (10-35mg/kg) and para-coumaric acid (1-30mg/kg) depending on the sample type. After storage of spinach at different temperatures (4°C or -18°C) the amount of total phenolic compounds decreased by around 20%, while the amount of individual phenolic acids increased by four times on average.Entities:
Keywords: Carotenoids; Chromatography; Mass-spectroscopy; Phenolic compounds; Processing; Spectrophotometry; Storage
Year: 2007 PMID: 26059144 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2007.11.056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514