| Literature DB >> 26709023 |
Panagiotis Arapitsas1, Maurizio Ugliano2, Daniele Perenzoni3, Andrea Angeli3, Paolo Pangrazzi4, Fulvio Mattivi3.
Abstract
The impact of minute amounts of oxygen in the headspace on the post-bottling development of wine is generally considered to be very important, since oxygen can either damage or improve the quality of wine. This project aimed to gain new experimental evidence about the chemistry of the interaction between wine and oxygen. The experimental design included 216 bottles of 12 different white wines produced from 6 different cultivars (Inzolia, Muller Thurgau, Chardonnay, Grillo, Traminer and Pinot gris). Half of them were bottled using the standard industrial process with inert headspace and the other half without inert gas and with extra headspace. After 60 days of storage at room temperature, the wines were analysed using an untargeted LC-MS method. The use of a detailed holistic analysis workflow, with several levels of quality control and marker selection, gave 35 metabolites putatively induced by the different amounts of oxygen. These metabolite markers included ascorbic acid, tartaric acid and various sulfonated compounds observed in wine for the first time (e.g. S-sulfonated cysteine, glutathione and pantetheine; and sulfonated indole-3-lactic acid hexoside and tryptophol). The consumption of SO2 mediated by these sulfonation reactions was promoted by the presence of higher levels of oxygen on bottling.Entities:
Keywords: Cork; Indole; LC–MS; Non-targeted approach; Sulfonation; Untargeted
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26709023 DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2015.12.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr A ISSN: 0021-9673 Impact factor: 4.759