| Literature DB >> 27518822 |
Wen Ma1,2,3, Pierre Waffo-Teguo2,3, Michael Jourdes2,3, Hua Li1, Pierre-Louis Teissedre2,3.
Abstract
Astringency perception, as an essential parameter for high-quality red wine, is principally elicited by condensed tannins in diversified chemical structures. Condensed tannins, which are also known as proanthocyanidins (PAs), belong to the flavonoid class of polyphenols and are incorporated by multiple flavan-3-ols units according to their degree of polymerization (DP). However, the influence of DP size of PAs on astringency perception remains unclear for decades. This controversy was mainly attributed to the lack of efficient strategies to isolate the PAs in non-galloylated forms and with individual degree size from grape/wine. In the present study, the astringency intensity of purified and identified grape oligomeric tannins (DP ranged from 1 to 5) was firstly explored. A novel non-solid phase strategy was used to rapidly exclude the galloylated PAs from the non-galloylated PAs and fractionate the latter according to their DP size. Then, a series of PAs with individual DP size and galloylation were purified by an approach of preparative hydrophilic interaction chromatography. Furthermore, purified compounds were identified by both normal phase HPLC-FLD and reverse phase UHPLC-ESI-Q-TOF. Finally, the contribution of the astringency perception of the individual purified tannins was examined with a salivary protein binding ability test. The results were observed by HPLC-FLD and quantified by changes in PA concentration remaining in the filtrate. In summary, a new approach without a solid stationary phase was developed to isolate PAs according to their DP size. And a positive relationship between the DP of PAs and salivary protein affinity was revealed.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27518822 PMCID: PMC4982662 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Subunits structures of tannins from grape seed.
Fig 2General procedure of experimental design: (A). Tannins were extracted from grape seeds; (B). Technique of CPC fractionated tannins according to their DP size; (C). Purified compounds were identified by UHPLC-HRMS; (D). Salivary protein binding abilities of purified oligomers were assessed by measuring difference between tannins with and without saliva; (E). Astringency intensities of monomeric, dimeric, trimeric, tetrameric and pentameric tannins in model wine solution were estimated.
Fig 3MS spectra obtained for crude extract (A) and fraction 1 of CPC (B).
Information on CPC fractions.
| Fraction | Main Compounds | Retention time (min) | Weight (mg) | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | Galloylated tannins | 0–8 | 1719.6 | 35.87% |
| F2 | Monomers | 9–20 | 1044.4 | 21.78% |
| F3 | Dimers | 21–30 | 546.9 | 11.41% |
| F4 | Trimers | 31–42 | 302.3 | 6.31% |
| F5 | Tetramers. Pentamers | 43–62 | 257.2 | 5.36% |
| F6 | Tail fraction | 63–140 | 198.6 | 4.14% |
| F0 | Coil fraction | 172.7 | 3.6% | |
| Sum | 4241.7 | 87.74% |
Fig 4Two complementary and orthogonal HPLC approaches to identify the five purified PAs: A). Normal phase HPLC-FLD chromatograms to separate PAs according to their DP; B). Reverse phase UHPLC-Q-TOF extracted ion chromatograms to separate isomeric PAs at the same DP.
HRMS identification data of purified tannins.
| No. | Compounds | Rt (min) | Formula [M-H]- | Calculated | Measured | Diff (ppm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Monomer 1 | 8.20 | [C15H14O6-H]- | 289.0718 | 289.0718 | 0 |
| 2 | Monomer 2 | 10.57 | [C15H14O6-H]- | 289.0718 | 289.0716 | -0.69 |
| 3 | Dimer 1 | 7.39 | [C30H26O12-H]- | 577.1351 | 577.1341 | -1.73 |
| 4 | Dimer 2 | 7.61 | [C30H26O12-H]- | 577.1351 | 577.1340 | -1.91 |
| 5 | Dimer 3 | 9.15 | [C30H26O12-H]- | 577.1351 | 577.1342 | -1.56 |
| 6 | Dimer 4 | 9.66 | [C30H26O12-H]- | 577.1351 | 577. 1343 | -1.39 |
| 7 | Trimer 1 | 5.55 | [C45H38O18-H]- | 865.1985 | 865.1977 | -0.92 |
| 8 | Trimer 2 | 6.55 | [C45H38O18-H]- | 865.1985 | 865.1985 | 0.00 |
| 9 | Trimer 3 | 9.63 | [C45H38O18-H]- | 865.1985 | 865.1997 | 1.39 |
| 10 | Tetramer 1 | 9.47 | [C60H50O24-H]- | 1153.2619 | 1153.2589 | -2.6 |
| 11 | Tetramer 2 | 10.15 | [C60H50O24-H]- | 1153.2619 | 1153.2586 | -2.86 |
| 12 | Tetramer 3 | 10.82 | [C60H50O24-H]- | 1153.2619 | 1153.2596 | -1.99 |
| 13 | Tetramer 4 | 11.10 | [C60H50O24-H]- | 1153.2619 | 1153.2584 | -3.03 |
| 14 | Tetramer 5 | 11.81 | [C60H50O24-H]- | 1153.2619 | 1153.2611 | -0.69 |
| 15 | Pentamer 1 | 2.17 | [C75H62O30-H]- | 1441.3253 | 1441.3248 | -0.35 |
| 16 | Pentamer 2 | 2.29 | [C75H62O30-H]- | 1441.3253 | 1441.3239 | -0.97 |
| 17 | Pentamer 3 | 2.70 | [C75H62O30-H]- | 1441.3253 | 1441.3258 | 0.35 |
| 18 | Pentamer 4 | 4.13 | [C75H62O30-H]- | 1441.3253 | 1441.3201 | -3.61 |
| 19 | Pentamer 5 | 4.82 | [C75H62O30-H]- | 1441.3253 | 1441.3254 | 0.07 |
Fig 5Examples of MS/MS fragments of purified dimeric, trimeric, tetrameric and pentameric PA.
Fig 6Concentration of oligomeric tannins in filtrates with/without salivary protein interaction (* indicates “not detected”).