| Literature DB >> 28274416 |
Letícia Flores da Silva1, Celito Crivellaro Guerra2, Diandra Klein3, Ana Maria Bergold4.
Abstract
Bioactive phenols (BPs) are often targets in red wine analysis. However, other compounds interfere in the liquid chromatography methods used for this analysis. Here, purification procedures were tested to eliminate anthocyanin interference during the determination of 19 red-wine BPs. Liquid chromatography, coupled to a diode array detector (HPLC-DAD) and a mass spectrometer (UPLC-MS), was used to compare the direct injection of the samples with solid-phase extractions: reversed-phase (C18) and strong cation-exchange (SCX). The HPLC-DAD method revealed that, out of 13BPs, only six are selectively analyzed with or without C18 treatment, whereas SCX enabled the detection of all BPs. The recovery with SCX was above 86.6% for eight BPs. Moreover, UPLC-MS demonstrated the potential of SCX sample preparation for the determination of 19BPs. The developed procedure may be extended to the analysis of other red wine molecules or to other analytical methods where anthocyanins may interfere.Entities:
Keywords: Bioactive phenols; Diode array detector; Kaempferol (PubChemCID: 5280863); Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; Myricetin (PubChemCID: 5281672); Quercetin (PubChemCID: 5280343); Red wine; Sample purification; Taxifolin (PubChemCID: 439533); trans-Cinnamic acid (PubChemCID: 444539); trans-Piceid (PubChemCID: 5281718); trans-Resveratrol (PubChemCID: 445154); trans-ε-Viniferin (PubChemCID: 5315233)
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28274416 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.01.087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514