| Literature DB >> 29561820 |
Núria Carranco1, Mireia Farrés-Cebrián2, Javier Saurina3,4, Oscar Núñez5,6,7.
Abstract
High performance liquid chromatography method with ultra-violet detection (HPLC-UV) fingerprinting was applied for the analysis and characterization of olive oils, and was performed using a Zorbax Eclipse XDB-C8 reversed-phase column under gradient elution, employing 0.1% formic acid aqueous solution and methanol as mobile phase. More than 130 edible oils, including monovarietal extra-virgin olive oils (EVOOs) and other vegetable oils, were analyzed. Principal component analysis results showed a noticeable discrimination between olive oils and other vegetable oils using raw HPLC-UV chromatographic profiles as data descriptors. However, selected HPLC-UV chromatographic time-window segments were necessary to achieve discrimination among monovarietal EVOOs. Partial least square (PLS) regression was employed to tackle olive oil authentication of Arbequina EVOO adulterated with Picual EVOO, a refined olive oil, and sunflower oil. Highly satisfactory results were obtained after PLS analysis, with overall errors in the quantitation of adulteration in the Arbequina EVOO (minimum 2.5% adulterant) below 2.9%.Entities:
Keywords: UV detection; food authentication; fraud quantitation; high performance liquid chromatography; multivariate calibration; olive oils
Year: 2018 PMID: 29561820 PMCID: PMC5920409 DOI: 10.3390/foods7040044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Scatter score plots (PC1 vs. PC2) when processing raw HPLC-UV (High performance liquid chromatography method with ultra-violet detection) chromatographic fingerprints of 47 olive oils and 25 other fruit seed oils (sunflower, corn, soy, and some mixtures of them) registered at (a) 257 nm; (b) 280 nm; and (c) 316 nm. Ellipse is grouping the quality controls.
Figure 2HPLC-UV chromatographic fingerprint registered at 257 nm for four extra-virgin olive oil (EVOOs) obtained from (a) Arbequina; (b) Picual; (c) Hojiblanca; and (d) Cornicabra monovarietal olive cultivars.
Figure 3Principal component analysis (PCA) results (scatter score plot of PC1 vs. PC2) in the analysis of 66 EVOOs obtained from monovarietal olive cultivars by employing as data: (a) HPLC-UV chromatographic profile segments of 5–8 min, 13–21 min, and 23–26 min simultaneously (registered at 280 nm); and (b) a combination of the HPLC-UV chromatographic profile segments from 13 to 32 min obtained at 257, 280, and 316 nm, simultaneously.
Figure 4Partial least square (PLS) regression results for the adulteration of an Arbequina monovarietal EVOO using a Picual monovarietal EVOO, a ROO, and a sunflower oil as adulterants. Data set: raw HPLC-UV chromatographic fingerprints registered at 257 nm. (a) Estimation of the optimum number of latent variables; (b) validation results in the calibration step; and (c) validation results in the prediction step. RMSECV: root-mean-square errors in cross validation.
Partial least square (PLS) calibration and prediction errors in the identification and quantitation of adulterants (Picual EVOO (extra-virgin olive oil), refined olive oil (ROO), and sunflower oil) in an Arbequina EVOO when using raw HPLC-UV (High performance liquid chromatography method with ultra-violet detection) chromatographic fingerprints as sample descriptors.
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| 257 nm | 0.27 | 0.28 | 0.29 |
| 280 nm | 0.19 | 0.33 | 0.37 |
| 316 nm | 0.67 | 1.54 | 0.77 |
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| 257 nm | 0.25 | 0.30 | 0.54 |
| 280 nm | 0.41 | 0.33 | 0.48 |
| 316 nm | 0.36 | 1.42 | 0.77 |