| Literature DB >> 29743429 |
Kazuhiro Kobayashi1, Masaharu Tanaka1, Yoichi Yatsukawa1, Soichi Tanabe2, Mitsuru Tanaka1,2, Naohiko Ohkouchi3.
Abstract
Recent growing health awareness is leading to increasingly conscious decisions by consumers regarding the production and traceability of food. Stable isotopic compositions provide useful information for tracing the origin of foodstuffs and processes of food production. Plants exhibit different ratios of stable carbon isotopes (δ13C) because they utilized different photosynthetic (carbon fixation) pathways and grow in various environments. The origins of glutamic acid in foodstuffs can be differentiated on the basis of these photosynthetic characteristics. Here, we have developed a method to isolate glutamic acid in foodstuffs for determining the δ13C value by elemental analyzer-isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (EA/IRMS) without unintended isotopic fractionation. Briefly, following acid-hydrolysis, samples were defatted and passed through activated carbon and a cation-exchange column. Then, glutamic acid was isolated using preparative HPLC. This method is applicable to measuring, with a low standard deviation, the δ13C values of glutamic acid from foodstuffs derived from C3 and C4 plants and marine algae.Entities:
Keywords: Glutamic acid; carbon isotopic ratio; elemental analysis; isotope ratio mass spectrometry
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29743429 DOI: 10.2116/analsci.17P450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Sci ISSN: 0910-6340 Impact factor: 2.081