| Literature DB >> 29860843 |
Minwei Xu1, Zhao Jin1, Jae-Bom Ohm2, Paul Schwarz1, Jiajia Rao1, Bingcan Chen1.
Abstract
Our recent study found that antioxidative activity of phenolic compounds extracted from germinated chickpea was boosted in both in vitro assays and oil-in-water emulsions [ Xu et al. Food Chem. 2018 , 250 , 140 ]. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the mechanism by which germination enhances the antioxidative activity of the phenolic compounds extracted from chickpea. Liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray-ionization quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-QTOF-MS) and size-exclusion chromatography with multiangle-light-scattering and refractive-index detection (SEC-MALS-RI) were employed to evaluate the phenolic composition of soluble phenolic compounds (free and bound) and molar masses of soluble bound phenolic compounds, respectively, over 6 days of germination. According to principal-component analysis of the interrelationship between germination time and phenolic composition, it is revealed that protocatechuic acid 4- O-glucoside and 6-hydroxydaidzein played a pivotal role in the soluble free phenolic compounds, whereas gentisic acid and 7,3',4'-trihydroxyflavone were important in the soluble bound phenolic compounds. Molar masses of soluble bound phenolic compounds were increased after 6 days of germination. Protective and dual antioxidative effects were proposed to explicate how the antioxidative activity of soluble bound phenolic compounds in oil-in-water emulsions was improved with germination.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidative activity; chickpea; germination; molar mass; phenolic compounds
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29860843 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279