| Literature DB >> 31253286 |
Sylwia Mildner-Szkudlarz1, Maria Różańska2, Paulina Piechowska2, Agnieszka Waśkiewicz3, Renata Zawirska-Wojtasiak2.
Abstract
The formation of toxic and potentially carcinogenic acrylamide, alongside volatile aroma compounds, was studied after polyphenols ((+)-catechin, quercetin, gallic, ferulic, caffeic acids) were added to model bread. The addition of as little as 0.1% polyphenols to bread significantly reduced acrylamide (16.2-95.2%). In the case of quercetin, a promoting effect was observed (+9.8%) when its concentration increased. Of all the phenolic compounds, regardless of concentration, ferulic acid showed the highest level of acrylamide inhibition. This is probably due to the presence of 4-vinylguaiacol, a degradation derivative with strong antioxidant activity in heterogeneous systems. Although the phenolic compounds mitigate acrylamide, this adversely affected bread volatile profile. At the highest level (2.0%), caffeic acid most significantly suppressed Maillard-type volatiles (75.9%), followed by gallic acid (74.3%), ferulic acid (65.6%), (+)-catechin (62.4%), and quercetin (59.3%). Among polyphenols, ferulic acid decreased yeast fermentation products level the most (33.1%), simultaneously enhancing lipid oxidation product, probably due to inhibition of amylases and yeast activity.Entities:
Keywords: Acrylamide; Bread; GC–MS; Lipid oxidation; Maillard reaction; Phenolic compounds
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31253286 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2019.125008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514