| Literature DB >> 32699353 |
Mary T Fletcher1, Natasha L Hungerford2, Dennis Webber3, Matheus Carpinelli de Jesus4, Jiali Zhang2, Isobella S J Stone3,4, Joanne T Blanchfield4, Norhasnida Zawawi5,6.
Abstract
Stingless bee (Meliponini) honey has long been considered a high-value functional food, but the perceived therapeutic value has lacked attribution to specific bioactive components. Examination of honey from five different stingless bee species across Neotropical and Indo-Australian regions has enabled for the first time the identification of the unusual disaccharide trehalulose as a major component representing between 13 and 44 g per 100 g of each of these honeys. Trehalulose is an isomer of sucrose with an unusual α-(1 → 1) glucose-fructose glycosidic linkage and known acariogenic and low glycemic index properties. NMR and UPLC-MS/MS analysis unambiguously confirmed the identity of trehalulose isolated from stingless bee honeys sourced across three continents, from Tetragonula carbonaria and Tetragonula hockingsi species in Australia, from Geniotrigona thoracica and Heterotrigona itama in Malaysia and from Tetragonisca angustula in Brazil. The previously unrecognised abundance of trehalulose in stingless bee honeys is concrete evidence that supports some of the reported health attributes of this product. This is the first identification of trehalulose as a major component within a food commodity. This study allows the exploration of the expanded use of stingless bee honey in foods and identifies a bioactive marker for authentication of this honey in associated food standards.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32699353 PMCID: PMC7376065 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68940-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Chemical structures of trehalulose (1) (major, fructopyranose (1a) and minor, fructofuranose (1b) tautomers), maltose (2) and isomaltulose (palatinose) (3).
Figure 2UPLC-MS/MS selected-ion chromatograms of molecular ion ([M-H]−) m/z 341.20 of: (a) Tetragonula hockingsi, Tetragonula carbonaria, Heterotrigona itama, Geniotrigona thoracica and Tetragonisca angustula honeys and (b) our isolated trehalulose, and authentic trehalulose (1), maltose (2), and isomaltulose (palatinose) (3).
Figure 3Differences in ESI–MS/MS spectra (CE 20) resulting from fragmentation of the molecular ion ([M-H]−) m/z 341 for each disaccharide (1–3) which allow these sugars to be readily distinguished.
NMR assignments for trehalulose fructopyranose/fructofuranose tautomers (1a) and (1b).
| 1- | 1- | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ring | Position | 1H NMR | 13C NMR | Ring | Position | 1H NMR | 13C NMR |
| Glc | 1′ | 4.98 (d, 3.7) | 99.32 | Glc | 1′ | 5.01 (d, 3.7) | 99.32 |
| 2′ | 3.58 (dd, 9.9, 3.7) | 72.28 | 2′ | 3.59 | 72.23 | ||
| 3′ | 3.79 (dd, 9.5, 9.2) | 73.81 | 3′ | 3.76 | 73.81 | ||
| 4′ | 3.44 (dd, 9.8, 9.5) | 70.41a | 4′ | 3.44 | 70.29 | ||
| 5′ | 3.73 (td, 9.8, 2.5) | 72.73 | 5′ | 3.72 | 72.91 | ||
| 6′ | 3.88 (dd, 12.2, 2.5) | 61.31 | 6′ | 3.89 | 61.35 | ||
| 3.80–3.76 (m) | |||||||
| Fru | 1 | 3.48 (d, 10.3) | 69.93 | Fru | 1 | 3.56 | 69.29 |
| 3.94 (br d, 10.3) | |||||||
| 2 | –b | 98.64 | 2 | –b | 101.69 | ||
| 3 | 3.85(dd, 10.0, 0.9) | 68.70 | 3 | 4.15 | 77.11 | ||
| 4 | 3.92 (dd, 10.0, 2.0) | 70.34a | 4 | 4.13 | 75.19 | ||
| 5 | 4.02 (dd, 2.0, 1.6) | 69.89 | 5 | 3.88 | 81.49 | ||
| 6 | 4.08 (ABdd, 12.8, 1.0) | 64.35 | 6 | 3.81 | 63.13 | ||
| 3.72 (ABdd, 12.8, 0.9) | |||||||
NMR measured at 500 MHz for 1H and 125 MHz for 13C in D2O, with 1,4-dioxane (δ 67.4) for 13C reference.
aCarbon shifts may be interchanged.
bQuaternary carbon.