Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10847788 | Steroids | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
As vegetable oils and phytosterol-enriched spreads are marketed for frying food or cooking purposes, temperature is one of the most important factors leading to the formation of phytosterol oxides in food matrix. A methodology based on saponification, organic solvent extraction, solid-phase extraction (SPE), followed by mass spectrometric identification and quantitation of β-sitosterol oxides using capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) in selected ion monitoring (SIM) mode was developed and characterized. Relative response factors of six β-sitosterol oxides, including 7α-hydroxy, 7β-hydroxy, 5,6α-epoxy, 5,6β-epoxy, 7-keto, and 5α,6β-dihydroxysitosterol, were calculated against authentic standards of 19-hydroxycholesterol or cholestanol. Linear calibration data, limit of detection, and sample recoveries during analytical process. Recoveries of these oxidation compounds in spiked samples ranged from 88 to 115%, while relative standard derivation (R.S.D.) values were below 10% in most cases. The analytical method was applied to quantify β-sitosterol oxides formed in thermal-oxidized vegetable oils which were heated at different temperatures and for varying time periods. Sitosterol oxidation is strikingly higher in sunflower oil relative to olive oil under all conditions of temperature and heating time.
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Authors
Xin Zhang, Diane Julien-David, Michel Miesch, Philippe Geoffroy, Francis Raul, Stamatiki Roussi, Dalal Aoudé-Werner, Eric Marchioni,