Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5133779 | Food Chemistry | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢Different mamey sapote genotypes are characterized by their specific carotenoid profiles.â¢Orange-fleshed fruits contained higher amounts of keto-carotenoids.â¢Neoxanthin, violaxanthin, and other epoxides prevailed in yellow-fleshed fruits.â¢Mamey sapote contained potentially vitamin A-active sapotexanthin and cryptocapsin.â¢Post-prandial absorption of sapotexanthin was proven for the first time.
Although different genotypes of mamey sapote with distinct pulp colors are consumed in countries from Central to South America, in-depth knowledge on genotype-related differences of their carotenoid profile is lacking. Since the fruit was found to contain the potentially vitamin A-active keto-carotenoids sapotexanthin and cryptocapsin, we sought to qualitatively and quantitatively describe the carotenoid profile of different genotypes by HPLC-DAD-MSn. Sapotexanthin and cryptocapsin were present in all genotypes. Keto-carotenoids such as cryptocapsin, capsoneoxanthin, and their esters were most abundant in orange-fleshed fruit, whereas several carotenoid epoxides prevailed in yellow-fleshed fruit. Differing carotenoid profiles were associated with different color hues of the fruit pulp, while the widely variable carotenoid content (3.7-8.0 mg/100 g FW) was mainly reflected by differences in color intensity (chroma Câ). Furthermore, the post-prandial absorption of sapotexanthin to human plasma was proven for the first time. Besides sapotexanthin, cryptocapsin was found to be resorbed.