Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7596120 | Food Chemistry | 2015 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
Anthocyanin degradation has been proposed as one of the primary causes for reduced colour and quality in red wine grapes grown in a warm climate. To study anthocyanin degradation we infused berries with l-phenyl-13C6-alanine and then tracked the fate of the anthocyanins comparing normal (25 °C) and warm (45 °C) temperature conditions. An untargeted metabolomics approach was aided by filtering the MS data using software algorithms to extract all M and M+6 isotopic peak pairs, allowing the analysis to focus solely on the metabolites of phenylalanine. A paired-comparison t-test was performed over the 8 biological replicates revealing 13 metabolites that were statistically different between 25 °C and 45 °C treatments. Most of these features had lower abundances in 45 °C samples, confirming that 45 °C treatment caused anthocyanin degradation. In addition, resveratrol was significantly reduced following heat treatment. However, 5 metabolites increased following the 45 °C treatment. These unidentified metabolites are therefore suspects for anthocyanin degradation products.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Alexander W. Chassy, Christoph Bueschl, Hyeyoung Lee, Larry Lerno, Anita Oberholster, Daniela Barile, Rainer Schuhmacher, Andrew L. Waterhouse,