Chromatographic determination of D-amino acids as native constituents of vegetables and fruits |
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Authors: | H. Brückner T. Westhauser |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute of Food Technology, University of Hohenheim, 70593 Stuttgart, Germany |
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Abstract: | Summary Free D-amino acids (D-AA) were detected as native constituents in juices of vegetables (cultivars of cabbage, tomato, carrot, garlic) and fruits (organes, clementine, grapefruit, lemon, apples, pear, grapes) using gas chromatography (GC) or high-performance liquid chromatography (LC). For investigation by GC, AA enantiomers were converted into theirN(O)-pentafluoropropionyl 2-propyl esters and resolved on a Chirasil-L-Val capillary column. For determination by LC, precolumn derivatization of AA enantiomers usingo-phthaldialdehyde together with the chiral thiolsN-isobutyryl-L-cysteine orN-isobutyryl-D-cysteine and fluorescence detection of the diastereomeric isoindole derivatives, resolvable on an octadecylsilyl stationary phase, were used. D-Ala (0.6–3.8%) was detected in all freshly pressed plant juices usually in the highest relative amounts. Other D-AA detected were D-Asx (0.1–1.9%), D-Glx (0–1.3%), D-Ser (0–1.7%), D-Arg (0.4–1.2%, in grapes, orange, grapefruit, and clementine) and D-Leu and D-Val (1% in cabbage). Absolute amounts of native D-AA were totally 28–57 mol L–1 in fruit juices, 14.5 mol L–1 in a tomato juice and 8.5 mol L–1 in a carrot juice.Presented in part as lecture at 3rd International Congress on Amino Acids, Peptides and Analogues, August 23–27, 1993, Vienna; and as posters at 31st Scientific Meeting of German Society of Nutrition, Giessen, March 17th and 18th, 1994 [19]; and at Analytica Conference, April 19–22, 1994, Munich [20]. |
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Keywords: | Column liquid chromatography Gas chromatography Chirasil-Val Amino acid enantiomers N-Isobutyryl-cysteine |
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