Effect of Thermal Processing on the Metabolic Components of Black Beans on Ultra-High-Performance Liquid Chromatography Coupled with High-Field Quadrupole-Orbitrap High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry |
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Authors: | Yuchao Feng Xia Fan Shu Zhang Miao Yu Tong Wu Ying Liang Changyuan Wang Hongzhi Yang |
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Affiliation: | 1.College of Food, Heilongjiang Bayi Agricultural University, Xinfeng Lu 5, Daqing 163319, China; (Y.F.); (S.Z.); (M.Y.); (T.W.); (Y.L.) ;2.Institute of Quality Standards and Testing Technology for Agricultural Product, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science, Beijing 100081, China;3.Chinese National Engineering Research Center, Daqing 163319, China |
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Abstract: | An ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with high-field quadrupole-orbitrap mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QE-MS) histological platform was used to analyze the effects of two thermal processing methods (cooking and steaming) on the nutritional metabolic components of black beans. Black beans had the most amino acids, followed by lipids and polyphenols, and more sugars. Multivariate statistical analysis indicated that heat processing significantly affected the metabolic component content in black beans, with effects varying among different components. Polyphenols, especially flavonoids and isoflavones, were highly susceptible. A total of 197 and 210 differential metabolites were identified in both raw black beans and cooked and steamed black beans, respectively. Cooking reduced the cumulative content of amino acids, lipids, polyphenols, sugars, and nucleosides, whereas steaming reduced amino acid and lipid content, slightly increased polyphenol content, and significantly increased sugar and nucleoside content. Our results indicated that metabolic components were better retained during steaming than cooking. Heat treatment had the greatest impact on amino acids, followed by polyphenols, fatty acids, sugars, and vitamins, indicating that cooking promotes the transformation of most substances and the synthesis of a few. The results of this study provide a basis for further research and development of nutritional products using black beans. |
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Keywords: | metabolic components hot working UHPLC-QE-MS black beans |
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