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1.
The nonenzymatic reaction between reducing sugars and proteins, known as the Maillard reaction, has received increased recognition from nutritional science and medical research. The development of new analytical techniques for the detection of protein-bound Maillard products is therefore crucial. In this study, we applied peptide mapping by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry to investigate the formation of structurally specific Maillard products on glycated lysozyme (AGE-lysozyme), produced upon incubation with D-glucose. In parallel, we synthesized N(epsilon)-(carboxymethyl)lysine-modified lysozyme (CML-lysozyme) and N(epsilon)-(carboxyethyl)lysine-modified lysozyme, two well-described glycation products, as model substances. 3-Deoxyglucosone-modified lysozyme and methylglyoxal-modified lysozyme were prepared as examples of glycation products incubated with dicarbonyl compounds. We were able to detect specific modifications on AGE-lysozyme, which were assigned to CML, imidazolone A, and the Amadori product.  相似文献   

2.
Proteins or poly-L-lysine which were incubated in the presence of ascorbic acid, dehydroascorbic acid (ascorbylation), or various sugars (glycation) were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). To also detect more labile reaction products, the Maillard modified proteins or poly-L-lysine were enzymatically hydrolyzed and reacted with N-methyl-N-(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide to form the N(O)-tert-butyldimethylsilyl (tBDMS) derivatives prior to GC analysis. Under these conditions, the known Maillard products N (epsilon)-(carboxymethyl)lysine (1), oxalic acid mono-N (epsilon)-lysinylamide (2), and N (epsilon)-(carboxyethyl)lysine (3) could be simultaneously detected and quantified in glycated and ascorbylated proteins. Additionally, N (epsilon)-(1-carboxy-3-hydroxypropyl)-L-lysine (4) was identified for the first time as a Maillard product of proteins. Under the conditions applied here, 4 was found only in ascorbylated proteins or poly-L-lysine, but not in glycated proteins. Maillard-modified poly-L-lysine was further subjected to high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis after enzymatic hydrolysis and formation of the phenyl isothiocyanate derivatized amino acids. Using this method, N (epsilon)-formyl-L-lysine (5), which cannot be distinguished from 2 by GC-MS analysis, was identified for the first time as a glycation product. Compound 5 is mainly formed from ribose, lactose, and fructose. The indicated Maillard products were quantified in beta-lactoglobulin (GC-MS) or poly-L-lysine (HPLC) which were glycated or ascorbylated using different precursors.  相似文献   

3.
As indicators of the early stage of the Maillard reaction in carrots, N-(furoylmethyl) amino acids (FMAAs) formed during acid hydrolysis of the corresponding Amadori products were analyzed using RP-HPLC with UV detection. N(ε)-FM-Lys (furosine), FM-Gly, FM-Ala, FM-Val, FM-Ile, FM-Leu, and FM-GABA were identified using synthesized standard material by means of mass spectrometry. Furthermore, N(ε)-carboxymethyllysine (CML) and pyrraline were analyzed as indicators for advanced stages of glycation. For commercial samples with high water content, the formation of Amadori compounds predominates, whereas the advanced stage of Maillard reaction plays only a minor part. Carrot juices, baby food, and tinned carrots showed quite low rates of amino acid modification up to 5%. For dehydrated carrots, significantly higher values for Amadori products were measured, corresponding to a lysine derivatization of up to 58% and nearly 100% derivatization of GABA. Drying experiments revealed great differences in reactivity between the amino acids studied. Whereas furosine reached constant values quite quickly, some FMAAs showed a continuous increase with heating time, indicating that selected FMAAs can be used as a hallmark for the early Maillard reaction to control processing conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Although the Maillard reaction between proteins and carbohydrates is of central importance for food processing and in vivo processes, only little is known about changes of the metal-binding properties induced by protein glycation. The purpose of this study was to examine the complex formation of the quantitatively important peptide-bound Maillard reaction products (MRPs) N(epsilon)-fructoselysine and N(epsilon)-carboxymethyllysine with the biologically relevant metal ions copper(II) and zinc(II). The MRPs were synthesized as the N(alpha)-hippuryllysine derivatives in order to block the coordination function of the alpha-amino group. Stability constant measurements were performed in aqueous solution using pH potentiometry. N(alpha)-Hippuryl-N(epsilon)-fructoselysine forms moderate Cu(II) complexes (Log(10) K(1) = 5.8; Log(10) K(2) = 4.0) but fails to form any complexes with Zn(II). N(alpha)-Hippuryl-N(epsilon)-carboxymethyllysine gives slightly stronger complexes with Cu(II) (Log(10) K(1) = 7.3; Log(10) K(2) = 6.3), but again no complexation with Zn(II) was observed. These results show that post-translational modification of proteins by carbohydrates leads to the formation of new coordination centers for metal ions within a protein chain. Further studies are necessary to clarify the consequences of this phenomenon in terms of protein quality and physiological processes.  相似文献   

5.
Dry mixtures of lactose and caseinate were heated at 60 degrees C for up to 96 h at different relative humidities (RHs) ranging from 29 to 95%. The resulting nonenzymatic browning was studied by determining lactulosyl lysine formation in the caseinate (as measured by the conversion to furosine), amount of reacted lactose, loss of lysine, color formation, and fluorescent intensity. For each measurement, the maximum reaction occurred at intermediate RHs. While there is general agreement between the results obtained by different methods, discrepancies are understandable given the complex nature of nonenzymatic browning. It was shown that the degradation of the Amadori product, lactulosyl lysine, increased with RH. Moreover, the Maillard reaction, as opposed to caramelization of lactose, was the major pathway at all RHs. Visible browning occurred when the destruction of Amadori product became dominant, and interactions between sugar fragments and caseinate were not the rate-limiting steps in the nonenzymatic browning.  相似文献   

6.
The synthesis of the Amadori product lactuloselysine [N(epsilon)-(1-deoxy-D-lactulosyl-1)-L-lysine] was obtained starting from FMOC-lysine-OH (N(alpha)-9-fluorenylmethoxy-carbonyl-N(epsilon)H(2)-L-lysine-OH) and lactose. Compound identity was confirmed by MALDI-ToF, electrospray, and NMR analysis. A selective LC-MS procedure which allowed the detection of lactuloselysine up to 10 ng mL(-)(1) was set up and used to follow the formation of the compound in a lactose-lysine model system; quantification of this molecule after complete enzymatic hydrolysis of whey-proteins from milk samples was also performed.  相似文献   

7.
Glycation of bovine serum albumin by D-glucose and D-fructose under dry-heating conditions was studied. The reactivities of D-glucose and D-fructose, with respect to their ability to utilize primary amino groups of proteins, to cross-link proteins, to develop Maillard fluorescence, and to reduce protein solubility in the presence and absence of air (molecular oxygen) were investigated. D-Glucose showed a higher initial rate of utilization of primary amino groups than D-fructose, both in the presence and in the absence of oxygen. Subsequent reactions of the Amadori and Heyns rearrangement products, cross-linking, development of Maillard fluorescence, oxidation, and fragmentation, indicated that the alpha-hydroxy carbonyl group of Amadori products is more reactive than the aldehydo group of Heyns products. D-Fructose showed a greater sensitivity than D-glucose toward the presence of oxygen at the initial stages of the Maillard reaction. The presence or absence of oxygen in the glycation mixture did not seem to have an influence on the nature of products generated in the glycation mixtures during the advanced stages of the Maillard reaction.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the influence of the type of carbonyl group of the sugar on the structural changes of proteins during glycation, an exhaustive structural characterization of glycated beta-lactoglobulin with galactose (aldose) and tagatose (ketose) has been carried out. Conjugates were prepared via Maillard reaction at 40 and 50 degrees C, pH 7, and a w = 0.44. The progress of the Maillard reaction was followed by indirect formation of Amadori and Heyns compounds, advanced glycation end products, and brown polymers. The structural characterization of glycoconjugates was conducted by using a number of analytical techniques such as RP-HPLC, isoelectric focusing, MALDI-ToF, SDS-PAGE, size exclusion chromatography, and spectrofluorimetry (tryptophan fluorescence). In addition, the surface hydrophobicity of the beta-lactoglobulin glycoconjugates was also assessed. The results showed a higher reactivity of galactose than tagatose to form the glycoconjugates, probably due to the higher electrophilicity of the aldehyde group. At 40 degrees C, more aggregation was produced when beta-lactoglobulin was conjugated with tagatose as compared to galactose. However, at 50 degrees C hardly any difference was observed in the aggregation produced by galactose and tagatose. These results afford more insight into the importance of the functional group of the carbohydrate moiety during the formation of protein-carbohydrate conjugates via Maillard reaction.  相似文献   

9.
The formation of color and Maillard reaction products in two model systems consisting of lactose and lysine or N(alpha)-acetyllysine has been investigated. During heating, the blockage of the N(alpha) group of lysine determined a faster color and antioxidative ability development compared to the system with free lysine. This is combined to a greater amount of melanoidin formation in the acetylated lysine system, while in the free lysine system a higher amount of pyrraline and hydroxymethyl furfural were detected. The pattern of low molecular weight products suggests that 3-deoxyglucosone and 1-deoxyglucosone degradation pathways are favored for free lysine and N(alpha)-acetyllysine, respectively. Whole data allow us to hypothesize that in a lactose-N(alpha)-acetyllysine model system the formation of colored high molecular weight polymer proceeds faster because less material is dispersed in reaction pathways, mainly the Strecker degradation, which leads to small and intermediate molecular weight products.  相似文献   

10.
While the Maillard reaction of free amino acids and proteins is a well-established process, no defined structures from the nonenzymatic browning of aminophospholipids in foodstuffs have been described so far. Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)-linked glucosylamines (Schiff-PE), Amadori products (Amadori-PE), 5-hydroxymethylpyrrole-2-carbaldehydes (Pyrrole-PE), and carboxymethyl (CM-PE) as well as carboxyethyl (CE-PE) derivatives were detected and quantified by liquid chromatography- electrospray mass spectrometry (LC-(ESI)MS). Model incubations of soy-PE and D-glucose were employed to firmly establish the LC-(ESI)MS procedure. Analyses of spray-dried egg yolk powders and lecithin products derived therefrom show one-fourth of the native D-glucose content of egg yolk to be transformed to Amadori-PE, corresponding to a PE derivatization quota of 11-15.5 mol %. Schiff-PE and Pyrrole-PE were present only in low amounts, no CM-PE and CE-PE could be identified in any of the investigated samples. The high glycation rate of egg yolk PE will influence the emulsifying properties and perhaps even the oxidation resistance of the respective products.  相似文献   

11.
The Maillard reaction is important during the heating and processing of foods for its contribution to food quality. To control a reaction as complex as the Maillard reaction, it is necessary to study the reactions of interest quantitatively. In this paper the main reaction products in monosaccharide-casein systems, which were heated at 120 degrees C and pH 6.7, were identified and quantified, and the reaction pathways were established. The main reaction routes were (i) sugar isomerization, (ii) degradation of the sugar into carboxylic acids, and (iii) the Maillard reaction itself, in which not only the sugar itself but also its reaction products react with the epsilon-amino group of lysine residues of the protein. Significant differences in reaction mechanism between aldose and ketose sugars were observed. Ketoses seemed to be more reactive in the sugar degradation reactions than their aldose isomers, and whereas the Amadori product was detected as a Maillard reaction intermediate in the aldose-casein system, no such intermediate could be found in the ketose-casein system. The reaction pathways found were put together into a model, which will be evaluated by kinetic modeling in a subsequent paper.  相似文献   

12.
Incubation of fumonisin B(1) and D-glucose in aqueous solutions resulted in the formation of N-(1-deoxy-D-fructos-1-yl) fumonisin B(1) in addition to the previously reported N-(carboxymethyl) fumonisin B(1). N-(1-Deoxy-D-fructos-1-yl) fumonisin B(1) is the first stable product formed after the Amadori rearrangement of the Schiff base formed by the reaction of the primary amine of fumonisin B(1) and the aldehyde group of D-glucose. N-(1-Deoxy-D-fructos-1-yl) fumonisin B(1) was synthesized by reacting fumonisin B(1) with an excess of D-glucose in methanol and heating for 6 h at 64 degrees C. It was purified using C(18) and strong cation exchange solid-phase extraction cartridges and characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Subsequently, N,N-dimethylformamide was found to be a better reaction solvent, requiring reaction for only 2-3 h at 64 degrees C and eliminating the formation of methyl esters. Alkaline hydrolysis of N-(1-deoxy-D-fructos-1-yl) fumonisin B(1) gave a mixture of hydrolyzed fumonisin B(1) and hydrolyzed N-(carboxymethyl) fumonisin B(1).  相似文献   

13.
α-Lactalbumin was glycated via the Maillard reaction in the dry state using various mono- and oligosaccharides. The reaction resulted not only in coupling of the saccharides to α-lactalbumin but also in cross-linked proteins. The glycation rate and the extent of cross-link formation were highly dependent on the saccharide used. Glycation by arabinose and xylose led to a very fast protein cross-link formation, whereas glucose showed a relatively low protein cross-linking ability. The stability of foams, created using the various glycated protein samples, depended on the type of saccharide used, the extent of glycation, and possibly the amount of cross-linked protein. Compared to nonmodified α-lactalbumin, glycation with rhamnose and fucose improved foam stability, whereas application of glucose, galacturonic acid, and their oligosaccharides did not exert a clear effect. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed that dehydration of the Amadori products is an indicator of the formation of protein cross-links.  相似文献   

14.
Electrochemical properties of beta-alanine/carbohydrate Maillard reaction products were measured using a combination platinum/Ag-AgCl (Cl(-)) redox electrode. Changes toward more negative voltages were observed, which were consistent with reductone formation during the course of the Maillard reaction. Using voltage change as a guide, the propensity for reductone formation among various sugars was ribose > xylose approximately arabinose > glucose approximately rhamnose approximately mannose approximately lactose > fructose. Similar electrochemical behavior indicative of reductone formation was observed in the decomposition products of a model Amadori compound, N-(1-deoxyfructos-1-yl)piperidine (1).  相似文献   

15.
To obtain information about the extent of the early Maillard reaction between the N-termini of peptides and lactose, alpha-N-(2-furoylmethyl) amino acids (FMAAs) were quantified together with epsilon-N-(2-furoylmethyl)lysine (furosine) in acid hydrolyzates of hypoallergenic infant formulas, conventional infant formulas, and human milk samples using RP-HPLC with UV-detection. FMAAs are formed during acid hydrolysis of peptide-bound N-terminal Amadori products (APs), and furosine is formed from the Amadori products of peptide-bound lysine. Unambiguous identification was achieved by means of LC/MS and UV-spectroscopy using independently prepared reference material. The extent of acid-induced conversion of APs to FMAAs was studied by RP-HPLC with chemiluminescent nitrogen detection (CLND). Depending on the corresponding alpha-N-lactulosyl amino acid, between 6.0% and 18.1% of FMAAs were formed during hydrolysis for 23 h at 110 degrees C in 8 N HCl. From epsilon-N-lactulosyllysine, 50% furosine is formed under these conditions. Whereas furosine was detectable in all assayed samples, five different FMAAs, alpha-FM-Lys, alpha-FM-Ala, alpha-FM-Val, alpha-FM-Ile, and alpha-FM-Leu, were exclusively detected in acid hydrolyzates of hypoallergenic infant formulas in amounts ranging from 35 to 396 mumol/100 g protein. Taking the conversion factors into account, modification of N-terminal amino acids in peptides by reducing carbohydrates was between 0.3% and 8.4%. This has to be considered within the discussion concerning the nutritional quality of peptide-containing foods.  相似文献   

16.
The formation of alpha-dicarbonyl-containing substances and Amadori rearrangement products was studied in the glycine-catalyzed (Maillard reaction) and uncatalyzed thermal degradation of glucose, maltose, and maltotriose using o-phenylenediamine as trapping agent. Various degradation products, especially alpha-dicarbonyl compounds, are formed from carbohydrates with differing degrees of polymerization during nonenzymatic browning. The different Amadori rearrangement products, isomerization products, and alpha-dicarbonyls produced by the used carbohydrates were quantified throughout the observed reaction time, and the relevance of the different degradation pathways is discussed. In the Maillard reaction (MR) the amino-catalyzed rearrangement with subsequent elimination of water predominated, giving rise to hexosuloses with alpha-dicarbonyl structure, whereas under caramelization conditions more sugar fragments with an alpha-dicarbonyl moiety were formed. For the MR of oligosaccharides a mechanism is proposed in which 1,4-dideoxyosone is formed as the predominating alpha-dicarbonyl in the quasi-water-free thermolysis of di- and trisaccharides in the presence of glycine.  相似文献   

17.
The chemical reactivity of 5-(hydroxymethyl)-2-furaldehyde (HMF) with lysine, glycine, and proline was studied using isotope labeling technique. To confirm the formation of HMF adducts in glucose amino acid model systems, a useful strategy was developed in which products simultaneously possessing six glucose (HMF moiety) and any number of amino acid carbon atoms in addition to nitrogen were targeted using specifically labeled precursors such as [(15)N(α)]lysine·2HCl, [(15)N(ε)]lysine·2HCl, [U-(13)C(6)]lysine·2HCl, [(13)C(6)]lysine·2HCl, and [U-(13)C(6)]glucose in the case of lysine model system. In addition, model systems containing HMF and amino acids were also studied to confirm specific adduct formation. Complete labeling studies along with structural analysis using appropriate synthetic precursors such as HMF Schiff base adducts of piperidine and glycine have indicated that HMF generated in the glucose/amino acid model systems initially forms a Schiff base adduct that can undergo decarboxylation through an oxazolidin-5-one intermediate and form two isomeric decarboxylated Schiff bases. Unlike the Schiff bases resulting from primary amines or amino acids such as glycine or lysine, those resulting from secondary amino acids such as proline or secondary amines such as piperidine can further undergo vinylogous Amadori rearrangement, forming N-substituted 5-(aminomethyl)furan-2-carbaldehyde derivatives.  相似文献   

18.
The product of acid hydrolysis of the Amadori compound gamma-N-(1-deoxy-D-fructosyl)aminobutyric acid was isolated and identified by (1)H NMR and (13)C NMR as gamma-N-(2-furoylmethyl)aminobutyric acid. This compound is an analogue to furosine, formed during acid hydrolysis of the corresponding Amadori compound. The retention time of the isolated compound was the same as that of the main peak observed in acid hydrolysates of stored orange juice powder. gamma-N-(2-Furoylmethyl)aminobutyric acid can be a useful indicator of the early stages of Maillard reaction in foods containing free gamma-aminobutyric acid.  相似文献   

19.
The formation of acrylamide was studied in low-moisture Maillard model systems (180 degrees C, 5 min) based on asparagine, reducing sugars, Maillard intermediates, and sugar degradation products. We show evidence that certain glycoconjugates play a major role in acrylamide formation. The N-glycosyl of asparagine generated about 2.4 mmol/mol acrylamide, compared to 0.1-0.2 mmol/mol obtained with alpha-dicarbonyls and the Amadori compound of asparagine. 3-Hydroxypropanamide, the Strecker alcohol of asparagine, generated only low amounts of acrylamide ( approximately 0.23 mmol/mol), while hydroxyacetone increased the acrylamide yields to more than 4 mmol/mol, indicating that alpha-hydroxy carbonyls are much more efficient than alpha-dicarbonyls in converting asparagine into acrylamide. The experimental results are consistent with the reaction mechanism based on (i) a Strecker type degradation of the Schiff base leading to azomethine ylides, followed by (ii) a beta-elimination reaction of the decarboxylated Amadori compound to afford acrylamide. The beta-position on both sides of the nitrogen atom is crucial. Rearrangement of the azomethine ylide to the decarboxylated Amadori compound is the key step, which is favored if the carbonyl moiety contains a hydroxyl group in beta-position to the nitrogen atom. The beta-elimination step in the amino acid moiety was demonstrated by reacting under low moisture conditions decarboxylated model Amadori compounds obtained by synthesis. The corresponding vinylogous compounds were only generated if a beta-proton was available, for example, styrene from the decarboxylated Amadori compound of phenylalanine. Therefore, it is suggested that this thermal pathway may be common to other amino acids, resulting under certain conditions in their respective vinylogous reaction products.  相似文献   

20.
High-pressure effects on Maillard reaction between glucose and lysine   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Glucose-lysine model systems prepared over a range of pH values (5-10) in unbuffered and buffered media were incubated at 60 degrees C either under atmospheric pressure or at 400 MPa. The results obtained showed that high pressure affected in different ways the different stages of the Maillard reaction and that such effects were strongly influenced by pressure-induced changes in the pH of the systems. In unbuffered media, at an initial pH < or =8.0, the formation of Amadori rearrangement products (ARP) was not considerably affected by pressure, whereas the intermediate and advanced stages of the Maillard reaction were suppressed, suggesting a retardation of the degradation of the ARP. In buffered media, at pH values < or =8.0, pressure slowed the Maillard reaction from the initial stages. These effects are attributed to the pH drop caused by the pressure-induced dissociation of the acid groups. In unbuffered and buffered media at initial pH = 10.2, high pressure accelerated the formation and subsequent degradation of ARP, leading to increased levels of intermediate and advanced reaction products.  相似文献   

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