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Download fileDifferentiation of Maturity and Quality of Fruit Using Noninvasive Extractive Electrospray Ionization Quadrupole Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry
journal contribution
posted on 15.02.2007, 00:00 authored by Huanwen Chen, Yanping Sun, Arno Wortmann, Haiwei Gu, Renato ZenobiMaturity is an essential factor that determines storage-life and final quality of most fruits and vegetables. Maturity
monitoring is thus of paramount importance for postharvest handling and fruit quality regulation. Ideal analytical
procedures for maturity investigation require high sensitivity, specificity, and high throughput and should be
noninvasive. For the purpose of maturity differentiation,
extractive electrospray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight
mass spectrometry (EESI-QTOF-MS) is developed for
rapid fingerprinting of compounds released from various
fruits. Ripening stages of bananas, grapes, and strawberries are successfully differentiated by performing principal
component analysis (PCA) of the mass spectral fingerprints of the fruits. Methodological reproducibility was
also evaluated experimentally and in terms of PCA clusters. The data indicate that EESI-QTOF-MS is a useful
noninvasive tool for rapid investigation and differentiation
of maturity and quality of fruits without sample preparation.