Structural Determination
of Glucosylceramides in the
Distillation Remnants of Shochu, the Japanese Traditional Liquor,
and Its Production by Aspergillus kawachii
posted on 2012-11-21, 00:00authored byMiyo Hirata, Keisuke Tsuge, Lahiru
N. Jayakody, Yoshitaka Urano, Kazutaka Sawada, Shigeki Inaba, Koji Nagao, Hiroshi Kitagaki
Shochu is traditional Japanese liquor produced from various
crops
and fungi Aspergillus kawachi or A. awamorii. The amount of unutilized shochu distillation
remnants is increasing because of the recent prohibition of ocean
dumping of these remnants. In this Article, we first describe the
structures of glucosylceramides contained in shochu distillation remnants
by fragment ion analysis using ESI–tandem mass spectrometry.
Shochu distillation remnant produced from barley contained glucosylceramides
d18:2/C16:0h, d18:2/C20:0h, d19:2/C18:1h, and d18:2/C18:0h. Koji (barley
fermented with A. kawachii) contained
the same glucosylceramides. Shochu distillation remnants produced
from rice contained glucosylceramides d18:2/C18:0h and d19:2/C18:1h.
The culture broth of A. kawachii contained
glucosylceramides d19:2/C18:1h and d19:2/C18:0h. These results indicate
that the glucosylceramides contained in crops and those produced by A. kawachii transfer through the processes of fermentation
with yeast and distillation to the shochu distillation remnant. This
information will enable utilization of shochu distillation remnants
and koji as novel sources of sphingolipids.