Contribution of Hydroxycinnamic Acids to Color Formation
in Nonenzymatic Browning Reactions with Key Maillard Reaction Intermediates
Posted on 2024-01-15 - 14:33
The Maillard reaction
is a vital part of food processing, involving
a vast number of complex reaction pathways, resulting in high-molecular-weight
colorants. So far, studies have been focused on the conversion of
carbohydrates and amino compounds, but the literature elaborating
the contribution of phenolic compounds to the formation of the colored
end-products is still rare. The aim of this study was to characterize
early reactions, underlying the formation of phenol-containing melanoidins.
For this purpose, binary model systems of the prominent phenolic compounds
caffeic acid and ferulic acid combined with α-dicarbonyl compounds
typically formed in the Maillard reaction such as glyoxal, methylglyoxal,
and diacetyl were analyzed after heat treatment. High-resolution mass
spectrometry revealed that decarboxylation, aromatic electrophilic
substitution, and nucleophilic addition are important reaction steps
that lead to colored heterogeneous oligomers. Polymerization was favored
for phenolic compounds with a high electron density in the aromatic
system and for α-dicarbonyl compounds carrying aldehyde functions.
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Bork, Leon Valentin; Proksch, Nicolas; Rohn, Sascha; Kanzler, Clemens (2024). Contribution of Hydroxycinnamic Acids to Color Formation
in Nonenzymatic Browning Reactions with Key Maillard Reaction Intermediates. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.3c07168