Glycine, Diglycine, and Triglycine Exhibit Different
Reactivities in the Formation and Degradation of Amadori Compounds
Posted on 2022-11-15 - 15:05
A series
of Amadori compounds of glucose were prepared from glycine
(G-ARP), diglycine (DiG-ARP), and triglycine (TriG-ARP), and identified
by UPLC-MS/MS and NMR. The formation rate of ARPs was TriG-ARP >
DiG-ARP
> G-ARP, and their activation energies were 63.48 kJ/mol (TriG-ARP),
72.84 kJ/mol (DiG-ARP), and 84.76 kJ/mol (G-ARP), respectively, suggesting
that ARP was formed more easily from small peptides than from amino
acid. Although 1-DG was formed much more difficultly than 3-DG, the
same order of the formation of 1-DG, 3-DG, and browning was DiGly
> TriGly > Gly. It was also confirmed that more methylglyoxal
and
glyoxal would be formed from small peptides than equimolar amino acids.
Compared with free amino acid, ARP, deoxyglycosones, and their secondary
degradation products were more easily formed from dipeptide and tripeptide,
thereby stronger browning occurred and higher reactivity was exhibited
in Maillard reaction of di- or tripeptide.
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Xia, Xue; Zhai, Yun; Cui, Heping; Zhang, Han; Hayat, Khizar; Zhang, Xiaoming; et al. (2022). Glycine, Diglycine, and Triglycine Exhibit Different
Reactivities in the Formation and Degradation of Amadori Compounds. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.2c06639