Metabolomic fingerprinting of saffron by LC/MS: novel authenticity markers
Autores
Guijarro Díez, MiguelIdentificadores
Enlace permanente (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/24585DOI: 10.1007/s00216-015-8882-0
ISSN: 1618-2642
Editor
Springer
Fecha de publicación
2015Fecha fin de embargo
2016-07-23Patrocinadores
Authors thank financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (project CTQ2009-09022), the Comunidad of Madrid (Spain) and European funding from
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FEDER program (project S2013/ABI-3028, AVANSECAL-CM), and the University of Alcalá (project UAH2011/EXP-020). M. Guijarro-Díez thanks the Ministry of Science and Innovation for his predoctoral contract (BES-2010-033465). Authors also thank the kind gift of saffron samples by Carmencita Company and the group of Prof. Coral Barbas for the one month stay of M.G.D. in her laboratory to work with the different chemometric techniques used in this work.
Cita bibliográfica
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 2015, v. 407, n. 23, p. 7197-7213
Palabras clave
Metabolomic fingerprinting
Liquid chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry
Saffron
Authenticity markers
Proyectos
CTQ2009-09022 (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
S2013/ABI-3028/AVANSECAL (Comunidad de Madrid)
UAH2011/EXP-020 (Universidad de Alcalá)
Tipo de documento
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Versión del editor
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00216-015-8882-0Derechos
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
(c) Springer, 2015
Derechos de acceso
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Resumen
An untargeted metabolomic approach using liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry was developed in this work to identify novel markers for saffron authenticity which is an important matter related to consumer protection, quality assurance, active properties, and also economical impact (saffron is the most expensive spice). Metabolic fingerprinting of authentic and suspicious saffron samples from different geographical origin was obtained and analysed. Different extracting protocols and chromatographic methodologies were evaluated to obtain the most adequate extracting and separation conditions. Using an ethanol/water mixture at pH 9.0 and an elution gradient with a fused core C18 column enabled obtaining the highest number of significant components between authentic and adulterated saffron. By using multivariate statistical analysis, predictive classification models for authenticity and geographical origin were obtained. Moreover, 84 and 29 significant metabolites were detected as candidates for markers of authenticity and geographical origin, respectively, from which only 34 metabolites were tentatively identified as authenticity markers of saffron, but none related to its geographical origin. Six characteristic compounds of saffron (kaempferol 3-O-glucoside, kaempferol 3-O-sophoroside, kaempferol 3,7-O-diglucoside, kaempferol 3,7,4´-O-triglucoside, kaempferol 3-O-sophoroside-7-O-glucoside, and geranyl-O-glucoside) were confirmed by comparing experimental MS/MS fragmentation patterns with those provided in scientific literature being proposed as novel markers of authenticity.
Ficheros en el ítem
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Metabolomic_ABC_2015.pdf | 1.697Mb |
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