A Screening Method for the Identification of Glycosylated Flavonoids and Other Phenolic Compounds Using a Standard Analytical Approach for All Plant Materials

Long-Ze Lin and James M. Harnly*
Food Composition Laboratory, Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Room 202B, Building 161, BARC-E, 103000 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, Maryland 20705-3000
J. Agric. Food Chem., 2007, 55 (4), pp 1084–1096
DOI: 10.1021/jf062431s
Publication Date (Web): January 27, 2007
Copyright Not subject to U.S. Copyright. Published 2007 American Chemical Society
*

 To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel:  301-504-8569. Fax:  301-504-8314. E-mail:  james.harnly@ars.usda.gov.

Abstract

A screening method was developed for the systematic identification of glycosylated flavonoids and other phenolic compounds in plant food materials based on an initial, standard analytical method. This approach applies the same analytical scheme (aqueous methanol extraction, reverse phase liquid chromatographic separation, and diode array and mass spectrometric detection) to every sample and standard. This standard approach allows the cross-comparison of compounds in samples, standards, and plant materials previously identified in the published literature. Thus, every analysis contributes to a growing library of data for retention times and UV/vis and mass spectra. Without authentic standards, this method provides provisional identification of the phenolic compounds:  identification of flavonoid backbones, phenolic acids, saccharides, and acyls but not the positions of the linkages between these subclasses. With standards, this method provides positive identification of the full compound:  identification of subclasses and linkages. The utility of the screening method is demonstrated in this study by the identification of 78 phenolic compounds in cranberry, elder flower, Fuji apple peel, navel orange peel, and soybean seed.

Keywords: Screening method; LC-DAD-ESI-MS; glycosylated flavonoids; phenolic compounds

Tools

History

  • Published In Issue February 21, 2007
  • Received for review August 23, 2006. Revised manuscript received November 7, 2006. Accepted November 9, 2006. This research was supported by the Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health under an Interagency Agreement.

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: