Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods: Impact of molecular structure

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Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods : Impact of molecular structure. / Lund, Marianne N.

In: Trends in Food Science and Technology, Vol. 112, 2021, p. 241-251.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lund, MN 2021, 'Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods: Impact of molecular structure', Trends in Food Science and Technology, vol. 112, pp. 241-251. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056

APA

Lund, M. N. (2021). Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods: Impact of molecular structure. Trends in Food Science and Technology, 112, 241-251. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056

Vancouver

Lund MN. Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods: Impact of molecular structure. Trends in Food Science and Technology. 2021;112:241-251. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056

Author

Lund, Marianne N. / Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods : Impact of molecular structure. In: Trends in Food Science and Technology. 2021 ; Vol. 112. pp. 241-251.

Bibtex

@article{56b108954ff349bb84c640360e5d7091,
title = "Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods: Impact of molecular structure",
abstract = "Background: Plant polyphenols are widely distributed in foods and beverages, either naturally present in plant-based foods or added as plant extracts due to their multifaceted functional and bioactive properties, especially as antioxidants that retard rancidity caused by lipid oxidation. More than 8000 phenolic compounds with different molecular structure exist in nature, but only a limited range of polyphenol-containing plant extracts are commercially available as food ingredients, e.g. from rosemary, green tea, and grapes. Scope and approach: Polyphenols react with a wide range of food components, including proteins, peptides, amino acids, lipid oxidation products, intermediates of Maillard reactions, and compounds formed during thermal degradation of carbohydrates. The reaction mechanisms are very different for some of these reactions, and the molecular structure determines how efficiently a given polyphenol is involved in these reactions. This review will describe the chemical mechanisms for reactions of polyphenols with food components, and illustrate how choice of polyphenols with specific molecular structure can be used to control undesired reactions in foods. A discussion is included on other characteristics of polyphenols that need to be taken into consideration in order to avoid the introduction of new unwanted quality changes in foods. Key findings and conclusions: Polyphenols with o-diphenol structure oxidize in foods and the resulting o-quinone reacts fast with nucleophilic amino acid residues, especially with thiol groups, and may change protein functional properties. Polyphenols with hydroxyl groups in meta-position will favor reaction with carbonyls, but these types of reactions are slower than reactions between quinones and proteins.",
keywords = "Dicarbonyl trapping, Maillard reactions, Michael addition, Polyphenol-protein binding, Reaction kinetics, Strecker aldehydes",
author = "Lund, {Marianne N.}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056",
language = "English",
volume = "112",
pages = "241--251",
journal = "Trends in Food Science & Technology",
issn = "0924-2244",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reactions of plant polyphenols in foods

T2 - Impact of molecular structure

AU - Lund, Marianne N.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Background: Plant polyphenols are widely distributed in foods and beverages, either naturally present in plant-based foods or added as plant extracts due to their multifaceted functional and bioactive properties, especially as antioxidants that retard rancidity caused by lipid oxidation. More than 8000 phenolic compounds with different molecular structure exist in nature, but only a limited range of polyphenol-containing plant extracts are commercially available as food ingredients, e.g. from rosemary, green tea, and grapes. Scope and approach: Polyphenols react with a wide range of food components, including proteins, peptides, amino acids, lipid oxidation products, intermediates of Maillard reactions, and compounds formed during thermal degradation of carbohydrates. The reaction mechanisms are very different for some of these reactions, and the molecular structure determines how efficiently a given polyphenol is involved in these reactions. This review will describe the chemical mechanisms for reactions of polyphenols with food components, and illustrate how choice of polyphenols with specific molecular structure can be used to control undesired reactions in foods. A discussion is included on other characteristics of polyphenols that need to be taken into consideration in order to avoid the introduction of new unwanted quality changes in foods. Key findings and conclusions: Polyphenols with o-diphenol structure oxidize in foods and the resulting o-quinone reacts fast with nucleophilic amino acid residues, especially with thiol groups, and may change protein functional properties. Polyphenols with hydroxyl groups in meta-position will favor reaction with carbonyls, but these types of reactions are slower than reactions between quinones and proteins.

AB - Background: Plant polyphenols are widely distributed in foods and beverages, either naturally present in plant-based foods or added as plant extracts due to their multifaceted functional and bioactive properties, especially as antioxidants that retard rancidity caused by lipid oxidation. More than 8000 phenolic compounds with different molecular structure exist in nature, but only a limited range of polyphenol-containing plant extracts are commercially available as food ingredients, e.g. from rosemary, green tea, and grapes. Scope and approach: Polyphenols react with a wide range of food components, including proteins, peptides, amino acids, lipid oxidation products, intermediates of Maillard reactions, and compounds formed during thermal degradation of carbohydrates. The reaction mechanisms are very different for some of these reactions, and the molecular structure determines how efficiently a given polyphenol is involved in these reactions. This review will describe the chemical mechanisms for reactions of polyphenols with food components, and illustrate how choice of polyphenols with specific molecular structure can be used to control undesired reactions in foods. A discussion is included on other characteristics of polyphenols that need to be taken into consideration in order to avoid the introduction of new unwanted quality changes in foods. Key findings and conclusions: Polyphenols with o-diphenol structure oxidize in foods and the resulting o-quinone reacts fast with nucleophilic amino acid residues, especially with thiol groups, and may change protein functional properties. Polyphenols with hydroxyl groups in meta-position will favor reaction with carbonyls, but these types of reactions are slower than reactions between quinones and proteins.

KW - Dicarbonyl trapping

KW - Maillard reactions

KW - Michael addition

KW - Polyphenol-protein binding

KW - Reaction kinetics

KW - Strecker aldehydes

U2 - 10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056

DO - 10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.056

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:85104635269

VL - 112

SP - 241

EP - 251

JO - Trends in Food Science & Technology

JF - Trends in Food Science & Technology

SN - 0924-2244

ER -

ID: 261163838