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Identification and Quantitation of Reaction Products from Quinic Acid, Quinic Acid Lactone, and Chlorogenic Acid with Strecker Aldehydes in Roasted Coffee.

Michael GiglOliver FrankJohanna BarzAnna GablerChristian HegmannsThomas Frank Hofmann
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2021)
To gain comprehensive insight into the interactions of key coffee odorants, like the Strecker aldehydes, acetaldehyde, propanal, methylpropanal, 2- and 3-methylbutanal, and methional, and the nonvolatile fraction of coffee, an untargeted metabolomics approach was applied. Ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC)-time of flight (TOF)-mass spectrometry (ESI-) profiling followed by statistical data analysis revealed a marker substance for a coffee beverage spiked with acetaldehyde with an accurate mass of 217.0703 [M - H]-. This compound could be identified as a reaction product of quinic acid (QA) and acetaldehyde linked by acetalization at the cis-diol function of QA. Consequently, the acetalization of aldehydes, QA, 5-O-caffeoyl quinic acid (CQA), and quinic acid γ-lactone (QAL) was investigated by means of model reactions, followed by synthesis, isolation, and structure elucidation via UPLC-TOF-MS and 1D and 2D NMR techniques. UHPLC-MS/MSMRM screening and the quantification of aldehyde adducts in coffee beverages revealed the presence of QA/acetaldehyde, -/propanal, -/methylpropanal, and -/methional reaction products and CQA/acetaldehyde, -/propanal, -/methylpropanal, -/2- and 3-methylbutanal, and -/methional and QAL/acetaldehyde adducts for the first time, in concentrations of 12-270 μg/L for QA/aldehydes, 5-225 μg/L for CQA/aldehydes, and 62-173 μg/L for QAL/acetaldehyde. The sensory characterization of the identified compounds showed bitter taste recognition thresholds of 48-297 μmol/L for CQA adducts and 658 μmol/L for QAL/acetaldehyde, while the QA adducts showed no bitter taste (<2000 μmol/L).
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