Amino Acids Profiling in Fruit Juices by High Performance Liquid Chromatography: A Review

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (SPL4) ◽  
pp. 2756-2767
Author(s):  
Vijaya Vemani ◽  
Mounika P ◽  
Poulami Das ◽  
Anand Kumar Tengli

In the preservation of normal physiological functions, the building blocks of the body called amino acids play a crucial role. A number of valuable and nutritional phytoconstituents are contained in fruit juices, such as vitamins, minerals, microelements, organic acids, antioxidants, flavonoids, amino acids and other components. Due to the growing population and demand, the quality of fruit juices is decreasing. One of the unethical and harmful practices called adulteration or food fraudulence has been adopted by most food and beverage industries. The amino acids which is one of the most important phytochemicals of fruit and fruit juices which affects the organoleptic properties like color, odor, and taste of juices and also helps in authenticity process from governing bodies by providing total amino acid content. Consequently, the main aim of the present review work is to provide information regarding the importance of amino acids, how they are adulterated, the potential analytical approach to detected amino acids and which methods are generally accepted method by the food industries. According to the literature review, we presume that reverse phased high-performance liquid chromatography with pre-column derivatization was the most adopted method for quality checking due to its advantages over other old and recent analytical approaches like simple, rapid, cost-effective nature, less / no sample matrix effect with high sensitivity, accuracy, and precision.

2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Musadiq Hussain Bhat ◽  
Mufida Fayaz ◽  
Amit Kumar ◽  
Alamgir Ahmad Dar ◽  
Ashok Kumar Jain

Background: The present study was carried out for determination of amino acid content in tubers of Dioscorea bulbifera using reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Methods: The method involved the vapor phase hydrolysis of the sample, automated derivatisation of the amino acids with the aid of AccQ-Fluor reagent kit, separated on a high performance liquid chromatography equipped with photo diode array (HPLC-PDA) at 254 nm having column temperature of 37 ºC. Results: The proportional molar concentration for each amino acid was calculated based on the concentration of standard amino acids and expressed as μg amino acid/mg sample. Methionine, aspartic acid and leucine were major components while as tyrosine was found minor from the plant on dry weight basis. Conclusion: The method is reliable, simple and economical for determining the amino acid content of Dioscorea bulbifera tubers.


2021 ◽  
pp. 217-223
Author(s):  
Ekut Saidkarimovna Karieva ◽  
Nodira Nigmatillaevna Gaipova ◽  
Kamola Negmatilloevna Nuridullaeva

The purpose of this research is to study the amino acid and elemental composition of the complex dry extract "Phytoinflam" obtained from ordinary Oak (latin. Quercus robur L.). Chamomile (latin. Chamоmilla recutita (L.)) and three-lobe Beggarticks (latin. Bidens tripartita). Determination of the amino acid composition was carried out by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and the quantitative determination of macro-and microelements - by the method of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) According to the results of the research, it was revealed that 20 amino acids were found in the dry extract "Phytoinflam": 15 of which are representatives of various classes of aliphatic amino acids, 3 – aromatic and 2 – heterocyclic. It should be noted that ten out of twenty discovered amino acids are irreplaceable. The largest quantities are proline, valine, alanine, arginine, cysteine and glutamine. The total amino acid content was 14.767 mg/100 mg, of which 38.97% were essential amino acids, and, accordingly, 61.03% were non-essential. The results of the study of micro- and macroelements showed the presence of 28 elements in the analyzed extract, among which seven are essential (Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn) and four conditionally essential. It is noted that the high content of such elements important for the vital activity of the body as calcium, potassium, sodium, magnesium, silver, strontium. The concentrations of heavy metals and arsenic in the analyzed dry extract did not exceed the regulated limit according to WHO and state Pharmacopoeia XIV. The data obtained indicate the high value of the complex dry extract "Phytoinflam", which confirms its therapeutic value and the possibility of creating drugs based on it.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Li ◽  
Justin W. Hicks ◽  
Lihai Yu ◽  
Lise Desjardin ◽  
Laura Morrison ◽  
...  

Abstract Background In molecular imaging with dynamic PET, the binding and dissociation of a targeted tracer is characterized by kinetics modeling which requires the arterial concentration of the tracer to be measured accurately. Once in the body the radiolabeled parent tracer may be subjected to hydrolysis, demethylation/dealkylation and other biochemical processes, resulting in the production and accumulation of different metabolites in blood which can be labeled with the same PET radionuclide as the parent. Since these radio-metabolites cannot be distinguished by PET scanning from the parent tracer, their contribution to the arterial concentration curve has to be removed for the accurate estimation of kinetic parameters from kinetic analysis of dynamic PET. High-performance liquid chromatography has been used to separate and measure radio-metabolites in blood plasma; however, the method is labor intensive and remains a challenge to implement for each individual patient. The purpose of this study is to develop an alternate technique based on thin layer chromatography (TLC) and a sensitive commercial autoradiography system (Beaver, Ai4R, Nantes, France) to measure radio-metabolites in blood plasma of two targeted tracers—[18F]FAZA and [18F]FEPPA, for imaging hypoxia and inflammation, respectively. Results Radioactivity as low as 17 Bq in 2 µL of pig’s plasma can be detected on the TLC plate using autoradiography. Peaks corresponding to the parent tracer and radio-metabolites could be distinguished in the line profile through each sample (n = 8) in the autoradiographic image. Significant intersubject and intra-subject variability in radio-metabolites production could be observed with both tracers. For [18F]FEPPA, 50% of plasma activity was from radio-metabolites as early as 5-min post injection, while for [18F]FAZA, significant metabolites did not appear until 50-min post. Simulation study investigating the effect of radio-metabolite in the estimation of kinetic parameters indicated that 32–400% parameter error can result without radio-metabolites correction. Conclusion TLC coupled with autoradiography is a good alternative to high-performance liquid chromatography for radio-metabolite correction. The advantages of requiring only small blood samples (~ 100 μL) and of analyzing multiple samples simultaneously, make the method suitable for individual dynamic PET studies.


1998 ◽  
Vol 829 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 101-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianni Galaverna ◽  
Roberto Corradini ◽  
Arnaldo Dossena ◽  
Emma Chiavaro ◽  
Rosangela Marchelli ◽  
...  

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