Novel Amadori and Heyns compounds derived from short peptides found in dried cocoa beans

[Display omitted] •A novel class of short-peptide derived Amadori and Heyns compounds were identified in dried cocoa beans.•Amadori and Heyns compounds of di- and tripeptides exhibit complex fragmentation patterns during MS-MS experiments.•Discrimination of cocoa origins based on Amadori and Heyns c...

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Published inFood research international Vol. 133; p. 109164
Main Authors Andruszkiewicz, Paweł J., D'Souza, Roy N., Corno, Marcello, Kuhnert, Nikolai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canada Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2020
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Summary:[Display omitted] •A novel class of short-peptide derived Amadori and Heyns compounds were identified in dried cocoa beans.•Amadori and Heyns compounds of di- and tripeptides exhibit complex fragmentation patterns during MS-MS experiments.•Discrimination of cocoa origins based on Amadori and Heyns compounds content is possible using principal component analysis. Chemical transformations of Amadori compounds are responsible for the formation of aroma volatiles at the end of the Maillard reaction cascade, which in turn contributes to unique organoleptic characteristics of chocolate. A large amount of short peptides reported in fermented cocoa suggests the existence of a much larger variety of these flavor precursors than previously suspected. An HPLC-MS-MS study was performed on dried Malaysian cocoa beans to identify novel Amadori and Heyns compounds. In total, 34 species were found, including 26 previously unknown derived from di- and tripeptides. We illustrate how the structures were elucidated via tandem MS experiments, as well as present a comparative study on their relative quantities in samples coming from 11 countries of origin. There were significant differences between them, and discrimination was possible by principal component analysis based on Amadori content alone. However, the PCA separation could be a result of various post-harvest practices exerted among said countries.
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ISSN:0963-9969
1873-7145
DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2020.109164