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Chemical Acylation of Water‐Soluble Antioxidant of Bamboo Leaves (AOB‐w) and Functional Evaluation of Oil‐Soluble AOB (cAOB‐o)
Author(s) -
Liu Lingyi,
Xia Boneng,
Jin Cheng,
Zhang Yu,
Zhang Ying
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of food science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1750-3841
pISSN - 0022-1147
DOI - 10.1111/1750-3841.12578
Subject(s) - bamboo , acylation , chemistry , antioxidant , water soluble , organic chemistry , food science , botany , biology , catalysis
Antioxidant of bamboo leaves (AOB) is a novel natural food antioxidant approved in China since 2004. Natural phenolics contained in the current AOB are usually polyhydroxy derivatives exhibiting hydrophilic character, which has been marked as water‐soluble AOB (AOB‐w). In order to broaden the application fields, oil‐soluble AOB (cAOB‐o) was obtained by chemical acylation of AOB‐w with different chain‐length fatty acids varying from C8 to C18. Results indicated that the yield and solubility of cAOB‐o in 1‐octanol solvent depended on the carbon chain length of acyl donor, and cAOB‐o derived from C12 fatty acid exhibited the more powerful antioxidant activity evaluated by β‐carotene/linoleic acid bleaching assay. Total phenolic content decreased by Folin–Ciocalteu assay. Fourier transform infrared spectra showed the increase of a carbonyl (C = O) peak at 1701 cm −1 and a decrease in the intensity of the absorption at 3400 cm −1 (O‐H stretching) in cAOB‐o. Acylation was inferred to mainly occur on the hydroxyl groups of flavones C ‐glycosides according to the change of high‐performance liquid chromatography spectra and the contents of total flavonoids and phenolic acids. cAOB‐o with the addition of 0.02% significantly increased oxidative stability of palm oil 1.59 times, lard 3.74 times, and fried potato chips 2.08 times, which was better than the effect of oil‐soluble tea polyphenol ( P < 0.01). Moreover, cAOB‐o was identified to be actually nontoxicity by an acute oral toxicity test. All the above results indicated that cAOB‐o could be used as a novel and effective oil‐soluble antioxidant in the food industry.