The wall-bound phenolics of Chinese water chestnut (Eleocharis dulcis)
1996
Parr, A.J. | Waldron, K.W. | Ng, A. | Parker, M.L.
Chinese water chestnut (CWC) is a vegetable in which the edible storage parenchyma exhibits thermal stability to texture. This property has been attributed to the presence of large quantities of simple phenolics which exhibit pH-dependent autofluorescence. The identities of the major phenolic components were assessed by reverse-phase HPLC after sequentially extracting them with increasing strengths of alkali from purified CWC cell wall material. The levels of cold-alkali-liberated phenolics were very high (12.2 mg g-1 cell wall material). Ferulic acid dominated the monomeric phenol fraction (7.2 mg g-1), although small quantities of aldehydes were also released. A number of different diferulic acids were also identified, of which the 8-O-4'-linked form was the major component (2.8 mg g-1), with 8,5'-diferulic acid and the familiar 5,5'-form also present in smaller quantities (910 and 988 micrograms g-1, respectively). Hence, approximately 40% of the ferulic acid in the wall was present as dimers which are potentially available to form extensive, heat-resistant cross-links between polysaccharides within the wall, and between cells.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]الكلمات المفتاحية الخاصة بالمكنز الزراعي (أجروفوك)
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