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Paper No. : 11 Paper Title: Food Analysis and Quality Control Module-21: Analysis of anti-nutrients in foods 1.1 Methods for quantification of the antinutritional factors in foods Antinutrients are found at some level in almost all foods for a variety of reasons. They are natural or synthetic compounds that interfere with the absorption of nutrients present in the food. Although they not necessarily toxic per se, are plant compounds which decrease the nutritional value of a plant food, usually by making an essential nutrient unavailable or indigestible when consumed by humans/animals. Several methods are used for the quantitative determination of anti-nutritional factors in foods based on reports by different authors. These are: trypsin inhibitor activities are determined according to Liener (1979); haemagglutinatin, Jaffe (1979); cyanogenic glucosides (HCN), Bradbury et al (1999); oxalates, Fasset, (1996); phytates, Maga (1983); tannin, Dawra et al. (1988); saponinn, Brunner (1984); and alkaloids, Henry (1973) etc. There are other some new methods for quantification of antinutritional factors also due to recent advances in the nutritional sciences. Principles of these methods are discussed as under. 1.1.1 Phytic acid Several methods are available for determining phytic acid concentrations in products. There are many papers that report different modifications to these methods, but the ideal methodology is yet to be agreed upon. The existing methodology needs to be optimized and standardized. There are many different techniques that can be used for the identification of phytic acid, but there are no direct methods. There are no specific reagents that detect phytic acid or its various forms. Moreover, phytic acid does not have a characteristic absorption spectrum in the UV or visible light region. Most analytical methods are based on extraction or isolation of phytic acid. Most conventional quantitative methods for phytate analysis have been based on the procedure of Heubner and Standler (1914). These methods involve sample extraction with acid and subsequent precipitation of the Fe (III)–phytate complex following addition of ferric chloride. Phytate is estimated either by determining the phosphorus (McCance and Widdowson, 1935), Fe (Wheeler and Ferrel, 1971) or inositol (Oberleas, 1971) in the isolated phytate complex, or indirectly based on the determination of the residual Fe in the solution after precipitation of ferric phytate from a known concentration of ferric salt in an acid solution (Young, 1936). Later, it was established that in addition to inositol hexaphosphate, ferric ion will also precipitate myoinositol pentaphosphate and tetraphosphate in a dilute acid solution, with the amount of IP5 and IP4 of the precipitate depending on the amount and composition of wash solution (Oberleas, 1971; Frolich et al. 1986; Phillippy et al., 1986). Small amounts of inorganic phosphate may also co-precipitate (Ellis et al., 1977). As the stoichiometric ratio of phosphorus to Fe in Fe (III)–IP precipitates is affected by several variables, the results are unreliable. Harland and Oberleas (1977) introduced the use of an anion exchange resin column. Phytic acid was eluted from the column separately from the lower inositol phosphates and inorganic phosphate employing a stepped gradient system and quantified by measuring the phosphate released after acid hydrolysis of the phytate fractions. Ellis and Morris further modified the anion exchange column stage of the method (Ellis and Morris, 1986) and it was accepted as an official method by the AOAC in1986 (Harland and Oberleas, 1986). The method of Harland and Oberleas (1977) has also been modified by other workers. Phytic acid content can be measured after elution from the anion exchange column either based on the reaction between ferric chloride and sulfosalisylic acid ¨ (Wade reagent) (Latta and Eskin, 1980 ; Fru Hbeck et al.,1995) or formation of the phytate–o- hydroxyhydroquinone- phtalein–Fe(III) complex (Fujita et al., 1986). In the Plaami and Kumpulainen‟s modification (1995) total phosphorus determination of phytic acid, after either anion exchange column or ferric precipitation, was performed by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). March et al. (1995) liberated phosphorus from phytic acid after anion exchange column by enzymatic hydrolysis and measured it spectrophotometrically, according to the method of Uppstro¨ m and Svensson (1980). However, in the method of Uppstro¨ m and Svensson (1980), phytic acid was calculated from the difference between phosphorus content before and after enzymatic hydrolysis of the sample without using anion exchange separation. The AOAC anion-exchange method is one that has been used to estimate phytic acid content in products. The results of the AOAC method and the method of Latta and Eskin (1980) and Fujita et al. (1986) agree with those of the earlier Fe precipitation methods. Later it was shown that the concentration of phytic acid determined by all these methods may be systematically overestimated because lower inositol phosphates (IP3-5) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP), if present, may be associated with IP6 (Phillippy et al., 1988; 36 Lehrfeld and Morris, 1992). Near-infrared spectroscopy methods for the determination of phytic acid have been developed by De Boever et al. (De Boever et al., 1994). NMR methods are capable of measuring phytic acid and myoinositols with a lower number of phosphate groups (Frolich et al. ¨ et al., 1980 1986, Erso ). Blatny et al. (1995) developed a method in which myoinositol hexaphosphate was determined with iso- tacophoresis. De Koning (1994) determined phytic acid in food by gas liquid chromatography. The early HPLC methods were capable of separation and determination of IP6 only (Camire and Clydesdal, 1982, Lee and Abendroth, 1983). Newer methods are capable of separating and determining the other IPs also. HPLC and detection methods are described. The high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method is the primary means of separation and quantification. HPLC is capable of separating phytic acid and inositol phosphates as separate entities. It also has the sensitivity and reproducibility to measure low concentrations in products. However HPLC method is also not without its share of problems. The reagents used in this method must be pure and free from metals or it will cause distortion in the readings. There are many different modifications to the HPLC method. The most common are the use of different columns, mobile phases, flow rates, extraction solvents, and preparation techniques. A strong anion exchange HPLC column has been used by Mathews et al. (1988) for separation in food analysis. Rounds and Nielsen obtained better separation and sharper peaks in plant, food and soil samples by gradient anion exchange HPLC instead of the isocratic elution used by Cilliers and Van Niekerk (1986). The use of reverse phase columns in ion-pair chromatography has also been presented in several papers (Sandberg and Ahderinne, 1986; Sandberg et al., 1989; Lehrfeld, 1994; Rounds, and Nielsen, 1993) with food, intestinal content and faeces samples. Methods for measuring phytic acid have been reviewed by Oberleas and Harland (1986), and phytic acid and other myoinositol phosphates more recently by Xu et al. (1992). For food and nutrition studies, methods which can determine different IPs separately are an appropriate choice. 1.1.2 Analytical techniques used in the determination of polyphenolic compounds from foods The most representative analytical methods mentioned in the literature for the separation and or quantification of polyphenolic compounds found in foods shall be discussed here. In the first place chromatographic techniques such as fine layer chromatography, gas, and in particular high- performance liquid chromatography used for the determination of polyphenolic compounds shall be discussed. 1.1.2.1 Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC) Before the onset of chromatography, the analysis of polyphenolic compounds was an extremely tedious task and perhaps the most difficult endeavor for those responsible for analytical determination. The birth of paper chromatography revolutionized the analysis of organic substances, and during the 1950s and 1960s paper chromatography was widely used for the determination of polyphenolic compounds, especially when applied for flavonoids determination (Robards and Antolovich, 1997). In no time paper chromatography was substituted by thin layer chromatography (TLC). It was considered a very simple and cheap technique that offered great versatility with respect to simultaneous qualitative analysis of polyphenolic compounds in distinct samples through the employment of adequate absorbents and specific reagents. The choice of stationary phase as well as an adequate solvent depends on the studied polyphenolic structures. Consequently, the most hydrophilic flavonoids were separated with TLC by employing stationary phases such as polyamide and microcrystaline cellulose. On the other hand, a classical stationary phase made of silicone gel has been used widely to separate more apolar flavonoids such as flavons and isoflavonoids. Likewise, this technique has numerous applications in the analysis of anthocyanins as confirmed by many bibliographical pilot studies. The detection, as is well known, is carried out by close inspection of migratory spot under the ultraviolet light. Furthermore, in the current chemical arsenal we dispose of an array of specific reagents that can be applied to each compound, previously separated on the plate. Therefore, for the sake of an example we may cite aluminum chloride, boron hydride, sodium, 190 and vanillin193 as the most common reagents employed in TLC. Inasmuch as that, based on the ensuing reaction and in virtue of the generated color, it is possible to accomplish identification of determined compounds, or at least the involved species of polyphenolic family. Thus, for example, while flavonoles and flavanones do not react with vanillin and HCl in the methanol medium, these reagents nonetheless are capable of reducing flavanones giving off a red or violet color that intensifies throughout reaction, allowing the identification of individual species from a complex polyphenolic environment.
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