Cristin-resultat-ID: 133907
Sist endret: 27. august 2010, 22:12
Resultat
Poster
2010

Assessment of physiological changes and taste quality of European blueberry (Vaccinium myrtillus) using metabolite profiling

Bidragsytere:
  • Jens Rohloff
  • Inger Martinussen
  • Eivind Uleberg
  • Olavi Junttila
  • Anja Hohtola
  • Laura Jaakola
  • mfl.

Presentasjon

Navn på arrangementet: 28th International Horticultural Congress
Sted: Lisboa
Dato fra: 22. august 2010
Dato til: 27. august 2010

Arrangør:

Arrangørnavn: International Society for Horticultural Science ISHS

Om resultatet

Poster
Publiseringsår: 2010

Klassifisering

Vitenskapsdisipliner

Basale biofag

Emneord

Plantemetabolisme

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

Assessment of physiological changes and taste quality of European blueberry (Vaccinium myrtillus) using metabolite profiling

Sammendrag

The fruit quality of European blueberry (EB) is mainly determined by taste compounds (sugars, acids, flavour) and health-beneficial structures generally denoted as antioxidants (vitamin C, phenolic acids, flavonols, anthocyanins, proanthocyanidins). Content and compound composition is strongly affected by the growth environment regarding light, temperature, water and edaphic factors. In order to assess genotypic relationships (northern and southern clones of EB) and environmental impact (temperature, day length) on berry quality parameters, a high-throughput system for blueberry metabolite profiling of nutritional compounds was established based on gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Dried methanol:H2O extracts from fresh-frozen berry tissue were derivatized, and subjected to GC-MS in order to detect polar compounds such as organic acids from Krebs-cycle, amino acids, sugars, polyols, and partly secondary metabolites (phenols, flavonoids). In addition, general quality parameters such as total phenols, total anthocyanins and antioxidant capacity (FRAP) were measured. Fructose (5 g), glucose (5 g), and sucrose (0.5 g/ 100 g f.w. at average) were the most abundant carbohydrates, together with high levels of organic acids such as citric acid (1.3 g), quinic acid (1.6 g), and malic acid (0.3 g/ 100 g f.w. at average). More than 50 metabolites per sample (identified compounds and not-annotated mass spectral tags) could be detected, and established the basis for multivariate statistics using principal component analysis, hierarchical clustering, and metabolite network analysis. Genotypic differences, modulation of metabolite pools and biosynthetic relationships are being discussed in-depth.

Bidragsytere

Aktiv cristin-person

Jens Rohloff

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Institutt for biologi ved Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet

Inger Martinussen

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter

Eivind Uleberg

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter

Olavi Junttila

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter

Anja Hohtola

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
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