Title of article :
Degradation and conversion of thiamin and thiamin phosphate esters in fresh stored pork and in raw sausages
Author/Authors :
Poel، نويسنده , , C. and Bنckermann، نويسنده , , S. and Ternes، نويسنده , , W.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
5
From page :
506
To page :
510
Abstract :
Pork samples were extracted with trichloroacetic acid (4%) and analyzed for thiamin (T) and thiamin phosphate esters with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The following concentrations (on protein basis) were found in samples analyzed 0.5 h after slaughter: non-phosphorylated T, 1.0 nmol/g; thiamin monophosphate (TP), 1.3 nmol/g; thiamin diphosphate (TP2), 9.1 nmol/g; and thiamin triphosphate (TP3), 65.7 nmol/g. A fifth substance was also detected, which has not yet been identified in pork and may be related to thiamin tetraphosphate (TP4) or adenosine thiamin triphosphate (ATP3); when calculated as thiamin tetraphosphate the content (on protein basis) of the fifth substance was 15.0 nmol/g. 216 h storage, the contents (on protein basis) of T and TP had changed as follows: 46.3 nmol/g T; 3.2 nmol/g TP, 5.0 nmol/g TP2, and 12.5 nmol/g TP3, The fifth substance completely degraded within 6 h. These changes are probably due to the instability of highly phosphorylated thiamin phosphate esters, which undergo dephosphorylation during storage. ition, there was a decrease in total thiamin concentrations (on protein basis) during the first 24 h of storage from 92.1 nmol/g to 24.0 nmol/g, followed by an increase to 67.0 nmol/g over a 216 h storage period. ssible explanation for the decrease observed during the first 24 h might be that thiamin is converted into a reversible, binding form that cannot be extracted by trichloroacetic acid.
Keywords :
Thiamin phosphate ester , thiamin , pork , Binding form of thiamin
Journal title :
Meat Science
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Meat Science
Record number :
1489110
Link To Document :
بازگشت