• Title of article

    Interactions between apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.) polyphenols and cell walls modulate the extractability of polysaccharides

  • Author/Authors

    Le Bourvellec، نويسنده , , C. and Guyot، نويسنده , , S. and Renard، نويسنده , , C.M.G.C.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    251
  • To page
    261
  • Abstract
    Apple polyphenol (procyanidin)–cell wall interactions were investigated and their impact on polysaccharide extractability were determined. Native and oxidised procyanidins with average degrees of polymerisation of 13 and 55 were incubated with cell walls. The effect of polyphenol oxidation was evaluated according to two designs: polyphenols were chemically oxidised either before or during interaction. The extent of procyanidin binding to cell walls was assessed by the weight increase of procyanidin–cell wall complexes as compared to weights of cell walls alone. Pectins and hemicelluloses were subsequently extracted from cell walls and from cell wall–procyanidin adducts using a chelating agent (ammonium oxalate), a pectin lyase treatment and NaOH. increases of complexes ranged from 20% to 29%. Weight gains increased in the following order: native, pre-oxidised, simultaneously oxidised and bound procyanidins, these different fractions were, respectively, bound to cell walls. In presence of native procyanidins, oxalate extracted less pectins, and those pectins had lower degrees of methylation, as compared to cell walls alone. When cell walls were incubated with oxidised and oxidising procyanidins, even less pectins with lower degree of methylation were extracted. Major findings indicated that procyanidins mainly bound to pectins as compared to other cell wall compounds: (1) the procyanidin adsorption to cell walls limited the depolymerisation of pectins supposedly induced by pectin lyase. Thus less pectins were extracted but their degree of methylation increased, indicative of products of lysis of pectin lyase. (2) Hemicelluloses extracted using NaOH (4 M) were more abundant in pectins when oxidised or oxidising procyanidins were complexed rather than non complexed to cell walls.
  • Keywords
    Hemicellulose , pectin , Sequential extraction , Tannin
  • Journal title
    CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
  • Record number

    1620715