Quantitative analysis of long-chain trans-monoenes originating from hydrogenated marine oil
Autor: | Rudolph A. Riemersma, J. Anne Payne, Rob Wilson, Karin Lyall |
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Rok vydání: | 2000 |
Předmět: |
Adult
chemistry.chemical_classification Chromatography Gas Chromatography Organic Chemistry Reproducibility of Results Fatty acid Cell Biology Middle Aged Reference Standards Fish oil Margarine Biochemistry Toluene Hexane chemistry.chemical_compound Silver nitrate Fish Oils Adipose Tissue chemistry Humans Chromatography Thin Layer Gas chromatography Quantitative analysis (chemistry) Polyunsaturated fatty acid |
Zdroj: | Lipids. 35:681-687 |
ISSN: | 1558-9307 0024-4201 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11745-000-0573-3 |
Popis: | Gas chromatography (GC) is used for the analysis of trans-fatty acids in partially hydrogenated vegetable oils. Although trans-isomers of C18 carbon length predominate in partially hydrogenated vegetable oils, trans-isomers of C20 and C22 carbon length occur in partially hydrogenated fish oil. We report a simple silver ion chromatographic combined with capillary GC technique for quantitative analysis of trans-monoenes derived from partially hydrogenated fish oil. Silver nitrate thin-layer chromatographic (TLC) plates are developed in toluene/hexane (50:50, vol/vol). Fatty acid methyl esters are separated into saturates (Rf 0.79), trans-monoenes (Rf 0.49), cis-monoenes (Rf 0.27), dienes (Rf 0.10), and polyunsaturated fatty acids with three or more double bonds remaining at the origin. The isolated trans-monoenes are quantitatively analyzed by capillary GC. The technique of argentation TLC with GC analysis of isolated methyl esters is highly reproducible with 4.8% variation (i.e., coefficient of variation, CV%) in R. values and 4.3 and 6.9% CV% in quantification within batch and between batch, respectively. Furthermore, the combined technique revealed that direct GC analysis underestimated the trans-content of margarines by at least 30%. In this study, C20 and C22 trans-monoenes were found in relatively large quantities; 13.9% (range 10.3-19.6%) and 7.5% (range 5.3-11.5%), respectively, in margarine purchased in 1995, but these C20 and C22 trans-monoenes were much reduced (0.1%) in a fresh selection of margarine purchased in 1998. Compositional data from labels underestimated the trans-content of margarines, especially those derived from hydrogenated marine oil. Low levels of C20 transmonoenes (range 0.1-0.3%) and C22 trans-monoenes (range 0.0-0.1%) were identified in adipose tissue obtained from healthy volunteers in 1995, presumably indicating consumption of partially hydrogenated fish oil. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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