학술논문

Phenolic composition of rooibos changes during simulated fermentation: Effect of endogenous enzymes and fermentation temperature on reaction kinetics.
Document Type
Article
Source
Food Research International. Jul2019, Vol. 121, p185-196. 12p.
Subject
*CHEMICAL kinetics
*FERMENTATION
*ROOIBOS tea
*ENZYMES
*PHENOLS
Language
ISSN
0963-9969
Abstract
Phenolic compounds of Aspalathus linearis (rooibos) are susceptible to oxidation during "fermentation", a process characterized by the formation of a red-brown leaf color. The role of enzymes in this process is not yet understood. An experiment with dried green rooibos plant material pre-treated at 170 °C for 30 min to denature and "inactivate" endogenous enzymes was conducted to confirm the role of oxidative enzymes. The phenolic composition of "enzyme inactivated" plant material was not significantly (p ≥.05) affected by simulated fermentation, compared to control samples, as determined using piece-wise multivariate analysis of variance for successive time intervals. This proves that rooibos enzymes participate in the oxidation of phenolic compounds during fermentation of the plant material. A kinetic modeling approach was subsequently used to establish reaction kinetic parameters for selected rooibos phenolic compounds. The degradation of aspalathin and nothofagin and formation of eriodictyol glucosides during simulated fermentation at four temperatures from 37 to 50 °C were best described by the fractional conversion model based on first-order kinetics (r2 > 0.98), which allows for non-zero equilibrium concentrations. The extent of degradation for other compounds was too low to enable kinetic modeling. Reaction rates for the degradation/formation of phenolic compounds during fermentation followed the Arrhenius law. Less phenolic degradation (higher equilibrium concentration), but a higher reaction rate constant, was observed at higher temperatures, which could possibly be attributed to inactivation of enzymes. Unlabelled Image • Endogenous enzymes participate in oxidation during rooibos fermentation. • Mini-scale simulated fermentation facilitated kinetic reaction modeling. • Dihydrochalcone oxidation follows fractional conversion kinetics. • Formation of intermediate oxidation products, flavanones, follows the same kinetics. • Oxidation/formation reaction rate constants follow the Arrhenius law. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]