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Symposium Introduction
Anthocyanins. Plant pigments and beyond Celestino Santos-Buelga, Nuno Mateus, and Victor De Freitas J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/jf501950s • Publication Date (Web): 27 Jun 2014 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 30, 2014
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Anthocyanins. Plant pigments and beyond
C. Santos-Buelgaa,*, N. Mateusb, V. de Freitasb
a
Grupo de Investigacion en Polifenoles, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Salamanca.
Campus Miguel de Unamuno. 37007 Salamanca (Spain). b
Chemistry Investigation Centre (CIQ), Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Sciences,
University of Porto, 4169-007 Porto, Portugal.
*Corresponding author (Tel: +34 923 294 537; Fax: +34 923 294 515; E-mail:
[email protected])
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Abstract
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Anthocyanins are plant pigments widespread in Nature. They play relevant roles in plant
3
propagation and ecophysiology, plant defense mechanisms and are responsible for the color of
4
fruits and vegetables. A large number of novel anthocyanin structures have been identified,
5
including new families like pyranoanthocyanins or anthocyanin oligomers, their biosynthesis
6
pathways have been elucidated and new plants with “a la carte” colors created by genetic
7
engineering. Furthermore, evidences about their benefits in human health have accumulated,
8
and processes of anthocyanin absorption and biotransformation in the human organism started
9
to be ascertained. These advances in anthocyanin research were revised in the 7th International
10
Workshop on Anthocyanins that took place in Porto (Portugal) in September 9-11, 2013.
11
Some selected communications are collected in this special issue, where aspects like
12
anthocyanin accumulation in plants, relationship with color expression and stability in plants
13
and food, bioavailability or biological activity are revised.
14
Keywords: anthocyanin, color, biosynthesis, analysis, bioavailability, health
15
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Introduction
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Anthocyanins are one of the most widespread families of natural pigments in the Plant
18
Kingdom. They can be found in any plant tissue and display a great diversity of colors,
19
touching practically all visible spectra, from orange and red through to purple and blue hues.
20
Over the years, the scientific community has been focusing on these amazing molecules
21
trying to ascertain their chemistry and properties. It is known that anthocyanins play relevant
22
roles in plant propagation and ecophysiology. They assist in attracting pollinators and seed
23
dispersers and participate in plant defense mechanisms against biotic and environmental stress
24
factors.1 They are responsible for the color of many fruits and vegetables, and are also
25
regarded in the food industry as candidates for natural colorants alternative to synthetic food
26
coloring additives. Furthermore, they have been related with possible health benefits
27
protecting against a number of human diseases, as well as suggested for potential medicinal
28
uses.2
29
Following a broad search for the term “anthocyanin” in the ISI Wok of Science, it becomes
30
evident that research into anthocyanins gradually increased since the beginning of the 20th
31
century, where the first attempts to understand anthocyanin chemistry and their role in flower
32
coloration were made.3,4 Sir R. Robinson started the research on anthocyanins copigmentation
33
back in the 1920’s.5 Significant advances were made in the 1970’s-1980’s with the
34
elucidation of the equilibria among anthocyanin structures6-8 and the description of the
35
copigmentation mechanisms.9 An outstanding increase in anthocyanin research took place in
36
the 1990’s (Figure 1), favored by the advances in the analytical techniques. Since then the
37
number of published papers has steadily increased, risen by fifteen-fold between 1990 (110
38
papers) and 2013 (1557 papers) (Figure 1). Over the last twenty years, a large number of
39
novel structures have been identified and new anthocyanin families like pyranoanthocyanins
40
or anthocyanin oligomers described; biosynthesis pathways have been elucidated and new 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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plants with “a la carte” colors created by genetic engineering; evidences for benefits in human
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health have accumulated and processes of anthocyanin absorption and biotransformation in
43
the human organism started to be ascertained; also, new applications of anthocyanins as
44
colorants or putative bioactives to be exploited by food, pharmaceutical and cosmetic
45
industries have arisen.
46 47
Advances in anthocyanin analysis
48
For a long time the analysis of anthocyanins mostly relied on planar chromatography
49
techniques and UV-vis spectrophotometry, together with nuclear magnetic resonance for
50
complete structural characterization after tedious compound isolation. Since its introduction
51
for anthocyanin analysis10 HPLC has become the technique of choice for their qualitative and
52
quantitative analysis. Further development in the mid eighties of improved reversed-phase
53
columns and coupling to photodiode-array detectors represented a great advance, as in a
54
single analysis it allowed obtaining separation and information for structural identification
55
based on chromatographic retention and UV-vis spectra, which notably provides more clues
56
for compound identification. Mass spectrometry atmospheric pressure ionization (API)
57
interfaces, and especially electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric pressure chemical
58
ionization (APCI) interfaces, led in the nineties to hyphenation of HPLC and MS. This
59
facilitated the identification of a plethora of compounds, including new anthocyanin families,
60
such as pyranoanthocyanins, flavone/flavanol-linked anthocyanins or dimeric anthocyanins,
61
as well as other related anthocyanins-like pigments like oaklins resulting from the
62
condensation of catechins and hydroxycinnamic acids.11 Many of these new pigments were
63
firstly identified in red wines to be further reported in plant tissues. According to Andersen
64
and Jordheim12, by 2013 the number of anthocyanins identified in nature was 702, with about
65
more 200 additional structures proposed as tentative. 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Nowadays the introduction of a new generation of HPLC as favored by the development of
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new column supports and smaller particle sizes has allowed further decreasing the analysis
68
time and increasing peak capacity and sensitivity. Also, high-resolution mass spectrometers
69
(HR-MS), like time-of-flight (TOF), Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR-MS)
70
and Orbitrap equipments, able to provide accurate masses have been developed making
71
possible distinction between compounds differing in mass by around 20 mDa. The enhanced
72
selectivity of these equipments reduces interfering background ions increasing sensitivity
73
compared with triple quadrupole and ion trap systems. Another advantage of these
74
equipments is that compounds signals may be used directly for compound tentative
75
identification. Indeed the combination of these high resolution spectrometers coupled to the
76
new high capacity separation techniques and enhanced software platforms opens improved
77
prospective for qualitative (non-targeted compound identification) and quantitative analyses
78
using single runs. Also, developments in mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) should be
79
expected to help visualizing the spatial distribution of compounds by their molecular masses,
80
which should have an impact in determining tissue distributions and establishing biological
81
targets of metabolites.
82
An interesting feature of LC-MS is that it provides another separation dimension to HPLC,
83
through the use of selective detection modes, like monitoring single ions, extracting particular
84
ions or recording characteristic transitions in the fragmentation of compounds. Selective
85
detection increases sensitivity and possibilities of detecting and quantifying metabolites in
86
biological samples, allowing important progress in understanding the processes of
87
anthocyanin absorption and biotransformation in the human organism.
88
Hyphenation of liquid chromatography to NMR spectroscopy is another promising tool for
89
the separation and structural elucidation of unknown compounds in mixtures. Even though it
90
emerged in the mid-1990’s this technique has not yet become popular, among others due to 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the existence of technical drawbacks that hamper its application. The technique is mostly
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restricted to H-NMR, as low abundance of
93
peaks of high concentration. In the particular case of anthocyanins, problems may also arise
94
from their existence as different forms in equilibrium. Recent advances have been made
95
concerning the improvement in NMR flow probe technology, introduction of new techniques
96
for solvent suppression, or coupling to an on-line solid-phase extraction unit for concentrating
97
the eluted peaks prior to spectra recording so as to increase the sensitivity (LC-SPE-NMR).
98
This has contributed to improve the sensitivity, so that an increase in its applications should
99
be expected in coming years, also favored by the introduction of cheaper equipments making
100
13
C isotopes limits obtaining C-NMR spectra to
the technique available to more laboratories.13
101 102
Uncovering flower color
103
It is well known that anthocyanins are structurally depending on the conditions and
104
composition of the media where they are dissolved and suffer interactions among them and
105
with other compounds that influence their chemical equilibria and modify their color. Kinetic
106
and thermodynamic equilibria between colored and colorless anthocyanin forms as a function
107
of the pH and temperature are well established since the works performed by Brouillard and
108
coworkers in the 1970’s.7,8 Anthocyanins are usually represented as their red flavylium cation,
109
but in aqueous media this form undergoes rapid proton transfer reactions, leading to blue
110
quinoidal bases, and hydration, generating colorless hemiketals in equilibrium with chalcone
111
structures. The highly colored flavylium forms predominate only in very acidic solutions,
112
whereas in weakly acidic aqueous media, even if they are kept in conditions (temperature, pH,
113
light, oxygen) similar to those found in plant vacuoles, anthocyanins mostly occur as colorless
114
species and tend further to degrade by irreversible cleavage of their molecules. Nevertheless,
115
in their natural media, anthocyanins are able to express intense red, blue or violet colors even 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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at weakly acidic pH’s, and, what is more, the same anthocyanin can be found in different
117
flowers providing them distinct colorations.14 This apparent paradox is explained by the
118
existence of stabilizing mechanisms, among which the processes of copigmentation and metal
119
complexation are prominent.9,15 Nevertheless, although basic mechanisms involved in flower
120
pigmentation have been clarified to a considerable extent, many unresolved questions still
121
remain. Further research has still to be undertaken to extend our understanding about the
122
molecular and biological basis that control color expression and stability. Physicochemical
123
studies are required to identify the most promising chromophores and to establish the
124
influence of structural differences on the formation of metalloanthocyanins and the atomic
125
structure of intra- and intermolecular stacking. Also, a better understanding is needed about
126
charge transfer effects implicated in spectral shifts, mechanisms of metal and pigment
127
transport into vacuoles or the identification of transcriptional factors and the regulatory
128
network controlling anthocyanin biosynthesis.15 Expected advances in these fields in the
129
coming years should offer plant breeders new options to produce flowers with the desired
130
coloration.
131 132
Enhancing anthocyanin production
133
Anthocyanins
134
shikimate/phenylpropanoid pathway) and their synthesis constitutes the most studied
135
secondary metabolic pathway in plants. Actually most of the knowledge about transcriptional
136
regulation in plants has initially come from studies of the regulation of anthocyanin
137
biosynthesis in the monocot maize, further extended to dicots, with Arabidopsis as a
138
paradigm.1
139
The identification of transcription factors and a better understanding of the regulatory network
140
controlling anthocyanin biosynthesis in plants is a crucial prerequisite for the development of
are
produced
by
a
branch
of
the
flavonoid
pathway
(i.e.,
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plants with enhanced or improved anthocyanin composition. By 1990, all the enzymes
142
involved in the early specific part of anthocyanin biosynthesis (from chalcone to
143
anthocyanidin) had been solved, and cloning of the anthocyanin synthetic genes was nearly
144
completed. Since that time, several genes coding for glycosyltransferases and acyltransferases
145
in flower petals have been cloned and several transcriptional factors regulating anthocyanin
146
biosynthesis have been described.15 Available findings indicate that transcription factors
147
regulating anthocyanins share a great conservation of functional domains and that functional
148
diversification in a species and among closely related species generally resides more in
149
regulatory sequences than in coding regions. This high conservation may help in selecting the
150
proper heterologous regulators to obtain anthocyanin-rich varieties through metabolic
151
engineering.
152
The transcription factors controlling anthocyanin biosynthesis have been characterized for
153
many species and an ‘MBW’ regulatory complex consisting of a ternary complex of
154
R2R3MYB, bHLH and WD-Repeat proteins.16 Thus, manipulating the anthocyanin pathway
155
has often involved the overexpression of heterologous MYB and bHLH genes.1 Various
156
transgenic approaches have been taken to increase flavonoid levels in tomato fruit by
157
overexpressing either the structural or regulatory genes involved in the biosynthetic pathway.
158
Most of these attempts have exploited heterologous genes, and in only one case was an
159
endogenous tomato regulatory gene (ANT1) overexpressed in tomato plants. Although a
160
significant increase in the final content of some flavonoids (flavonols in particular) was
161
obtained, in tomato, the overexpression by activation tagging of the MYB ANT1 gene
162
realized only a partial enhancement of anthocyanins1, which were expressed either only in the
163
vegetative tissues of the plant or induced only a partial, spotted pigmentation, mostly limited
164
to the peel of the fruit, which could be explained by the low availability of flavonoid
165
biosynthetic precursors or the absence of other limiting regulatory factors (e.g., bHLH).17 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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These constraints were overcome by Butelli et al.18, who produced a tomato highly enriched
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with anthocyanins throughout the fruit tissues, averaged ~3 mg/g fresh weight, by the ectopic
168
expression of two selected transcription factors (Del, a bHLH-type TF, and Ros1, an R2R3
169
MYB-type TF) from the ornamental flower snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus L.). Interestingly,
170
the high production of anthocyanins in these ‘purple’ tomatoes was not obtained at the
171
expense of other major classes of tomato fruit pigments, and the antioxidant activity
172
attributable to the carotenoid fraction remained unchanged.17
173
Similar developments could be anticipated for the development of other anthocyanin-rich crop
174
or ornamental plants. Furthermore, given that the biological properties of different
175
anthocyanin compounds and of the other classes of flavonoids are often molecule-specific, a
176
major objective of metabolic engineering approaches might be not only increasing but also
177
optimizing their levels and composition in crops so that they could eventually be promoted as
178
functional foods. Additionally, researchers could exploit natural genetic resources, either as
179
an alternative to genetic engineering approaches or to strengthen them.17
180 181
Anthocyanins in food
182
For years the main focus on anthocyanins in food has been put on their influence in color. In
183
intact plant tissues (i.e., unprocessed fruits and vegetables), anthocyanins remain relatively
184
stable. Nonetheless, tissue disruption during food processing affects anthocyanin
185
extractability and stability. It has been suggested that anthocyanin extraction from berries into
186
juice could be limited by their interaction with macromolecules from disrupted cell walls such
187
as polysaccharides, tannins and proteins. However, the factors that govern those interactions
188
are still not well defined and remain a promising research area. On the other hand, storage
189
may also affect anthocyanin stability leading to color changes. In food systems, in addition to
190
be subjected to the equilibria among structural forms, anthocyanins can be involved in 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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chemical and enzymatic reactions that may degrade them to colorless products or transform
192
them into new structures. Indeed, the search for improved processing and storage methods to
193
better control anthocyanin losses and/or to address anthocyanin reactions in the “right”
194
direction to obtain more stable and desired colors constitutes a major challenge for the food
195
industry.
196
Anthocyanin stability and reactions have been particularly studied in red wine, in which a
197
variety of anthocyanin-derived products have been identified over the last two decades, such
198
as pyranoanthocyanins, anthocyanin-flavanol condensed pigments, either directly linked or
199
involving aldehydes, anthocyanin dimers, or xanthylium pigments.11 Similar products have
200
further been found in fruits and vegetables19-22 and other plant-derived food.23,24 Some of
201
these compounds possess interesting chromatic properties, displaying a variety of colors from
202
orange to blue and being more resistant to color bleaching by water or sulfur dioxide attack,
203
so that they show more color capacity at weakly acidic and neutral pH values than original
204
anthocyanins.11 Anthocyanins are authorized as food additives both in the European Union
205
(E-163) and the United States, where the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) includes them
206
as natural ‘Colorants Exempt from Certification’.12 However, the applications of anthocyanins
207
as food colorants are seriously limited due to their problems of stability. In these
208
circumstances, the improved color properties that exhibit some anthocyanin-derived pigments
209
make them potential candidates for their use as natural food colorants, which is particularly
210
relevant taking into account the current concerns and restrictions for the use of synthetic dyes.
211
Owing to the current interest in the potential associations between anthocyanin consumption
212
and health promotion, the estimation of the dietary intake of anthocyanins has also become a
213
point of interest, so that adequate relationships with the incidence of chronic diseases can be
214
established. It is, however, difficult to properly calculate anthocyanin consumption.12
215
Accurate data on the qualitative and quantitative anthocyanin composition in foods and 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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beverages are neither always available nor easy to obtain due to the structural diversity of
217
anthocyanins and their stability problems. Anthocyanin contents can vary tremendously
218
within a certain type of foods depending on varietal, agronomic and environmental conditions
219
and, furthermore, both degradation and formation of derived products have great influence in
220
the anthocyanin contents and profiles in processed foods and beverages. Indeed, stability is a
221
very important (and challenging) element when considering the impact of dietary
222
anthocyanins on the human organism. The common anthocyanins show instability toward a
223
variety of chemical and physical parameters, including oxygen, high temperatures, light, pH
224
values, enzymes and reactions with compounds in the food or body systems, which may vary
225
anthocyanin properties.12
226
Estimations made by different researchers varied within a wide range, oscillating from 3 to
227
150 mg/day, depending on the country and nutrition habits. In a rough calculation, average
228
adult intake of anthocyanins in Europe and the United States has been estimated that could be
229
in the scale of 10 mg/day.12 Further studies are, nevertheless, required to increase our
230
knowledge on anthocyanin composition in most consumed foods over different countries,
231
taking into account that not only total intake is important but also qualitative profiles should
232
have an influence on their putative health promoting effects. Moreover, attention will also
233
have to be paid to the increasing popularity of food supplements and the developing market
234
for functional foods, as they may contribute substantially to a rise in the dietary intake levels.
235 236
Bioavailability and health issues
237
Dietary anthocyanins have been related with health promotion, namely relief of oxidative
238
stress and protection against coronary heart disease, but also antimicrobial anti-inflammatory
239
and anticarcinogenic activities, control of obesity and diabetes or improvement of eye vision.2
240
The biological effects of anthocyanins have been classically associated to their antioxidant 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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capacity, although the actual mechanisms involved at the physiological level are yet to be
242
established, and a recent emerging view is that modulatory effects affecting signaling
243
pathways in cells should also be important.17
244
For understanding of the exact impact of dietary anthocyanins on health and their underlying
245
mechanisms, further knowledge is required about their bioavailability. Aspects like absorption
246
and biotransformation, the exact nature and amount of circulating metabolites and their
247
activity, tissue distribution and accumulation, or the forms able to reach particular cellular or
248
molecular targets are still largely unknown. In these circumstances, the ability to detect,
249
identify and determine the metabolites at physiological concentrations is crucial. Furthermore,
250
pure metabolites are required to be used activity and mechanistic studies, but are not always
251
available as commercial standards. On this matter, chemical or enzymatic synthesis constitute
252
different promising strategies to obtain some in vivo occurring anthocyanin metabolites.25
253
A fraction of anthocyanins could be absorbed both in the stomach and small intestine. The pH
254
changes considerable in the human body from the stomach (1.5), intestine surface (5.3), urine
255
(5.75), liver (7.0) to the blood (7.40), and, therefore, anthocyanins will thus most probably
256
under physiological conditions occur on different structural forms similar to those described
257
in model systems.12 Anthocyanin structure (e.g., type of aglycone, number and type of
258
glycosyl and acyl moieties) would influence forms distribution and stability, thus affecting
259
their bioavailability, metabolism or degradation mechanisms. Furthermore, a part of the
260
anthocyanins in processed foods, but also in intact plants, may occur in the form of more
261
complex structures (e.g., derived pigments), whose equilibrium schemes, stability and
262
reactivity characteristics are not well elucidated and should differ from those of the simple
263
anthocyanins.12 Finally, the relevance of the food matrix and the interactions between
264
anthocyanins and other food components, both macronutrients and bioactives, must also be
265
considered. At present most of this of knowledge is to a large extent lacking. 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Existing data indicate that the proportion of absorbed anthocyanins including their
267
metabolized derivatives is very low. Actually, anthocyanins have been reported to have one of
268
the lowest bioavailabilities of all of the dietary flavonoid subclasses26, with typical urinary
269
excretion of the total amount of anthocyanins and their derivatives well below 1% of the
270
ingested amount. Nevertheless, recent studies using
271
humans by Czank et al.27 have concluded that these compounds could be more bioavailable
272
than previously reported. Thus, on the basis of the recovered
273
glucoside (Cy3G) was established to have a relative bioavailability in humans of
274
12.38±1.38% on average, from which 0.18±0.11% of the 13C dose was recovered from blood,
275
5.37±0.67% from urine, and 6.91±1.59% from breath, whereas 32.13±6.13% of the
276
found in feces. The fate of the remaining ingested 13C remains unknown, although there was
277
considerable inter-individual variability in the recovery of the
278
15.1% to 99.3%, probably as a result of a high variation in gastric and intestinal transit times,
279
composition, and catabolic activity of colonic flora and the ability to take up and excrete
280
catabolites and metabolites.
281
The accumulation of multiple phenolic metabolites might ultimately be responsible for the
282
reported bioactivity of anthocyanins, with the gut microflora apparently playing an important
283
role in the biotransformation process. Although phase II conjugates of Cy3G and cyanidin
284
(cyanidin-glucuronide, methyl cyanidin-glucuronide, and methyl Cy3G-glucuronide) were
285
detected, the most important metabolites corresponded to products from the anthocyanin
286
degradation (i.e., benzoic, phenylacetic and phenylpropenoic acids, phenolic aldehydes and
287
hippuric acid) and their phase II conjugates, which were found at 60- and 45-fold higher
288
concentrations than their parent compounds in urine and plasma, respectively.27 An interesting
289
observation was the rapid appearance of Cy3G degradation products and their phase II
290
conjugates within the serum, which suggested that some degradation likely occurred in the
13
C-labelled anthocyanins carried out in
13
13
C dose, cyanidin-3-O-
13
C was
C tracer that ranged from
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small intestine (either pre- or post-absorption) and, therefore, anthocyanin C-ring cleavage
292
may not require the action of colonic microflora. Estimates made by Czank et al.27 of the half-
293
lives of elimination for
294
51.62±22.55h, which suggested a relatively slow urinary clearance of some metabolites. Long
295
elimination half-lives may be the result of a combination of hepatic recycling, enterohepatic
296
circulation, and prolonged colonic production and absorption. All in all, these data suggested
297
that anthocyanins would be as bioavailable as other flavonoid subclasses, such as flavan-3-ols
298
and flavones, which have relative bioavailabilities between 2.5% and 18.5% (26).
299
Further intervention studies using different anthocyanins and food matrices are, nevertheless,
300
required to confirm these preliminary conclusions on anthocyanin absorption and
301
bioavailability, as well as to establish their putative effects on human health. It is expected
302
that the advances in analytical methodologies enabling the identification and quantification of
303
metabolites, both in food and body fluids and tissues, together with bioinformatic strategies
304
should allow the characterization of changes produced in the human metabolome as a
305
consequence of anthocyanin intake, so that possible biomarkers of consumption and effects
306
can be identified and adequate relationships with the incidence of diseases established.
13
C-labeled metabolites were between 12.44±4.22 h and
307 308
The 7th International Workshop on Anthocyanins (IWA 2013)
309
Advances in anthocyanin research are revised every two years in the International Workshop
310
on Anthocyanins (IWA), whose last edition took place in the beautiful city of Porto
311
(Portugal). The IWA is the only world congress that focuses exclusively on anthocyanins and
312
acts an essential meeting point for all people working in these amazing molecules. Since the
313
first IWA took place in Melbourne (Australia) back in 2000, five more IWA meetings have
314
been held in Australia (Adelaide 2002 and Sydney 2004), New Zealand (Rotorua 2006), Japan
315
(Nagoya 2009), and the United States (Charlotte NC 2011). In September 2013, the IWA 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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came for the first time to Europe, with the goal of bringing together scientists from
317
Universities, Institutes and Industries, from different research areas but with the common
318
ground of working on anthocyanins, and attracting European researchers who did not have the
319
opportunity to join the previous workshops. The meeting was divided into 6 topics: (1)
320
Biosynthesis, Trafficking and Functionality, (2) Genetic & Metabolic engineering, (3)
321
Horticultural and Ornamental Plants, (4) Phytochemistry & Analysis, (5) Anthocyanin in
322
Health & Nutrition, and (6) Anthocyanins in Foods & Industry. Around 130 participants from
323
21 different countries attended the IWA2013, presenting 16 invited lectures (6 plenary
324
lectures and 10 invited keynotes), 21 regular oral communications and 80 posters. In relation
325
to previous IWAs, which were more focused on plant anthocyanins (physiological roles,
326
biosynthesis, metabolic engineering, etc.), the Porto’s meeting was enlarged upon food
327
anthocyanins, as related to sensory properties and health.
328
This highlights issue presents a selection of papers from IWA2013 communications dealing
329
with anthocyanins accumulation in plants, relationship with color expression and stability in
330
plants and food, copigmentation effects, stability during food processing an storage, chemical
331
applications, bioavailability and effects in model systems, properties of anthocyanin-related
332
pigments, microbial degradation, or influence on allergenic properties of food components.
333
Now the countdown to the 8th International Workshop on Anthocyanins, that will take place in
334
Montpellier (France) in 2015 organized by Dr. Véronique Cheynier, is on.
335
We wish to thank the Editor-in-Chief, Prof. Jim Seiber, and the JAFC editorial office for the
336
opportunity offered to publish this special issue, as well as to all submitting authors and
337
reviewers for their invaluable contribution.
338 339
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REFERENCES
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1. Petroni, K., Tonelli, C. Recent advances on the regulation of anthocyanin synthesis in
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Figure captions
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Figure 1. Number of publications obtained from the ISI Web of Knowledge database looking
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for the word “anthocyanin” in title and abstract for the periods 1900-2009 (upper graph), and
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1990-2013 (lower graph).
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Figure 1
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TOC Graphic
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