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Metabolomics investigation reveals 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted flavan-3-ols are potential marker compounds of stored white teas Weidong Dai, Junfeng Tan, Meiling Lu, Yin Zhu, Pengliang Li, Qunhua Peng, Li Guo, Yue Zhang, Dongchao Xie, Zhengyan Hu, and Zhi Lin J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02038 • Publication Date (Web): 19 Jun 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 25, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Metabolomics investigation reveals 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
2
substituted flavan-3-ols are potential marker compounds of
3
stored white teas
4 5
Weidong Dai1, Junfeng Tan1, Meiling Lu2, Yin Zhu1, Pengliang Li1, Qunhua Peng1, Li
6
Guo1, Yue Zhang1, Dongchao Xie1, Zhengyan Hu3, **, Zhi Lin1, *
7 8
1
9
Tea Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, 9 Meiling South
Key Laboratory of Tea Biology and Resources Utilization, Ministry of Agriculture,
10
Road, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310008, PR China
11
2
12
Beijing 100102, PR China
13
3
14
Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310051, PR China
Agilent Technologies (China) Limited, 3 Wangjing North Road, Chaoyang District,
Zhejiang Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 3399 Binsheng Road,
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Abstract
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White teas of different stored ages have varied flavor, bioactivity, and commercial
17
value. In this study, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS)-based
18
metabolomics investigation revealed that there are distinct differences among the
19
compound patterns of Baihaoyinzhen (BHYZ) and Baimudan (BMD) white teas with
20
various storage durations. The levels of flavan-3-ols, procyanidins, theasinensins,
21
theaflavins, flavonol-O-glycosides, flavone-C-glycosides, and most of the amino acids
22
were reduced after long-term (>4 years) storage. More importantly, 8-C
23
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted flavan-3-ols (EPSFs), including 7 novel
24
compounds discovered in white teas for the first time, were formed from theanine and
25
flavan-3-ols during storage, and their contents were positively correlated with the
26
storage duration. These findings were further confirmed by the linearly increasing
27
formation of EPSFs in reaction solution and in BMD white teas stored in an
28
environment-controlled cabinet. In conclusion, EPSFs were detected in white teas for
29
the first time and were discovered as marker compounds and potential indicators for
30
long-term storage of white tea.
31 32
Keywords: white tea, storage, metabolomics, LC-MS, theanine, flavan-3-ol
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1 Introduction Tea is one of mostly consumed beverages in the world due to its health benefits and 1-3
35
satisfactory sensory experience
36
most popular teas, white tea is a rare form that undergoes the least amount of
37
processing (only withering and drying process are involved) and can be generally
38
classed into three types according to the quality of plucked fresh tea leaves:
39
Baihaoyinzhen (BHYZ, bud only, also called silver needle), Baimudan (BMD, a bud
40
with one or two leaves, also called white peony), and Shoumei (more than two leaves,
41
with or without a bud) 4.
42
. Compared with green tea and black tea, the two
Storage is crucial for the quality of teas and could change the aroma
5,6
, taste 7,
43
bioactivities, and chemical components of teas. White tea and pu-erh tea stored for
44
long periods are considered to have higher quality and commercial value. By contrast,
45
green tea stored for long periods is considered not fresh and umami. Some
46
bioactivities of teas were also found to change during storage. Nekvapil et al.
47
reported that the antioxidant capacity of beverages containing black, green, and white
48
tea extracts decreased during storage. He et al. 9 found that the anti-bacterial effect in
49
latest white tea was the best and decreased along with the extension of the storage
50
time.
51
8
Some investigations on chemical changes in stored teas have been carried out. 10
52
Friedman
studied the stability of green tea catechins and found that the average
53
overall decrease in the total catechin concentrations of 8 teas was 32% after storage at
54
20 ºC for 6 months. Ning et al.
11
investigated the changes in gallic acid, caffeine, 3
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catechins, and amino acids in Shoumei white teas under different storage times using
56
ultra performance liquid chromatography coupled with a triple quadrupole mass
57
spectrometer (UPLC-QQQ-MS/MS) and found that the contents of catechins and
58
amino acids decreased with increased storage time, while the content of gallic acid
59
increased. These studies focused only on the major compounds or determined the total
60
contents of amino acids and flavonoids in teas. Therefore, a comprehensive
61
characterization of white tea metabolome during the white tea storage is urgently
62
needed. In addition, there is a lack of a survey on possible novel compounds that are
63
formed during storage.
64
Metabolomics enables the measurement of hundreds of endogenous compounds
65
simultaneously, providing a comprehensive view of the chemical compositions, and
66
has been widely used in food chemical research
67
ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography−quadrupole time-of-flight mass
68
spectrometry (UHPLC-Q-TOF/MS)-based metabolomics approach to investigate the
69
variations in the non-volatile compound profiles of white tea samples with various
70
storage durations and then surveyed novel potential marker compounds related to the
71
stored white tea.
12,13
. In this study, we used an
72 73
2 Materials and Methods
74
Chemicals
75
LC–MS-grade methanol was purchased from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany). Formic
76
acid (purity >96.0%), (-)-epigallocatechin (EGC, >95.0%), (+)-catechin (C, >98.0%), 4
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(-)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG, >95.0%), (-)-epicatechin gallate (ECG, >98.0%),
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(-)-epicatechin
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(+)-gallocatechin (GC, >95.0%), (-)-catechin gallate (CG, >98.0%), kaempferol
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3-glucoside (>97.0%), kaempferol 3-galactoside (>90.0%), kaempferol 3-rutinoside
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(>98.0%), vitexin (>95.0%), isovitexin (>98.0%), luteolin-8-C-glucoside (>97.0%),
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quercetin 3-glucoside (>98.0%), tryptophan (>98.0%), glutamic acid (>99.0%),
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pyroglutamic acid (>99.0%), proline (>99.0%), glutamine (>99.0%), aspartic acid
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(>98.0%), γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA, >99.0%), leucine (>98.0%), isoleucine
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(>99.0%), threonine (>98.0%), lysine (>98.0%), histidine (>99.0%), valine (>98.0%),
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arginine (>99.0%), and adenine (>99.0%) were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO,
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USA). Myricetin 3-galactoside (>98.0%), procyanidin B1 (>98.0%), procyanidin B2
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(>98.0%), theaflavin (TF, >98.0%), theaflavin-3-gallate (TF-3-g, >98.0%), and
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theaflavin-3,3’-digallate (TF-3,3’-dg, >98.0%) were purchased from ChemFaces
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(Wuhan, Hubei, China). Theanine (>99.0%), quercetin 3-galactoside (>97.0%),
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quercetin 3-rhamnoglucoside (rutin, >98.0%), theobromine (>98.0%), tyrosine
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(>99.0%), and phenylalanine (>99.0%) were obtained from J&K Scientific Ltd.
93
(Beijing, China). Caffeine (>99.0%) was purchased from Enzo Life Sciences Inc.
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(Farmingdale, NY, USA). Epiafzelechin (>98.0%), strictinin (>95.0%), benzyl
95
glucoside, and phenylethyl glucoside were purchased from Yuanye Bio-Technology
96
Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Deionized water was produced by a Milli-Q water
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purification system (Millipore, Billerica, Massachusetts, USA).
98
Stored white tea sample collection and treatment
(EC,
>98.0%),
(-)-gallocatechin
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gallate
(GCG,
>98.0%),
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Two types of white tea samples (BHYZ and BMD, Camellia sinensis (L.) O.
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Kuntze cv. Fuding Dabaicha) of various produced years (ranged from 2000 to 2015)
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were collected in 2016 in this study. BHYZ and BMD white tea samples were
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obtained from Fujian Pinpinxiang Tea Co., Ltd. (Fuding, Fujian, China) and Fujian
103
Yuda Tea Co., Ltd. (Fuding, Fujian, China), respectively (Table S1). BHYZ is
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produced from only one bud, and BMD is produced from one bud with two leaves.
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The raw fresh leaves were picked up from Fuding city of Fujian province in April and
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were processed by skillful workers according to a typical white tea manufacturing
107
procedure which only includes withering and drying process (Dai et al., 2017). The
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white tea products were naturally preserved in storehouse maintained at 15-25 °C and
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25-50% humidity. Detailed information of the stored white tea samples was included
110
in Table S1. To investigate the variations in non-volatile compounds, BHYZ and
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BMD tea samples were divided into 3 groups according to their storage durations: “1
112
year” group (1.0 ± 0.0 year (average ± SD) for the BHYZ and BMD samples), “2-4
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year” group (2.9 ± 0.8 and 2.8 ± 0.8 years for the BHYZ and BMD samples,
114
respectively), and “> 4 year” group (6.2 ± 1.1 and 10.1 ± 2.8 years for the BHYZ and
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BMD samples, respectively).
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Forty milliliters of a 70 °C methanol/water solution (70/30: v/v) was added into 0.3
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g of ground tea powder (< 0.15 mm) and incubated at 70 °C for 30 min to extract
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nonvolatile compounds from white tea. Then, 1.5 mL of the solution was centrifuged
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at 10,000 g (Centrifuge 5810R, Eppendorf) for 10 min and the supernatants were
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passed through a 0.22 µm membrane. Each tea sample was prepared in duplicate. The 6
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obtained solution was then analyzed by UHPLC-QTOF/MS. Three internal standards
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of flumequine, sulfafurazole, and sulfacetamide (0.2 µg/mL) were spiked into each tea
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sample to evaluate the stability during the LC-MS analytical process. In addition,
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quality control (QC) samples prepared by mixing equal amounts of each tea sample
125
were also used to evaluate the LC-MS analysis.
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Metabolomics analysis
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The metabolomics measurements of white tea samples were conducted following 14-16
128
the procedures that we developed previously
. Briefly, a UHPLC system (Infinity
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1290, Agilent Tech., Santa Clara, CA, USA) coupled to a Q-TOF mass spectrometer
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(6540, Agilent Tech., Santa Clara, CA, USA) was applied for the LC-MS analysis.
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Chromatographic separation of the white tea compounds was performed on a Zorbax
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Eclipse Plus C18 column (150 × 3.0 mm, 1.8 µm, Agilent Tech., Little Falls, DE,
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USA). The column was maintained at 40 °C. Binary mobile phases were used for
134
gradient elution with the flow rate of 0.4 mL/min, where phase A was water
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containing 0.1% (v/v) formic acid and phase B was methanol. The linear gradient
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elution program was as follows: 0 min, 10% B; 4 min, 15% B; 7 min, 25% B; 9 min,
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32% B; 16 min, 40% B; 22 min, 55% B; 28 min, 95% B; and 30 min, 95% B. 4 min
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was allowed for column equilibration between two consecutive injections. The
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injection volume was 3 µL. The Q-TOF mass spectrometer assembled an electrospray
140
ionization (ESI) source was operated in positive mode. The major MS parameters
141
were the same as those in previous reports 14,16. The mass scan range of m/z 100–1000
142
was applied for the full scan analysis. Reference ions with m/z 121.0509 (purine) and 7
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922.0098 (hexakis phosphazene) were continuously infused via the reference sprayer
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during data acquisition for online calibration to ensure the MS accuracy. The
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compounds were identified according to authentic standards, accurate masses, MS2
146
spectra, metabolomics databases, and our previous works 14-18.
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Metabolomics data processing
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Raw data files acquired by LC-MS analysis were first processed by Profinder
149
software (Agilent Tech., Santa Clara, CA) for compound features extraction, and then
150
imported into Mass Profiler Professional software (Version 13.0, Agilent Tech., Santa
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Clara, CA) for peak alignment. Ions with relative standard deviation (RSD) less than
152
30% in the QC samples were used for further univariate and multivariate statistics
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19,20
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Synthesis of 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted flavan-3-ols (EPSFs)
.
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Theanine (2 g) and EGCG (2 g) were dissolved in 15 mL of methanol/formic
156
acid/water solution (40/1/60: v/v/v) and then heated at 50 °C for 12 days. The solution
157
was separated into 20 fractions by revered-phase column chromatography with a
158
gradient elution of methanol solution (from 15% to 80%). The fraction 10-12 were
159
combined and then separated into 20 fractions by revered-phase column
160
chromatography again to obtain 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted EGCG. The
161
purity was 93% tested by a third-party laboratory using a UPLC-UV method at 280
162
nm. 1H NMR (600 MHz, DMSO-d6) δ 6.77 (d, J = 23.4 Hz, 2H), 6.40 (d, J = 19.0 Hz,
163
1H), 6.26 (d, J = 53.2 Hz, 1H), 6.02 (d, J = 22.1 Hz, 1H), 5.42 – 5.25 (m, 1H), 5.17 (d,
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J = 27.1 Hz, 1H), 5.00 (d, J = 54.3 Hz, 1H), 3.64 (t, J = 7.6 Hz, 1H), 3.06 – 2.95 (m, 8
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1H), 2.81 – 2.60 (m, 1H), 2.39 (s, 1H), 2.24 (s, 2H), 2.02 (t, J = 7.7 Hz, 1H), 1.72 –
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1.57 (m, 1H), 0.98 – 0.77 (m, 3H). 13C NMR (151 MHz, DMSO-d6) δ 174.20, 168.29,
167
158.84, 158.53, 148.6, 148.3, 135.18, 131.31, 122.48, 111.74, 108.57, 108.50, 79.68,
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70.75, 46.42, 36.3, 35.64, 29.02, 26.25, 15.45.
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Flavan-3-ol standards of EGC, ECG, EC, GCG, GC, CG, and C were also used to
170
react with theanine in methanol/formic acid/water solution (40/1/60: v/v/v),
171
respectively. The solutions were subjected to LC-MS and LC-MS/MS analyses
172
without purification.
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Identification and quantification of EPSFs in stored white tea
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Compounds 1-7 were preliminarily identified formed from flavan-3-ols and
175
theanine according to accurate mass, MS2 spectrum, and reference
21
176
syntheses of compounds 1-7 in reaction solution containing standards of theanine and
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flavan-3-ol (EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC, GCG, GC, CG, and C, respectively) were
178
carried out for the confirmation of chemical structures.
. Then, the
179
Compound 1 and 2 were found in the reaction solution containing theanine and
180
EGCG but not in the reaction solution containing theanine and GCG. Combining the
181
reported elution orders of stereoisomeric EPSFs
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5’’S-epigallocatechin gallate-8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone (S-EGCG-cThea) and
183
5’’R-epigallocatechin
184
respectively. 5’’S-epicatechin gallate-8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone (S-ECG-cThea)
185
and 5’’R-epicatechin gallate-8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone (R-ECG-cThea) were found
186
in the reaction solution containing theanine and ECG, but only R-ECG-cThea was
gallate-8-C
21,22
, they were identified as
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
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(R-EGCG-cThea),
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detected in the stored white teas. Therefore, compound 3 was identified as
188
R-ECG-cThea. Both compounds 4 and 5 were found in the reaction solution
189
containing theanine and EGC but not in the reaction solution containing theanine and
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GC. Both compounds 6 and 7 could be found in the reaction solution containing
191
theanine and EC but not in the reaction solution containing theanine and C.
192
Combining the reported elution orders of stereoisomeric EPSFs
193
structures of compounds 4-7 were identified as
5’’S-epigallocatechin-8-C
194
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
5’’R-epigallocatechin-8-C
195
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
196
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
197
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone (R-EC-cThea), respectively. The MS2 spectra and putative
198
fragmentation pathways of compounds 1-7 are shown in Figure S1-S4.
199
Post-fermented pu-erh dark tea was also analyzed to confirm the compound
200
identifications, and only compounds 4-7 were detected in pu-erh tea which agreed
201
with Wang’s report 21.
202
(S-EGC-cThea), (R-EGC-cThea), (S-EC-cThea),
21,22
, the chemical
5’’S-epicatechin-8-C and
5’’R-epicatechin-8-C
The contents of the EPSFs (compounds 1-7) in white teas were quantified using a
203
purified
8-C
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
substituted
EGCG
standard
by
204
UHPLC-QTOF/MS. Standard solutions of 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, 5.0, and 20.0 µg/mL were
205
used to establish the calibration curve (r2 = 0.9996).
206
To investigate whether EPSFs are formed during the compound extraction process,
207
a methanol/water solution (70/30: v/v) containing 5 g/L EGCG and 2 g/L theanine
208
and a freeze-dried fresh tea leave sample were respectively heated at 70 °C for 30 min, 10
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and then were analyzed by UHPLC-QTOF/MS. Both results showed that there is no
210
formation of N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted EGCG, which indicated that the
211
EPSFs are not formed during the compound extraction process.
212
Validation of EPSFs changes in stored white teas
213
To validate that the EPSFs were formed during the white tea storage and positively
214
related with the storage duration, two experiments were designed: (1) During the
215
synthesis of compounds 1-7 from standards of flavan-3-ols (EGCG, EGC, ECG, or
216
EC) and theanine, 50 µL of the reaction solution was sampled at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and
217
12 days and the samples were immediately stored at -20 °C pending LC-MS analysis.
218
(2) BMD white tea (5 kg) was stored in an environment-controlled cabinet at 45 °C
219
and 35% humidity, and was sampled at 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, and 2.5 months. The samples
220
were immediately stored at -20 °C prior to analysis by UHPLC-QTOF/MS. Each
221
sample was prepared in quintuplicate.
222
Statistical analysis
223
Principal component analysis (PCA), partial least squares discriminant analysis
224
(PLS-DA), and PLS regression analysis were performed using Simca-P 11.5 software
225
(Umetrics AB, Umeå, Sweden) after weight-normalization and Pareto scaling to
226
investigate the overall tea compound profile variation among the 1 year, 2-4 year, and >
227
4 year BHYZ and BMD white teas and to screen the characteristic compounds in
228
stored white teas. Heat-map analysis and clustering analysis were performed by
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MultiExperiment Viewer software (version 4.8.1) to illustrate the compound content
230
differences among white tea samples after data auto-scaling. Student’s t-test and 11
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ANOVA were performed using PASWstat software (version 18.0, Chicago, IL, USA).
232 233
3 Results and Discussion
234
A total of 2584 compound ions were obtained after peak alignment and used for
235
unsupervised PCA analysis. The QC samples were clustered in the center of the PCA
236
score plot (Figure S5), indicating good reproducibility of the compound extraction
237
and LC-MS analysis in the metabolomics investigations. The BHYZ samples and
238
BMD samples were clearly separated, which indicated that the type of white tea has
239
larger influence on the non-volatile chemical constituents than the storage (Figure S5).
240
Therefore, the influence of storage on BHYZ and BMD were investigated separately.
241
Influence of storage on the white tea compounds
242
PCA and PLS-DA models were constructed to investigate the influence of storage
243
on the white tea compounds (Figure 1) and 50 times permutation test was applied for
244
the validation of the PLS-DA models. The permutation test showed y-intercepts for R2
245
and Q2 were 0.381 and -0.267 respectively for BHYZ PLS-DA model and were 0.328
246
and -0.271 respectively for BMD PLS-DA model, which indicated these two PLS-DA
247
models were not over-fitted. Distinct compound patterns of white tea samples stored
248
for 1 year, 2-4 years, and >4 years were observed in the two-dimensional score plots
249
of PCA and PLS-DA (Figure 1). These patterns indicated that the white tea compound
250
patterns obviously changed during storage. A total of 125 compounds, including
251
flavan-3-ols, dimeric flavan-3-ols (theaflavins, theasinensins, and procyanidins),
252
alkaloids, flavonol/flavone glycosides, amino acids, phenolic acids, nucleosides, 12
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organic acids, lipids, and carbohydrates, were identified to characterize the compound
254
variations (Figures 2 and 3).
255
Flavan-3-ols (catechins) are one group of characteristic and the most abundant
256
compounds in teas, which account for up to 10% of the content and are considered the
257
major bioactive constituents in white tea 4. Ning et al.
258
catechins, EGCG, EGC, ECG, and EC contents in “Shoumei” white tea significantly
259
decreased with the lengthening of the storage duration. In this study, flavan-3-ols,
260
including EGCG, ECG, EGC, GC, and GCG were slightly increased in the 2-4 year
261
white tea samples and then decreased the in >4 year white tea samples (Figure S6).
262
These phenomena were observed in both BHYZ and BMD. These results do not
263
totally agree with Ning’s findings 11 potentially due to the different types of white tea
264
used (BHYZ and BMD vs. Shoumei) and the different years of the white tea samples
265
collected in the study. After long-term (>4 years) storage, flavan-3-ols of EGCG, EC,
266
ECG, EGC, C, and epiafzelechin in white tea were significantly reduced in both
267
BHYZ and BMD. These results are consistent with Ning’s findings in Shoumei white
268
teas 11.
11
reported that the total
269
The decreased flavan-3-ols were not ultimately converted to dimeric flavan-3-ols
270
(theaflavins, theasinensins, and procyanidins) in the stored white teas. The levels of
271
theaflavins (TF, TF-3-g, theaflavins-3-gallate (TF-3’-g), and TF-3,3’-dg) decreased in
272
a stepwise manner during the storage process (Figure S7). The contents of
273
procyanidins
274
EC-(4->8)-EGCG) were slightly increased in the 2-4 year white teas and significantly
(procyanidin
B1,
procyanidin
B2,
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EC-(4->8)-ECG,
and
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decreased in the >4 year white teas (Figure S7). Flavonol-O-glycosides and flavone-C-glycosides are also major phenolic 18,23
277
compounds in teas with a series of bioactivities
278
thresholds
279
3-glucoside,
280
3-glucosylrutinoside,
281
3-arabinoside),
282
3-galactoside, quercetin 3-rutinoside, quercetin 3-glucosylrutinoside, quercetin
283
3-galactosylrutinoside, quercetin diglucoside, and quercetin triglucoside), and 2
284
myricetin-O-glycosides
285
decreased
286
3-dicoumaroylglucoside, the contents of these flavonol-O-glycosides were lowest in
287
the >4 year white teas (both BHYZ and BMD). The levels of flavone-C-glycosides,
288
including
289
apigenin-6-C-glucosyl-8-C-arabinoside,
290
luteolin-8-C-glucoside also showed decreased trends in the 2-4 year and >4 year white
291
teas (Figure S8). These results did not agree with Zhou’s finding 26 that the content of
292
flavonoids increased during white tea storage and a significantly high content of
293
flavonoids was observed in white tea stored for 20 years. This disagreement may be
294
because a colorimetric method for the quantification of total flavonoids was used in
295
Zhou’s study while an LC-MS method was applied in this work.
296
and low astringent taste
24,25
. In this study, the contents of 6 kaempferol-O-glycosides (kaempferol kaempferol
7
during
3-galactoside,
kaempferol
kaempferol
3-galactosylrutinoside,
quercetin-O-glycosides
(myricetin
white
tea
3-rutinoside,
(quercetin
3-glucoside storage
apigenin-6,8-C-diglucoside,
and
(Figure
and
kaempferol
3-glucoside,
myricetin S8).
kaempferol
quercetin
3-galactoside)
Except
kaempferol
apigenin-6-C-arabinoside-8-C-glucoside, vitexin,
isovitexin,
and
The levels of most of amino acids (theanine, phenylalanine, valine, leucine, 14
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isoleucine, asparagine, proline, tryptophan, arginine, and tyrosine) decreased in a
298
stepwise manner in the stored white teas (Figure S9). This might be induced by the
299
Maillard reaction of amino acids with reducing sugars, which commonly occurs
300
during thermal processing and long storage of foods and leads to the browning of
301
foods
302
increased in the 2-4 year BHYZ white teas. The level of threonine also increased
303
during the storage of BHYZ white teas. Pyroglutamic acid, a cyclized derivative of
304
glutamic acid that can be formed nonenzymatically from glutamate and glutamine,
305
was increased significantly in the 2-4 year and >4 year BHYZ white teas as well as in
306
the >4 year BMD white teas. This indicated a nonenzymatic cyclization reaction of
307
glutamic acid or glutamine in white tea may occur during storage (Figure S9).
27
. The content of glutamic acid decreased in the stored BMD white teas, but
308
Aroma primeverosides are regarded as aroma precursors, which release aroma
309
compounds during the tea manufacturing and brewing processes 2. In this study, the
310
levels of all aroma primeverosides including benzyl primeveroside, phenylethyl
311
primeveroside, linalool primeveroside, and linalool oxide primeveroside were highest
312
in the 2-4 year BHYZ and BMD white teas and lowest in the 1 year BHYZ and BMD
313
white teas (Figure S10).
314
Here, it should be noted that the contents of some metabolites (e.g., flavan-3-ol) in
315
teas are susceptible to the climate factors, such as sunlight explosion, rainfall, and
316
temperature, etc., and can vary from year to year and also season to season
317
initial metabolite contents in white teas can affect the results.
318
EPSFs are potential marker compounds of stored white tea 15
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17,28
. The
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
319
In addition to the compounds discussed above, consisting of flavan-3-ols, dimeric
320
flavan-3-ols, flavonol/flavone glycosides, amino acids, phenolic acids, nucleosides,
321
organic acids, lipids, and carbohydrates (Figures 2 and 3), we also found that several
322
compound features showed strong positive correlations with the storage duration. As
323
shown in Figure 4, the correlation coefficients between compounds 1-7 and the
324
storage duration ranged from 0.714 to 0.850 in the BMD white teas and ranged from
325
0.565 to 0.659 in the BHYZ white teas. In addition, in a PLS regression analysis of
326
the BHYZ and BMD white teas (the compound contents and the storage durations
327
were set as the X-variables and the Y-variable, respectively), compounds 1-7 were
328
among the most important contributors (Figure S11). Variable important for the
329
projection (VIP) was also used to evaluate the contribution of compounds 1-7 to the
330
total variance in the PLS-DA model (Figure 1-C and D). VIP values of them ranged
331
from 2.53 to 7.65 and from 2.29 to 8.40 in BHYZ and BMD PLS-DA model,
332
respectively (Table S3), which indicated that the content of compounds 1-7 distinctly
333
differ in white teas of different storage periods. Particularly, compounds 1-7 showed
334
significantly higher contents in BHYZ (Figure 5-A) and BMD (Figure 5-B) white teas
335
stored for a long period. Results of nonparametric Mann-Whitney U tests of EPSFs
336
between each two groups also indicated the contents of compounds 1-7 in > 4 years
337
group were significantly higher (Table S2).
338
Compounds 1-7 showed accurate masses of m/z 570.1609 (compounds 1 and 2),
339
554.1663(compound 3), 418.1500 (compounds 4 and 5), and 402.1555 (compounds 6
340
and 7) in positive ionization mode, which indicated possible formulas of C28H27NO12, 16
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C28H27NO11, C21H23NO8, and C21H23NO7, respectively. Compound 1 and 2, 4 and 5,
342
as well as 6 and 7 had nearly identical MS2 spectra, respectively (Figure S1-S4). In
343
addition, compounds 1-7 had common MS2 fragment ions of m/z 262.1074, 250.1074,
344
and 205.0490, which indicated that these compounds have the same structural
345
skeleton. The accurate masses (m/z 418.1500 and 402.1555) and MS2 spectra of
346
compounds 4-7 perfectly matched with those of the EPSFs reported by Wang et al. 21.
347
These compounds were found in post-fermented dark teas and were formed from
348
flavan-3-ols and theanine
349
solution containing standards of theanine and flavan-3-ol (EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC,
350
GCG, GC, CG, and C, respectively), these 7 compounds were finally identified as 8-C
351
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted EGCG (S-EGCG-cThea and R-EGCG-cThea),
352
8-C
353
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted EGC (S-EGC-cThea and R-EGC-cThea), and 8-C
354
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted EC (S-EC-cThea and R-EC-cThea), respectively
355
(Figure 6-A). The total contents of these 7 compounds were 0.754 ± 0.080, 0.761 ±
356
0.253, and 1.340 ± 0.28 mg/g in the 1 year, 2-4 year, and >4 year BHYZ white teas,
357
respectively, and 1.009 ± 0.060, 1.028 ± 0.152, and 1.930 ± 0.438 mg/g in the 1 year,
358
2-4 year, and >4 year BMD white teas, respectively (Figure 5-A). To the best of our
359
knowledge, S-EGCG-cThea, R-EGCG-cThea, and R-ECG-cThea were discovered in
360
teas for the first time, and these 7 compounds were found in white teas for the first
361
time.
362
21
. Combining the syntheses of compounds 1-7 in reaction
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
substituted
ECG
(R-ECG-cThea),
8-C
The proposed route for the formation of EPSFs in stored white tea is shown in 17
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363
Figure 6-B. Theanine converts to 1-ethyl-5-hydroxy-2-pyrrolidinone after Strecker
364
degradation and cyclization 21,29, and this product then reacts with flavan-3-ols to form
365
EPSFs. The correlation coefficients between EPSFs and theanine and between EPSFs
366
and flavan-3-ols were calculated and are shown in Figure 5-C. EPSFs displayed
367
negative correlations with flavan-3-ols and theanine (R ranged from -0.76 to 0.13).
368
These results provide a new insight into the interactions between primary compounds
369
of
370
N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted GCG, CG, GC and C were not found in the stored
371
white teas potentially due to the much lower contents of GCG, CG, GC and C than
372
EGCG, ECG, EGC and EC in the white teas.
373
Validation of EPSF changes in stored white teas
catechins
and
theanine
in
teas
during
long-term
storage.
8-C
374
To further validate that the EPSFs were formed during the white tea storage and
375
that their contents were positively related to the storage duration, two experiments
376
were designed. As shown in Figure 7-A and B, the contents of compounds 1-7
377
increased in a stepwise manner in the reaction solutions at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 12 days.
378
The linear correlation coefficients ranged from 0.955 to 0.999. In the white tea
379
samples stored in an environment-controlled cabinet, the contents of compounds 1-7
380
also increased in a stepwise manner over 2.5 months. The linear correlation
381
coefficients ranged from 0.929 to 0.999 for compounds 1-5 and were 0.747 and 0.728
382
for compounds 6 and 7, respectively (Figure 7-C, D). These results demonstrated that
383
the formation of EPSFs from theanine and flavan-3-ols is linearly correlated to the
384
storage duration (or reaction duration). These results indicated that EPSFs are marker 18
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385
compounds of stored white tea, which are potential markers for the discrimination of
386
the storage duration of white teas.
387
In addition, it was believed that aged white teas have stronger effects against flu 26
388
and inflammation in folk medicine
, and 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted
389
EGC, GC, EC, and C were reported to have potential protective effects on human
390
microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC) injury induced by hydrogen dioxide
391
compared to other tea polyphenols
392
will be carried out in the future. Furthermore, studies of EPSFs during the storage of
393
other teas such as green, black, and dark teas are also needed.
21
. Therefore, bioactivity investigations of EPSFs
394 395 396
Supporting Information description
397
Information of included white tea samples (Table S1); Nonparametric Mann-Whitney
398
U tests of EPSFs (Table S2); VIP values of EPSFs in PLS-DA models (Table S3);
399
MS2 spectra and the putative fragmentation pathways of 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone
400
substituted flavan-3-ols (Figure S1-S4); The PCA score plot of white teas and QC
401
samples (Figure S5); Changes of catechins, dimeric catechins, flavone glycosides,
402
flavonol glycosides, amino acids, and aroma glycosides during white tea storing
403
(Figure S6-S10); PLS regression analysis of white tea storage duration and compound
404
contents (Figure S11). These materials are available free of charge via the Internet at
405
http://pubs.acs.org.
406 19
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Corresponding Author
408
*(Z. L.) Phone: +86 571 86650617. Email:
[email protected].
409
**(Z. H.) Phone: +86 571 87115272. Email:
[email protected].
410 411
Funding
412
The authors appreciate the funding support from the Central Public-Interest Scientific
413
Institution Basal Research Fund (No. 1610212016008 & 1610212018009), the
414
National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31500561 & 31501565), and the
415
Earmarked Fund for China Agricultural Research System (No. CARS-19).
416 417
Notes
418
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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References (1) Sharangi, A., Medicinal and therapeutic potentialities of tea (Camellia sinensis L.)–A review. Food Res. Int. 2009, 42, 529-535. (2) Ho, C.-T.; Zheng, X.; Li, S., Tea aroma formation. Food Sci. Hum. Wellness 2015, 4, 9-27. (3) Namita, P.; Mukesh, R.; Vijay, K. J., Camellia Sinensis (green tea): a review. Global J. Pharmacol. 2012, 6, 52-59. (4) Tan, J.; Engelhardt, U. H.; Lin, Z.; Kaiser, N.; Maiwald, B., Flavonoids, phenolic acids, alkaloids and theanine in different types of authentic Chinese white tea samples. J. Food Compos. Anal. 2017, 57, 8-15. (5) Kaack, K.; Christensen, L. P., Effect of packing materials and storage time on volatile compounds in tea processed from flowers of black elder (Sambucus nigra L.). Eur. Food Res. Technol. 2008, 227, 1259-1273. (6) Katsuno, T.; Kasuga, H.; Kusano, Y.; Yaguchi, Y.; Tomomura, M.; Cui, J.; Yang, Z.; Baldermann, S.; Nakamura, Y.; Ohnishi, T.; Mase, N.; Watanabe, N., Characterisation of odorant compounds and their biochemical formation in green tea with a low temperature storage process. Food Chem. 2014, 148, 388-395. (7) Wang, L. F.; Kim, D. M.; Lee, C. Y., Effects of heat processing and storage on flavanols and sensory qualities of green tea beverage. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2000, 48, 4227-4232. (8) Nekvapil, T.; Kopriva, V.; Boudny, V.; Hostovsky, M.; Dvorak, P.; Malota, L., Decrease in the antioxidant capacity in beverages containing tea extracts during 21
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storage. The Scientific World J. 2012, 2012, 1-5. (9) He, S.; Li, X.; Luo, C.; Chunfang, G.; Yun, S., Study on anti-bacterial activities of white tea produced in different years. Sci. Technol. Food Ind. 2016, 37, 164-168+190. (10) Friedman, M.; Levin, C. E.; Lee, S. U.; Kozukue, N., Stability of green tea catechins in commercial tea leaves during storage for 6 months. J. Food Sci. 2009, 74, H47-H51. (11) Ning, J.-M.; Ding, D.; Song, Y.-S.; Zhang, Z.-Z.; Luo, X.; Wan, X.-C., Chemical constituents analysis of white tea of different qualities and different storage times. Eur. Food Res. Technol. 2016, 242, 2093–2104. (12) Herrero, M.; Simó, C.; García-Cañas, V.; Ibáñez, E.; Cifuentes, A., Foodomics: MS-based strategies in modern food science and nutrition. Mass Spectrom. Rev. 2012, 31, 49-69. (13) Hu, C.; Xu, G., Mass-spectrometry-based metabolomics analysis for foodomics. TrAC-Trend. Anal. Chem. 2013, 52, 36-46. (14) Tan, J.; Dai, W.; Lu, M.; Lv, H.; Guo, L.; Zhang, Y.; Zhu, Y.; Peng, Q.; Lin, Z., Study of the dynamic changes in the non-volatile chemical constituents of black tea during fermentation processing by a non-targeted metabolomics approach. Food Res. Int. 2016, 79, 106-113. (15) Dai, W.; Tan, J.; Lu, M.; Xie, D.; Li, P.; Lv, H.; Zhu, Y.; Guo, L.; Zhang, Y.; Peng, Q.; Lin, Z., Nontargeted modification-specific metabolomics investigation of glycosylated secondary metabolites in tea (Camellia sinensis L.) based on liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2016, 64, 22
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6783-6790. (16) Dai, W.; Xie, D.; Lu, M.; Li, P.; Lv, H.; Yang, C.; Peng, Q.; Zhu, Y.; Guo, L.; Zhang, Y.; Tan, J.; Lin, Z., Characterization of white tea metabolome: Comparison against green and black tea by a nontargeted metabolomics approach. Food Res. Int. 2017, 96, 40-45. (17) Dai, W.; Qi, D.; Yang, T.; Lv, H.; Guo, L.; Zhang, Y.; Zhu, Y.; Peng, Q.; Xie, D.; Tan, J.; Lin, Z., Nontargeted analysis using ultraperformance liquid chromatography– quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry uncovers the effects of harvest season on the metabolites and taste quality of tea (Camellia sinensis L.). J. Agric. Food Chem. 2015, 63, 9869-9878. (18) Lv, H. P.; Zhu, Y.; Tan, J. F.; Guo, L.; Dai, W. D.; Lin, Z., Bioactive compounds from Pu-erh tea with therapy for hyperlipidaemia. J. Funct. Foods 2015, 19, 194-203. (19) Dai, W. D.; Wei, C.; Kong, H. W.; Jia, Z. H.; Han, J. K.; Zhang, F. X.; Wu, Z. M.; Gu, Y.; Chen, S. L.; Gu, Q.; Lu, X.; Wu, Y. L.; Xu, G. W., Effect of the traditional Chinese medicine tongxinluo on endothelial dysfunction rats studied by using urinary metabonomics based on liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. J. Pharmaceut. Biomed. Anal. 2011, 56, 86-92. (20) Dai, W.; Yin, P.; Zeng, Z.; Kong, H.; Tong, H.; Xu, Z.; Lu, X.; Lehmann, R.; Xu, G., Nontargeted modification-specific metabolomics study based on liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 9146-9153. (21) Wang, W.; Zhang, L.; Wang, S.; Shi, S.; Jiang, Y.; Li, N.; Tu, P., 8-C 23
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N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted flavan-3-ols as the marker compounds of Chinese dark teas formed in the post-fermentation process provide significant antioxidative activity. Food Chem. 2014, 152, 539-545. (22) Ren, D. M.; Guo, H. F.; Yu, W. T.; Wang, S. Q.; Ji, M.; Lou, H. X., Stereochemistry
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(29) Tanaka, T.; Watarumi, S.; Fujieda, M.; Kouno, I., New black tea polyphenol having N -ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone moiety derived from tea amino acid theanine: isolation, characterization and partial synthesis. Food Chem. 2005, 93, 81-87.
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Figure captions Figure 1. PCA analysis of the compound patterns of BHYZ (A) and BMD (B) white teas with different storage durations; PLS-DA analysis of the compound patterns of BHYZ (C) and BMD (D) white teas with different storage durations. Figure 2. Heat-map of the compound contents in BHYZ white tea samples with different storage durations. Figure 3. Heat-map of the compound contents in BMD white tea samples with different storage durations. Figure 4. (A) Extracted ion chromatograms (EICs) of EPSFs in stored white teas; (B) the Pearson correlation coefficients (R = 0.685-0.846) between compound 1-7 and storage periods in BMD white teas. Figure 5. The contents of EPSFs in BHYZ (A) and BMD (B) white teas. The significance of the compound difference among groups was tested using ANOVA; (C) correlation coefficients between EPSFs and theanine and between EPSFs and flavan-3-ols in white teas. Figure 6. (A) Chemical structures of compounds 1-7; (B) Proposed route for the formation of EPSFs. Figure 7. Linearly increasing formations of 8-C N-ethyl-2-pyrrolidinone substituted flavan-3-ols in reaction solution (containing standards of theanine and flavan-3-ols) within 12 days (A and B) and in Baimudan white teas stored in an environment-controlled cabinet within 2.5 months (C and D, n = 5).
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