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The photooxidation effect in liquid lipid matrices: Answers from an innovative FTIR spectroscopy strategy with ‘mesh cell’ incubation Noelia Tena, Ramon Aparicio, and Diego Luis Garcia-Gonzalez J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b05981 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Mar 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 20, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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The photooxidation effect in liquid lipid matrices: Answers from
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an innovative FTIR spectroscopy strategy with ‘mesh cell’
3
incubation
4 5
Noelia Tena*, Ramón Aparicio, Diego L. García-González
6
Instituto de la Grasa (CSIC), Ctra. de Utrera, km. 1, Campus Universitario Pablo de
7
Olavide - building 46, 41013 - Sevilla, Spain
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
*corresponding author:
[email protected]; Tel: +34 954 61 15 50; Fax: +34 954 61
22
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ABSTRACT
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Developing new approaches to evaluate the stability of edible oils under
25
moderate conditions is highly demanded today to avoid accelerated experiments that are
26
not well correlated with actual shelf life. In particular, low intensity of visible light
27
(photooxidation) needs to be integrated in stability studies, together with mild
28
temperature. Thus, in this work a strategy based on ‘mesh cell’-FTIR to monitor
29
chemical changes in lipid matrices as consequence of a combination of light and mild
30
heating was applied. The results were compared with those obtained for the stability of
31
triolein used as a molecular model. The study showed that the moderate light intensity
32
(400 lx) at low temperature (23ºC) has an early effect on the degradation of lipid
33
matrices that is not observed when they are stored at 35ºC in absence of light. Thus,
34
results proved that exposition to light (400 lx) pointed out to be more relevant than mild
35
heating (35ºC) in monounsaturated lipid matrices, while polyunsaturated lipid matrices
36
were more sensitive to mild heating.
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45
Keywords: FTIR spectroscopy; mesh cell; photooxidation; edible oils; triolein;
46
combination of mild storage conditions.
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1. INTRODUCTION
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Currently, there is a marked demand from retailers and producers for analytical
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tools to exert a major control on their products and to ensure that they comply with the
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labelling regulation during their whole shelf life. At the same time, consumers are
52
demanding better quality of food products. Thus, they are paying more attention to the
53
‘best before’ date of fresh foods.
54
The prediction of the stability of fresh foods during their shelf life depends on
55
the complex interplay among several compositional variables, together with packaging
56
and environmental factors (moderate light and temperature). Fat food products, in
57
particular, are unstable because the chemical composition of their lipid fraction is
58
sensitive to oxidation. Thus, liquid lipid matrices, such as edible oils, are in continuous
59
evolution of their chemical composition because their fatty acid composition is
60
susceptible to be easily oxidised. The oxidative stability of oils depends on the ratio
61
between polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fatty acids composition. It has been
62
estimated that the relative rate of autoxidation of oleate:linoleate:linolenate is 1:40–
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50:100 in regards to oxygen uptake.1,2 However, the effect of pigments, peroxides,
64
phenols, and other minor constituents also play an important role in the oxidation
65
process. Some of these compounds are removed during the refining process. However,
66
others remain in the oil having an influence in the kinetics of the degradation. Thus, the
67
degradation of the oil depends on the remained chemical compounds and the type of
68
energy being exposed to the oil (heat, light or both).
69
Considering how energy affects the rate of oxidation, it can be stated that the
70
shelf life of edible oils is greatly affected by variables that depend on the packer (type of
71
container, volume, etc.), and the distributor and storekeeper (temperature, light, etc.).
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These variables are not always suitable and perfectly controlled. Thus, they may affect
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the kinetics of the oxidation process and modify the actual ‘best before date’ with
74
respect to the date declared on the label. The immediate consequence of fails in oil
75
handling is the decrease of sensory quality of the product and the consequent consumer
76
rejection, thereby causing an image problem and economical loses. For that reason,
77
maintaining freshness along the food chain is of great concern to oil producers.3,4
78
Furthermore, gaining knowledge about the alteration processes of different lipid
79
matrices under real storage conditions is also of interest for other food producers since
80
edible oils are frequently used in the elaboration of foods that undergo a quality loss
81
over time influenced by their lipid fraction.
82
Different studies have been focused in the stability of the oils under accelerated
83
conditions, mainly focused on high temperatures that are close to 100ºC.5 These studies
84
are based on the oil stability index (OSI) determined by Rancimat and the active oxygen
85
method (AOM).5-8 Although research with these methods have yielded relevant
86
knowledge that has helped in the understanding of oxidation mechanisms, the acquired
87
information is speculative and it does not have a satisfactory correlation with the actual
88
oxidation process that slowly occurs at room temperature during the oil storage. Thus,
89
the degradation of oils is subjected to a different kinetic and degradation rate when they
90
are stored at low temperature (
309
exposition to light > mild heating) is similar in ROO and EVOO matrices. In these oils,
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light also showed to be a factor that was more relevant than only mild heating. However,
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this order was different in SO matrix (combination of mild heating and light > mild
312
heating > exposition to light). Thus, this oil showed to be highly sensitive to oxidation
313
when it was heated at 35ºC. Thus, the maximum peak height of hydroperoxide band in
314
this oil was 0.60 and 0.34 when applying mild heating and exposition to light
315
respectively. The ratio between these two values resulted in 1.8, which revealed the
316
importance of mild heating in this lipid matrix.
317
The band assigned to alcohols (~3535 cm-1) was also showed in the cumulative
318
spectra displayed in Figure 3. This band was clearly observable in SO when applying a
319
combination of mild heating and light. The maximum peak heights of this band in all of
320
the samples followed the same order than that described above for hydroperoxide band
321
(Table S1 of the Supporting Information). Thus, these results also prove the relatively
322
higher influence of exposition to light compared with mild heating, excepting again for
323
SO.
324
The fact that SO was more sensitive to mild heating than to light can be
325
explained by its fatty acid composition. Table 1 shows the composition in percentage of
326
fatty acids of the samples studied in this work. SO is rich in polyunsaturated fatty acid
327
(58.66%), the linoleic acid being the most abundant fatty acid (58.46%), while the rest
328
of oils were characterized by a major amount of monounsaturated fatty acids (>81.92%).
329
In order to compare better the stability between matrices, the evolution of the
330
intensity of the band assigned to hydroperoxides (~3430 cm-1) was plotted against the
331
time of incubation (360 h). Figure 4 shows the trend lines of the hydroperoxides band
332
for the four matrices grouped according to the three storage conditions. Figure 4-A
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shows that all the lipid matrices were quite stable when they were subjected to mild
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heating (35 ºC). Only SO and OOO underwent an increment of hydroperoxides under
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this condition after 150 and 170 hours respectively. This increment can be explained by
336
the absence of protective minor compounds, and in the case of SO, by its fatty acid
337
composition as described above.
338
Regarding the experience carried out with light (400 lx and 23 ºC), Figure 4-B
339
shows that all the lipid matrices presented an increment of hydroperoxide band after the
340
first 50 hours, which evidences the higher effect of photooxidation compared to mild
341
temperature (35 ºC). However, the speed of hydroperoxide formation is not the same in
342
all of the matrices. At the beginning of the incubation, OOO sample presented the
343
fastest formation of hydroperoxide (Figure 4-B), again explained by the lack of
344
protection of minor compounds. On the other hand, the SO underwent an acceleration in
345
the formation of hydroperoxide after 250 hours, being the most deteriorated sample at
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the end of the experiment.
347
Finally, when samples are subjected to the combined action of light and mild
348
heating (Figure 4-C), the formation of hydroperoxides also was accelerated in greater
349
extent compared with the other storage conditions, overall in SO and OOO. Regarding
350
ROO and EVOO, they were the matrices that showed higher stability even when this
351
more drastic storage conditions was applied. In this case, ROO and EVOO matrices
352
showed a similar trend in the formation of hydroperoxides, but with slight differences in
353
their kinetics over time (Figure 4-C).
354
In general terms, Figure 4 shows that different conditions affect not only the
355
final values of the band assigned to hydroperoxides at the end of the experiment, but
356
also the speed in their rising over time. Thus, the relative influence of light and
357
temperature was studied in terms of speed in the formation of hydroperoxides by means
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of the slopes of trend lines (Table S1 of the Supporting Information) and the ratios
359
between different conditions. Figure 5 presents the values of the slopes determined with
360
the following equation: ℎ () =
∆
3430 ∆
361
Thus, the effect of light (400 lx and 23ºC) in OOO, measured as slope of the
362
trend line for hydroperoxide band, is 4 times stronger than mild heating (35 ºC). Thus
363
this high slope for OOO prove that monounsaturated triacylglycerols, principally
364
glyceryl trioleate, are more resistant to moderate temperature than to photooxidation
365
when no minor compounds are present. On the contrary, mild heating was the most
366
remarkable factor accelerating the formation of hydroperoxides in SO matrix. The
367
slopes for this oil (Table S1 of the Supporting Information) show a double effect of mild
368
heating in this oil compared with light in regards to hydroperoxide formation. Finally, in
369
the case of ROO and EVOO, the slopes when exposing the samples to mild heating
370
condition were almost null, while exposition to light produced a slope slightly lower
371
than OOO. Therefore, it could be concluded that also in terms of oxidation speed, the
372
effect of light was more significant for monounsaturated lipid matrices (OOO, ROO,
373
EVOO) than for polyunsaturated lipid matrices (SO), the latter being more sensitive to
374
mild heating.
375
This study pointed out that the effect of mild light intensity on the stability of
376
different lipid matrices may be more remarkable than the application of mild
377
temperature in some cases. In the case of mild temperatures, the degradation rate
378
measured as the intensity of hydroperoxide FTIR band seems to be strongly related to
379
the fatty acid composition and the presence of minor compounds. Thus, the SO matrix
380
of linoleic sunflower oil was presented as the most unstable sample when it was
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exposed to 35ºC in dark. By contrast, SO oil exposed to light (400 lx at 23 ºC) was 1.8
382
times more stable than the same oil subjected to mild heating (kept in dark at 35 ºC). In
383
the case of OOO (triolein), ROO and EVOO (refined and extra-virgin olive oils),
384
exposition to light showed a higher effect in the formation of hydroperoxides compared
385
with mild temperature.
386
All these results obtained with samples of different production sources (refined
387
vs. virgin, sunflower seeds vs. olives), highlight the importance of determining the
388
stability of the lipid matrices including multiple factors (light in addition to mild
389
heating) and considering mild values of intensity. Thus, the combination of these two
390
factors, light (400 lx) and mild heating (35 ºC), was presented as the best way to predict
391
the stability of the lipid matrices because this combination produced the highest
392
differences in the spectral bands when different oils were compared (Table S1 of the
393
Supporting Information). The in-house system designed for combining different
394
oxidation factors in a controlled way (Figure 1) proved to be a useful tool to simulate
395
the real conditions of storage of fat foods. Considering this combination of factors (both
396
light and temperature), and the speed of the oxidation process measured as slope (Figure
397
5), the matrix that was most stable under these conditions was EVOO, followed by
398
ROO, OOO and SO. The three last oils were 1.14, 2.0 and 4.57 times more unstable
399
than EVOO respectively in terms of FTIR band of hydroperoxides.
400 401
Supporting Information
402
Details of spectra features (Table S1) as affected by each one of the three
403
conditions studied: mild heating, exposition to light and a combination of light and mild
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heating; spectra of triolein (OOO) before and after purification and spectrum of extra
405
virgin olive oil (VOO) (Figure S1).
406
Funding
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Financial support by Fundación General CSIC (Programa ComFuturo) is
408
acknowledged. This research was also funded by AGL2015‐69320‐R project (Spanish
409
State Secretariat for Research, Development and Innovation).
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Oxidation of lipids in food. Polish journal of food and nutrition sciences, 2004,
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monitored by ATR-FTIR analysis of trans content. Journal of Agricultural and
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Food Chemistry, 2009, 57, 9997–10003.
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(31) Tena, N.; Aparicio-Ruiz, R.; García-González, D. L. Use of polar and nonpolar
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fractions as additional information sources for studying thermoxidized virgin
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Raman, and Fluorescence Spectroscopies: Methodologies and Applications. In:
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J. L. Eds.; Springer: New York, 2013; pp. 335-393.
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
547 548
Figure 1. In-house system designed to study the simultaneous effect of mild heating and
549
exposition to light in the oxidation process of lipid matrices.
550 551
Figure 2. Spectral changes of different lipid matrices when they are incubated in mesh
552
cells under conditions combining exposition to light and mild heating (400 lx and 35 ºC
553
for 360h).
554
Note: Triolein (OOO), refined olive oil (ROO), extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) and
555
sunflower oil (SO). The scale of spectral regions that evolve during incubation has been
556
maximized and marked with an arrow, which indicates the direction of the evolution of
557
the band with time. The assignments of the spectral region are also indicated.
558 559
Figure 3. Spectral regions assigned to hydroxyl groups obtained for the cumulative
560
variance spectra computed from the spectra of triolein (OOO), refined olive oil (ROO),
561
extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) and sunflower oil (SO) in mesh cells for a total period of
562
360 hours (~15 days) under mild heating (kept in dark at 35 ºC), exposition to light (400
563
lx and 23 ºC) and combined action of light and mild heating (400 lx and 35 ºC).
564
Note: The spectral bands that show changes during all the experiments are marked by an
565
arrow. The arrow indicates the tendency of the changes with the incubation time. The
566
chemical assignments of the spectral bands that present evolution are identified.
567 568
Figure 4. Time course trends of peak height for the spectral band at 3430 cm-1 assigned
569
to hydroperoxides during 360 hours in the spectra of different lipid matrices when they
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are stored in mesh cells subjected to three conditions: A, mild heating (kept in dark at
571
35 ºC); B, exposition to light (400 lx and 23 ºC); C, a combined action of light and mild
572
heating (400 lx and 35 ºC).
573
Note: Triolein (OOO), refined olive oil (ROO), extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) and
574
sunflower oil (SO). The Y-axes have been set at the same value (0.35) to facilitate the
575
comparison of the trends. Some samples (OOO, SO) reached this value before 360
576
hours.
577 578
Figure 5. Speed of hydroperoxides formation determine by the trend lines slope of the
579
peak height of the spectral band at 3430 cm-1 during 360 hours in the spectra of different
580
lipid matrices loaded in mesh cells subjected to mild heating (kept in dark at 35 ºC),
581
exposition to light (400 lx and 23 ºC) and a combined action of light and mild heating
582
(400 lx and 35 ºC). Note: Triolein (OOO), refined olive oil (ROO), extra virgin olive oil
583
(EVOO) and sunflower oil (SO).
584
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Table 1. Fatty acid composition (percentage) of selected samples.
Samples
OOO
ROO
EVOO
SO
∑ SFA
8.74
15.46
14.86
11.19
∑ MUFA
84.71
76.79
81.92
30.10
∑ PUFA
8.76
7.71
3.20
58.66
∑ UFA
93.47
84.50
85.12
88.76
C18:1
66.69
75.32
80.56
29.78
C18:2
6.49
7.06
2.59
58.46
C18:3
0.30
0.59
0.61
0.05
Note: OOO, Triolein; ROO, Refined olive oil; EVOO, Extra virgin olive oil; SO, Sunflower oil; ∑SFA, Sum of saturated fatty acids; ∑MUFA, Sum of monounsaturated fatty acids; ∑PUFA, Sum of polyunsaturated fatty acids.
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Supporting Information Table S1: Minimum (min. peak height) and maximum (max. peak height) values of peak height of the bands assigned to alcohols (~3535 cm-1), hydroperoxides (~3430 cm1 ), unsaturated carbonyl compounds (~1640 cm-1), conjugated trans isomers (~987 cm-1) and isolated trans isomers (~967 cm-1); increment of peak height (∆ height), standard deviation (SD) and slopes of the trend lines obtained by plotting peak height vs incubation time for the four lipid matrices when they are stored in mesh cell subjected to a combined action of light and mild heating (400 lx and 35 ºC), exposition to light (400 lx and 23 ºC) and mild heating (kept in dark at 35 ºC) during 360h respectively. Note:a slope calculated in the range where the trend was linear; triolein (OOO), extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), refined olive oil (ROO) and sunflower oil (SO).
33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Lipid matrix/ storage condition
Min. peak height Max. peak height ∆ height Alcohols (~3535 cm-1) OOO/ 400 lx and 35 ºC 0.05 0.25 0.20 OOO/ 400 lx and 23 ºC 0.05 0.12 0.07 OOO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.05 0.08 0.03 ROO/400 lx and 35 ºC 0.06 0.16 0.10 ROO/400 lx and 23 ºC 0.07 0.11 0.04 ROO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.05 0.06 0.01 EVOO/400 lx and 35ºC 0.04 0.11 0.07 EVOO/400 lx and 23 ºC 0.04 0.07 0.02 EVOO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.03 0.04 0.01 SO/400 lx and 35ºC 0.05 0.93 0.88 SO/400 lx and 23ºC 0.05 0.14 0.10 SO/kept in dark at 35ºC 0.04 0.36 0.32 Hydroperoxide band (~3430 cm-1) OOO/ 400 lx and 35 ºC 0.05 0.52 0.48 OOO/ 400 lx and 23 ºC 0.03 0.29 0.26 OOO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.04 0.14 0.10 ROO/400 lx and 35 ºC 0.03 0.31 0.28 ROO/400 lx and 23 ºC 0.04 0.24 0.20 ROO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.03 0.04 0.01 EVOO/400 lx and 35ºC 0.03 0.29 0.26 EVOO/400 lx and 23 ºC 0.03 0.20 0.17 EVOO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.03 0.04 0.01 SO/400 lx and 35ºC 0.05 1.05 1.00 SO/400 lx and 23ºC 0.03 0.34 0.31 SO/kept in dark at 35ºC 0.04 0.60 0.56 C=C Stretching absorption of unsaturated carbonyl compound (~1640 cm-1) OOO/ 400 lx and 35 ºC 0.06 0.12 0.06 OOO/ 400 lx and 23 ºC 0.08 0.12 0.40 OOO/kept in dark at 35 ºC 0.06 0.08 0.02 ROO/400 lx and 35 ºC 0.06 0.11 0.05 ROO/400 lx and 23 ºC 0.07 0.07