4.7 Article

Exploring the Isomeric Precursors of Olive Oil Major Secoiridoids: An Insight into Olive Leaves and Drupes by Liquid-Chromatography and Fourier-Transform Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10092050

Keywords

extra-virgin olive oil; olive leaves and drupes; secoiridoids; oleuropein; oleuroside; ligstroside; elenolic acid glucoside; secoxyloganin; liquid chromatography-Fourier transform tandem mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Ministero per l'Istruzione, l'Universita e la Ricerca (MIUR) [PONa3_00395/1]
  2. Fondazioni in Rete per la Ricerca Agroalimentare (AGER) [2016-0169]

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Secoiridoids play a key role in determining health benefits related to the consumption of extra-virgin olive oil. Specific enzymatic/chemical transformations during EVOO production are the main source of secoiridoids, rather than from precursors with a specific structural feature.
Secoiridoids play a key role in determining health benefits related to a regular consumption of extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO), in which they are generated from precursors of the same class naturally occurring in drupes and leaves of the olive (Olea europaea L.) plant. Here, reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization and Fourier-transform single/tandem mass spectrometry (RPLC-ESI-FTMS and MS/MS) was employed for a structural elucidation of those precursors. The presence of three isoforms in both matrices was assessed for oleuropein ([M-H](-) ion with m/z 539.1770) and was emphasized, for the first time, also for ligstroside (m/z 523.1821) and for the demethylated counterparts of the two compounds (m/z 525.1614 and 509.1665, respectively). However, only the prevailing isoform included an exocyclic double bond between carbon atoms C-8 and C-9, typical of oleuropein and ligstroside; the remaining, less abundant, isoforms included a C=C bond between C-8 and C-10. The same structural difference was also observed between secoiridoids named elenolic acid glucoside and secoxyloganin (m/z 403.1246). This study strengthens the hypothesis that secoiridoids including a C-8=C-10 bond, recently recognized as relevant species in EVOO extracts, arise mainly from specific enzymatic/chemical transformations occurring on major oleuropein/ligstroside-like precursors during EVOO production, rather than from precursors having that structural feature.

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