4.6 Review

Analysis of Chlorophylls/Chlorophyllins in Food Products Using HPLC and HPLC-MS Methods

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 28, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules28104012

Keywords

HPLC; HPLC/MS; non-target analysis; natural green colorants; chlorophylls; chlorophyllins; metallochlorophyllins; food

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Color is the most important sensory factor for consumers and customers when it comes to food and beverages. Natural green colorants, being both appealing and nontoxic, have gained universal acceptance over synthetic ones. However, natural colorants are prone to degradation during processing and storage, posing challenges for their characterization. This review discusses the degradation, separation, and identification of chlorophylls and chlorophyllins, as well as the need for alternative analysis methods for accurate risk assessment and legislation purposes.
Of the different quality parameters of any food commodity or beverage, color is the most important, attractive and choice-affecting sensory factor to consumers and customers. Nowadays, food industries are interested in making the appearance of their food products attractive and interesting in order to appeal to consumers/customers. Natural green colorants have been accepted universally due to their natural appeal as well as their nontoxic nature to consumers. In addition, several food safety issues mean that natural green colorants are preferable to synthetic food colorants, which are mostly unsafe to the consumers but are less costly, more stable, and create more attractive color hues in food processing. Natural colorants are prone to degradation into numerous fragments during food processing, and thereafter, in storage. Although different hyphenated techniques (especially high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), LC-MS/HRMS, and LC/MS-MS are extensively used to characterize all these degradants and fragments, some of them are not responsive to any of these techniques, and some substituents in the tetrapyrrole skeleton are insensitive to these characterization tools. Such circumstances warrant an alternative tool to characterize them accurately for risk assessment and legislation purposes. This review summarizes the different degradants of chlorophylls and chlorophyllins under different conditions, their separation and identification using various hyphenated techniques, national legislation regarding them, and the challenges involved in their analysis. Finally, this review proposes that a non-targeted analysis method that combines HPLC and HR-MS assisted by powerful software tools and a large database could be an effective tool to analyze all possible chlorophyll and chlorophyllin-based colorants and degradants in food products in the future.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available