4.6 Article

Analysis of Processing Effects on Glucosinolate Profiles in Red Cabbage by LC-MS/MS in Multiple Reaction Monitoring Mode

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26175171

Keywords

glucosinolates; red cabbage; LC-MS; MS; MRM; cooking

Funding

  1. National Key Technologies R&D Project during the 13th Five-Year Plan Period, China [2016YFD0400405]
  2. Agricultural Project of Major Science and Technology Projects of Zhejiang Province, China [2020C02033]

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Different cooking methods have significant effects on the glucosinolate content in red cabbage, with microwaving and steaming being able to better retain glucosinolates. Boiling, microwaving, steaming, frying, and stir-frying resulted in reductions in glucosinolate levels.
Red cabbage (Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata) continues to receive increasing attention on its health-promoting properties because of its high glucosinolate content. Glucosinolates are an unstable active substance; however, there are few studies on their changes in different cooking processes. In this study, we investigated the effects of processing methods (boiling, steaming, microwave heating, frying, stir-frying) and boiling time on glucosinolates in red cabbage. Ten glucosinolates, including 4-methoxyglucobrassicin, neoglucobrassicin, glucoalyssin, glucobrassicin, glucoraphanin, glucoiberin, progoitrin, gluconapin and sinigrin, in red cabbage were detected. Decreases of 32.36%, 24.83%, 25.27%, 81.11% and 84.29% for total glucosinolates were observed after boiling, microwaving, steaming, frying and stir-frying. Indole glucosinolates were more efficiently lost compared to aliphatic glucosinolates after boiling, while microwaving, steaming, frying and stir-frying also resulted in a greater reduction in indole glucosinolates than aliphatic glucosinolates. Glucoalyssin, glucoerucin and sinigrin were more thermal sensitive than other glucosinolates. It was confirmed that microwaving and steaming retained higher levels of glucosinolates than other methods and may be better for cooking red cabbage.

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