Real-Time Monitoring of Miniaturized Thermal Food Processing by Advanced Mass Spectrometric Techniques.


Journal

Analytical chemistry
ISSN: 1520-6882
Titre abrégé: Anal Chem
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0370536

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
17 01 2023
Historique:
pubmed: 6 1 2023
medline: 20 1 2023
entrez: 5 1 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Mass spectrometry is a popular and powerful analytical tool to study the effects of food processing. Industrial sampling, real-life sampling, or challenging academic research on process-related volatile and aerosol research often demand flexible, time-sensitive data acquisition by state-of-the-art mass analyzers. Here, we show a laboratory-scaled, miniaturized, and highly controllable setup for the online monitoring of aerosols and volatiles from thermal food processing based on dielectric barrier discharge ionization (DBDI) mass spectrometry (MS). We demonstrate the opportunities offered by the setup from a foodomics perspective to study emissions from the thermal processing of wheat bread rolls at 210 °C by Fourier transformation ion cyclotron resonance MS. As DBDI is an emerging technology, we compared its ionization selectivity to established atmospheric pressure ionization tools: we found DBDI preferably ionizes saturated, nitrogenous compounds. We likewise identified a sustainable overlap in the selectivity of detected analytes with APCI and electrospray ionization (ESI). Further, we dynamically recorded chemical fingerprints throughout the thermal process. Unsupervised classification of temporal response patterns was used to describe the dynamic nature of the reaction system. Compared to established tools for real-time MS, our setup permits one to monitor chemical changes during thermal food processing at ultrahigh resolution, establishing an advanced perspective for real-time mass spectrometric analysis of food processing.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36602426
doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04874
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1694-1702

Auteurs

Leopold Weidner (L)

Comprehensive Foodomics Platform, Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Maximus-von-Imhof-Forum 2, 85354 Freising, Germany.
Helmholtz Zentrum München, Analytical BioGeoChemistry, Ingolstädter Landstr. 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany.

Daniel Hemmler (D)

Comprehensive Foodomics Platform, Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Maximus-von-Imhof-Forum 2, 85354 Freising, Germany.
Helmholtz Zentrum München, Analytical BioGeoChemistry, Ingolstädter Landstr. 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany.

Michael Rychlik (M)

Helmholtz Zentrum München, Analytical BioGeoChemistry, Ingolstädter Landstr. 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany.

Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin (P)

Comprehensive Foodomics Platform, Chair of Analytical Food Chemistry, TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Maximus-von-Imhof-Forum 2, 85354 Freising, Germany.
Helmholtz Zentrum München, Analytical BioGeoChemistry, Ingolstädter Landstr. 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany.

Articles similaires

Humans Breast Neoplasms Female Mass Spectrometry Adipose Tissue
Humans Proteomics Paraffin Embedding Tissue Fixation Organelles
Animals Alzheimer Disease Mice Proteomics Disease Models, Animal
Animals Liver Chickens Stress, Physiological Chromatography, Liquid

Classifications MeSH