Abstract

Flavor substances are crucial to the quality of soy sauce and closely related to the intermediate metabolites. This study systematically explored the dynamic changes in physicochemical characteristics, metabolomics and flavoromics during traditional Chinese soy sauce fermentation. The results indicated that the amino acid nitrogen gradually increased to 0.95 g/100 mL on the 13th day and then stabilized, and the changes of reducing sugars increased to 66.40 mg/mL on the 7th day and then slowly decreased. A total of 90 volatile compounds and 1172 non-volatile metabolites were detected. In the early fermentation period (1–7 day), alcohols, aldehydes and ketones were the main volatile compounds, but as fermentation proceeded, phenols and esters gradually accumulated. The total content of volatile compounds, mainly alcohols and phenols, reached the highest value on the 23rd day. Non-volatile metabolites were mainly amino acids, organic acids, lipids and carbohydrates, and the content and types of varied with fermentation time. KEGG analysis indicates there were significant changes in the proline and arginine metabolism in the middle and late periods (7–28 day) compared to the early fermentation period. Correlation analysis indicating a delicate balance between the transformation of metabolites and the formation of volatile compounds in traditional Chinese soy sauce.

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