Abstract

Phytol and tocopherols and their fatty acid esters (PFAE and TFAE) are isoprenoid lipid components which can be found for instance in vegetables. Their behavior during maturation of fruits and vegetables could reveal valuable information on their biosynthetic formation and biological function. As pods of the genus Capsicum contain considerable amounts of both PFAE and TFAE, two cultivars (i.e. Capsicum annuum var. Forajido and Capsicum chinense var. Habanero) were grown in a greenhouse project. The date of flowering and fruit formation of each blossom was noted and fruits were harvested in four specific periods which corresponded with different stages of ripening, i.e. unripe, semi-ripe, ripe and overripe. Quantification by means of gas chromatography mass spectrometry and creation of development profiles strongly supported the suggestion that PFAE and TFAE were formed as storage molecules during fruit ripening and parallel degradation of chlorophyll. Additionally, compound-specific carbon isotope ratios (δ13C values (‰)) of originally in PFAE and chlorophyll bound phytol ultimately proved that PFAE, besides tocopherols, serve as sink for the cytotoxic phytol moiety released from chlorophyll degradation during fruit ripening. Furthermore, color measurements were successfully implemented to simplify the usually cumbersome separation of chili fruits into different ripening degrees.

Highlights

  • Phytol and tocopherols and their fatty acid esters (PFAE and TFAE) are isoprenoid lipid components which can be found for instance in vegetables

  • Color changes could be used as criterion for the determination of ripening stages A to D TFAE and PFAE are colorless

  • The separate quantitative analysis of free and esterified tocopherols and phytol as well as chlorophyll-phytol in chili pods of the Capsicum cultivars Forajido (Capsicum annuum) and Habanero (Capsicum chinense) of different ripening stages allowed us to study the development of each compound class during fruit maturation

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Summary

Introduction

Phytol and tocopherols and their fatty acid esters (PFAE and TFAE) are isoprenoid lipid components which can be found for instance in vegetables. Quantification by means of gas chromatography mass spectrometry and creation of development profiles strongly supported the suggestion that PFAE and TFAE were formed as storage molecules during fruit ripening and parallel degradation of chlorophyll. Color measurements were successfully implemented to simplify the usually cumbersome separation of chili fruits into different ripening degrees Both phytol and tocopherols are isoprenoid lipid components, which are widely spread in the plant ­kingdom[1,2] Phytol ­(C20H40O) is mainly known as side chain of the green pigment chlorophyll and does hardly occur in its free form in plant t­ issue[3,4]. Subsequent alkaline hydrolysis of the ester containing SPE fraction enabled the separate analysis of free and originally esterified phytol and tocopherols by gas chromatography coupled to stable isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC-IRMS)

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