Abstract

Monophosphate nucleotides are difficult to identify in Champagne wine because they are present in small concentrations in a complex mixture. A method for the isolation, separation and identification of reference compounds, which achieved on average 79% recovery (except for cytidine derivatives), was developed and applied to wine. Some monophosphate nucleotides were then isolated from a Champagne wine aged on lees for 8 years, by ultrafiltration followed by a semi-preparative HPLC step using a strong anion-exchange column. The fraction obtained was subjected to HPLC in a reversed-phase column to remove the salt previously introduced, before identification of compounds by HPLC coupled to a mass spectrometer. For the first time in wine, 5′-IMP, 5′-AMP, 5′-CMP, 5′-GMP, 5′-UMP and the 3′- and/or 2′-isomers of the four latter compounds were identified by comparing their HPLC and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry data with those of reference nucleotides.

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