Abstract

Dietary plant foods are characterized by a vast molecular diversity of glycosylated sterols (SG) that differ in the structure of the steryl backbone. The identification of these polar steryl conjugates represents a major challenge as they are structurally highly similar, and commercial standards are limited to a few naturally abundant species. Spectral databases do not yet contain MS/MS spectra of these sterol conjugates obtained by electrospray ionization (ESI), which would facilitate their reliable identification. Thus, this study aimed at providing novel information on ESI-MS/MS spectra of both abundant and minor SG found in foods. As a first step, however, free sterols (FS) were investigated for their fragmentation behavior as they share the same intermediate ion as SG. Pure SG were obtained from commercially available standard mixtures and minor SG were extracted from different food sources (oat bran, wheat bran, pumpkin seeds, melon, rapeseeds, and potato peel). ESI-MS/MS spectra of 15 FS were assessed and fragment ions reflective of structural features were identified and rationalized. Subsequently, 14 SG were identified at four different levels, while relative retention times from chromatographic separation and spectral features of FS served to identify five SG. Spectral data from FS were directly transferable to SG when analyzed as aglycone ions as shown by similarity scores while SG were characterized by shorter retention times in reverse phase chromatography and the additional analysis as sodiated adduct confirmed their glycosidic nature. Moreover, we report for the first time the occurrence of 24-methylenecholesterol and a 4-monomethyl sterol as glycosidic conjugates in higher plants. The presented data will serve as a valuable tool for SG profiling of foods by facilitating their identification.

Highlights

  • Dietary phytosterols ubiquitously occur in plant-based foods

  • free sterols (FS) eluted between 7.38 min and 8.34 min but complete baseline separation of all analyzed FS remained difficult on a C18 column even under gradient elution due to high structural similarity (Figure 2), which is a known limitation in sterol analysis (Moreau et al, 2018)

  • Major and minor steryl glucosides (SG) species deserve to be included in SG profiling studies as a wide range of SG occur in our diet

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Summary

Introduction

Dietary phytosterols ubiquitously occur in plant-based foods. Acclaimed for their various bioactive properties, including cholesterol-lowering effects, they are gaining much attention in the food industry. Phytosterols occur as free sterols (FS), steryl esters (SE), and glycosylated conjugates comprised of steryl glucosides (SG) and acylated steryl glucosides (ASG). The UPLC-MS/MS of Glycosylated and Free Sterols focus lies on SG and their unbound counterpart as FS. Numerous compounds exist due to variations in the position and number of double bonds, differences in the side chain length, and the occurrence of stereoisomers (Figure 1). Unlike for FS, sterols with methylation at C4 have not been reported to occur as SG in higher plants (Wojciechowski, 1991; Potocka and Zirnowski, 2008)

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