Identification and Quantitation of Taste-Active Compounds in Dried Scallops by Combined Application of the Sensomics and a Quantitative NMR Approach

J Agric Food Chem. 2022 Jan 12;70(1):247-259. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.1c05257. Epub 2021 Dec 29.

Abstract

Application of the sensomics concept on dried scallops, a Japanese specialty produced from the adductor muscle of scallops, revealed after activity-guided fractionation with subsequent (comparative) taste dilution analyses besides nucleotides, amino acids, organic acids, and inorganic ions, the presence of taste-modulating quaternary ammonium compounds and opines in highly taste-active fractions. In order to recreate the taste of dried scallops, two independent quantitation approaches were applied and compared. The first approach used multiple targeted UHPLC-MS/MS and high-performance ion chromatography methods. Besides already established quantitation methods for basic taste compounds, a new HILIC-UHPLC-MS/MSMRM method for the quantitation of chromatographically challenging opines, using synthesized stable isotope-labeled standards, was developed. Furthermore, a qHNMR approach was applied, enabling a direct identification and quantitation of organic taste compounds in a food extract without prior fractionation using a reference 1H NMR database. Both methods yielded similar quantitative results of taste-active compounds in dried scallop extracts and subsequent taste recombination experiments based on these data were able to recreate the taste of dried scallops.

Keywords: dried scallops; kokumi; qHNMR; taste dilution analysis; taste recombinants.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Flavoring Agents / analysis
  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
  • Pectinidae*
  • Tandem Mass Spectrometry
  • Taste*

Substances

  • Flavoring Agents