Use of EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy in conjunction with the spin trapping technique to study the high-temperature oxidative degradation of fatty acid methyl esters[hair space]

(Note: The full text of this document is currently only available in the PDF Version )

Ma. Laura Vicente, José A. Empis, Nigel Deighton, Sheila M. Glidewell, Bernard A. Goodman and Christopher C. Rowlands


Abstract

Free radicals produced during the autoxidation of unsaturated edible oils are extremely short-lived, but are able to react with spin traps to produce adducts with sufficient stability for spectroscopic characterisation at (near) cooking temperatures (353–443 K). EPR spectra have shown that the model esters methyl oleate, linoleate and linolenate each formed three distinct radical adducts with N-tert-butyl-α-phenylnitrone (PBN). These adducts have been further characterised by obtaining spectra under conditions of limited oxygen availability and in the presence of α-tocopherol; two of these adducts corresponded to peroxyl and alkyl radical adducts of PBN, whereas the other was an alkyl adduct of 2-methyl-2-nitrosopropane (MNP), which was formed as a result of decomposition of the PBN peroxyl radical adduct. The origins of the various 1H hyperfine splittings have been determined by using selectively and fully deuterated PBN and selectively deuterated oleate and some of their magnitudes have been confirmed by ENDOR spectroscopy. The results obtained clearly confirm the high temperature oxidation of fatty acid esters to proceed via a different mechanism from that observed at low temperature, and point to significant differences in oxidation mechanisms of monounsaturated fatty acid esters relative to polyunsaturated.


References

  1. F. D. Gunstone, Fatty Acid and Lipid Chemistry, Blackie, Glasgow, 1996 Search PubMed.
  2. E. N. Frankel, J. Sci. Food. Agric., 1991, 54, 495 CAS.
  3. J. Kanner and I. Rosenthal, Pure Appl. Chem., 1992, 64, 1959 CAS.
  4. The Lipid Handbook, ed. F. D. Gunstone, J. L. Harwood and F. B. Padley, Chapman and Hall, London, 1986 Search PubMed.
  5. S. S. Chang, R. J. Peterson and C. T. Ho, J. Am. Oil Chem. Soc., 1978, 55, 718 CAS.
  6. P. Lambelet and J. Löliger, Chem. Phys. Lipids, 1984, 35, 185 CrossRef CAS.
  7. M. L. Vicente, N. Deighton, S. M. Glidewell, J. A. Empis and B. A. Goodman, Z. Lebens-Unters. Forsch., 1995, 200, 44 Search PubMed.
  8. M. L. Vicente, N. Deighton, S. M. Glidewell, B. A. Goodman and J. A. Empis, Proceedings of Euro Food Chem VIII, ed. G. Sontag, Austrian Chemical Society, Wien, 1995, 3, pp. 674–8 Search PubMed.
  9. G. R. Buettner, Free Radical Biol. Med., 1987, 3, 259 CrossRef CAS.
  10. J. C. Evans, S. K. Jackson, C. C. Rowlands and M. D. Barratt, Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1985, 835, 421 CrossRef CAS.
  11. D. L. Haire and E. G. Janzen, Magn. Reson. Chem., 1994, 32, 151 CAS.
  12. E. G. Janzen, P. H. Krygsman, D. A. Lindsay and D. L. Haire, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1990, 112, 8279 CrossRef CAS.
  13. R. E. Timms, P. Roupas and W. P. Rogers, Aust. J. Dairy Tech., 1982, 37, 39 Search PubMed.
  14. H. Sang, E. G. Janzen and B. H. Lewis, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1996, 118, 2358.
Click here to see how this site uses Cookies. View our privacy policy here.