Abstract
3-Aminopropionamide (3-APA) has recently been suggested as a transient intermediate in acrylamide (AA) formation during thermal degradation of asparagine initiated by reducing carbohydrates or aldehydes, respectively. 3-APA may also be formed in foods by an enzymatic decarboxylation of asparagine. Using a newly developed method to quantify 3-APA based on liquid chromatography/ tandem mass spectrometry, it could be shown that the biogenic amine was present in several potato cultivars in different amounts. Further experiments indicated that 3-APA is formed during storage of intact potatoes (20 or 35 °C) or after crushing of the cells. The heating of 3-APA under aqueous or low water conditions at temperatures between 100 and 180 °C in model systems always generated more AA than in the same reaction of asparagine, thereby pointing to 3-APA as a very effective precursor of AA. While the highest yields measured were about 28 mol % in the presence of carbohydrates (170 °C; aqueous buffer), in the absence of carbohydrates, 3-APA was even converted by about 63 mol % into AA upon heating at 170 °C under aqueous conditions. Propanoic acid amides bearing an amino or hydroxy group in the α-position, such as 2-hydroxypropionamide and L-alaninamide, were ineffective in AA generation indicating that elimination occurs only from the β-position.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4751-4757 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Journal | Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry |
| Volume | 52 |
| Issue number | 15 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 28 Jul 2004 |
Keywords
- β-alaninamide
- 3-Aminopropionamide
- Acrylamide
- Dansyl chloride
- Formation
- GC/MS
- Glycinamide
- LC/MS/MS
- Potato
- Quantitation