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  • Screening of antioxidant properties of the apple juice using the front-face synchronous fluorescence and chemometrics
    Publication . Wlodarska, Katarzyna; Pawlak-Lemanska, Katarzyna; Khmelinskii, Igor; Sikorska, Ewa
    Fluorescence spectroscopy is gaining increasing attention in food analysis due to its higher sensitivity and selectivity as compared to other spectroscopic techniques. Synchronous scanning fluorescence technique is particularly useful in studies of multi-fluorophoric food samples, providing a further improvement of selectivity by reduction in the spectral overlapping and suppressing light-scattering interferences. Presently, we study the feasibility of the prediction of the total phenolics, flavonoids, and antioxidant capacity using front-face synchronous fluorescence spectra of apple juices. Commercial apple juices from different product ranges were studied. Principal component analysis (PCA) applied to the unfolded synchronous fluorescence spectra was used to compare the fluorescence of the entire sample set. The regression analysis was performed using partial least squares (PLS1 and PLS2) methods on the unfolded total synchronous and on the single-offset synchronous fluorescence spectra. The best calibration models for all of the studied parameters were obtained using the PLS1 method for the single-offset synchronous spectra. The models for the prediction of the total flavonoid content had the best performance; the optimal model was obtained for the analysis of the synchronous fluorescence spectra at Delta lambda = 110 nm (R (2) = 0.870, residual predictive deviation (RPD) = 2.7). The optimal calibration models for the prediction of the total phenolic content (Delta lambda = 80 nm, R (2) = 0.766, RPD = 2.0) and the total antioxidant capacity (Delta lambda = 70 nm, R (2) = 0.787, RPD = 2.1) had only an approximate predictive ability. These results demonstrate that synchronous fluorescence could be a useful tool in fast semi-quantitative screening for the antioxidant properties of the apple juices.
  • Multivariate curve resolution Alternating least squares analysis of the total synchronous fluorescence spectra: An attempt to identify polyphenols contribution to the emission of apple juices
    Publication . Wlodarska, Katarzyna; Pawlak-Lemanska, Katarzyna; Khmelinskii, Igor; Sikorska, Ewa
    Presently we applied multivariate curve resolution alternating least squares (MCR-ALS) method for the analysis of front-face total synchronous fluorescence spectra (TSFS) of differently processed apple juices. This analysis enabled extracting of the TSFS profiles of five fluorescent components with distinct spectral characteristics and different contributions to the fluorescence of individual juices. Based on the spectral profiles and quantitative relationship with the chemical parameters describing the antioxidant properties of juices, three of the resolved components may be tentatively attributed to phenolic compounds. The analysis using multiple linear regression (MLR) and partial least square (PLS) regression confirmed better performance of fluorescence for the prediction of the total flavonoid content (TFC) as opposed to the total phenolic content (TPC) and total antioxidant capacity (TAC). This study demonstrated that MCR-ALS decomposition of the TSFS may provide a selective tool for understanding and interpretation of the observed relationships between the fluorescence and the total antioxidant indices of the apple juices.