Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen
Autori
Nešović, MilicaGašić, Uroš M.

Tosti, Tomislav

Horvacki, Nikola

Šikoparija, Branko

Nedić, Nebojša
Blagojević, Stevan

Ignjatović, Ljubiša
Tešić, Živoslav Lj.

Članak u časopisu (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
A focus of research in recent years is the comparison of honey as the final product of bees with pollen and nectar of the plant from which the honey originates, as the main food source for bees. Buckwheat honey is recognized as a nutritionally valuable product, which provides a scientifically proven health benefit and is confirmed as a functional food. The quality of this type of honey is attributed to high levels of phytochemicals in buckwheat. The purpose of this study was the examination of similarity between buckwheat honey and buckwheat nectar and pollen, as well as simultaneous investigation of their chemical profiles and the origin of the honey. The phenolic profile of buckwheat pollen showed a lower number of flavonoids and phenolic acids than those of nectar and honey samples, but confirmed the presence of the most characteristic polyphenols derived from the buckwheat plant. The notable difference was found to be the presence of (epi)catechin units, its galloylated derivatives... and procyanidin dimers, which were not present in honey. Honey polyphenols displayed a pronounced correlation with those of nectar, but not with those of pollen. Finally, by comparing the polyphenolic profiles of honey, nectar and pollen sharing the same geographical origin, new data could be provided for a potential assessment of the botanical origin of buckwheat honey.
Ključne reči:
Buckwheat honey / Botanical origin / Polyphenolprofile / Flavan-3-ols / UHPLC MS orbitrapIzvor:
Royal Society Open Science, 2020, 7, 12, 201576-Izdavač:
- Royal Society of Chemistry
Projekti:
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200007 (Univerzitet u Beogradu, Institut za biološka istraživanja 'Siniša Stanković') (RS-200007)
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200051 (Institut za opštu i fizičku hemiju, Beograd) (RS-200051)
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200168 (Univerzitet u Beogradu, Hemijski fakultet) (RS-200168)
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200288 (Inovacioni centar Hemijskog fakulteta u Beogradu doo) (RS-200288)
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200358 (BioSense institut) (RS-200358)
- Ministarstvo prosvete, nauke i tehnološkog razvoja Republike Srbije, Ugovor br. 451-03-68/2020-14/200116 (Univerzitet u Beogradu, Poljoprivredni fakultet) (RS-200116)
Kolekcije
Institucija
Hemijski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Nešović, Milica AU - Gašić, Uroš M. AU - Tosti, Tomislav AU - Horvacki, Nikola AU - Šikoparija, Branko AU - Nedić, Nebojša AU - Blagojević, Stevan AU - Ignjatović, Ljubiša AU - Tešić, Živoslav Lj. PY - 2020 UR - http://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4327 AB - A focus of research in recent years is the comparison of honey as the final product of bees with pollen and nectar of the plant from which the honey originates, as the main food source for bees. Buckwheat honey is recognized as a nutritionally valuable product, which provides a scientifically proven health benefit and is confirmed as a functional food. The quality of this type of honey is attributed to high levels of phytochemicals in buckwheat. The purpose of this study was the examination of similarity between buckwheat honey and buckwheat nectar and pollen, as well as simultaneous investigation of their chemical profiles and the origin of the honey. The phenolic profile of buckwheat pollen showed a lower number of flavonoids and phenolic acids than those of nectar and honey samples, but confirmed the presence of the most characteristic polyphenols derived from the buckwheat plant. The notable difference was found to be the presence of (epi)catechin units, its galloylated derivatives and procyanidin dimers, which were not present in honey. Honey polyphenols displayed a pronounced correlation with those of nectar, but not with those of pollen. Finally, by comparing the polyphenolic profiles of honey, nectar and pollen sharing the same geographical origin, new data could be provided for a potential assessment of the botanical origin of buckwheat honey. PB - Royal Society of Chemistry T2 - Royal Society Open Science T1 - Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen VL - 7 IS - 12 SP - 201576 DO - 10.1098/rsos.201576 ER -
@article{ author = "Nešović, Milica and Gašić, Uroš M. and Tosti, Tomislav and Horvacki, Nikola and Šikoparija, Branko and Nedić, Nebojša and Blagojević, Stevan and Ignjatović, Ljubiša and Tešić, Živoslav Lj.", year = "2020", url = "http://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4327", abstract = "A focus of research in recent years is the comparison of honey as the final product of bees with pollen and nectar of the plant from which the honey originates, as the main food source for bees. Buckwheat honey is recognized as a nutritionally valuable product, which provides a scientifically proven health benefit and is confirmed as a functional food. The quality of this type of honey is attributed to high levels of phytochemicals in buckwheat. The purpose of this study was the examination of similarity between buckwheat honey and buckwheat nectar and pollen, as well as simultaneous investigation of their chemical profiles and the origin of the honey. The phenolic profile of buckwheat pollen showed a lower number of flavonoids and phenolic acids than those of nectar and honey samples, but confirmed the presence of the most characteristic polyphenols derived from the buckwheat plant. The notable difference was found to be the presence of (epi)catechin units, its galloylated derivatives and procyanidin dimers, which were not present in honey. Honey polyphenols displayed a pronounced correlation with those of nectar, but not with those of pollen. Finally, by comparing the polyphenolic profiles of honey, nectar and pollen sharing the same geographical origin, new data could be provided for a potential assessment of the botanical origin of buckwheat honey.", publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry", journal = "Royal Society Open Science", title = "Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen", volume = "7", number = "12", pages = "201576", doi = "10.1098/rsos.201576" }
Nešović M, Gašić UM, Tosti T, Horvacki N, Šikoparija B, Nedić N, Blagojević S, Ignjatović L, Tešić ŽL. Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen. Royal Society Open Science. 2020;7(12):201576
Nešović, M., Gašić, U. M., Tosti, T., Horvacki, N., Šikoparija, B., Nedić, N., Blagojević, S., Ignjatović, L.,& Tešić, Ž. Lj. (2020). Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen. Royal Society Open ScienceRoyal Society of Chemistry., 7(12), 201576. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201576
Nešović Milica, Gašić Uroš M., Tosti Tomislav, Horvacki Nikola, Šikoparija Branko, Nedić Nebojša, Blagojević Stevan, Ignjatović Ljubiša, Tešić Živoslav Lj., "Polyphenolic profile of buckwheat honey, nectar and pollen" 7, no. 12 (2020):201576, https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201576 .