also known to be acariogenic 10,11 , and a highly active antioxidant 12 , and these properties may in no small way contribute to the reported beneficial health properties of stingless bee honey.
The
beneficial disaccharide, trehalulose, is a feature of stingless
bee honey, while not dominant in any other foods. By experimentally
feeding sugar solutions to confined colonies of the Australian stingless
bee Tetragonula carbonaria, the origin of trehalulose
has now been established. Complete conversion of fed sucrose was observed,
by analysis of the honey, forming trehalulose (64–72%) with
lesser erlose (18–23%), fructose (9–12%), and minor
glucose detected. Remarkably, feeding solutions of glucose/fructose
(1:1) mixtures did not result in trehalulose/erlose formation. Hence,
stingless bees with natural access to floral nectar high in sucrose
will produce honey high in trehalulose, with its associated beneficial
properties. Any temptation to artificially increase trehalulose content
by feeding sucrose to stingless bees would produce “fake”
honey lacking key natural phytochemicals available to the foraging
bee. The sucrose-fed fake and natural honey were however readily distinguished
via isotope ratio mass spectrometry δ
13C values, to combat such potential indirect adulteration.
Blue heliotrope (Heliotropium amplexicaule) is an invasive environmental weed that is widely naturalized in eastern Australia and has been implicated as a source of pyrrolizidine alkaloid (PA) poisoning in livestock. Less welldocumented is the potential of such carcinogenic alkaloids to contaminate honey from bees foraging on this plant species. In this study, the PA profile of H. amplexicaule plant material, determined by HRAM LC-MS/MS, revealed the presence of nine PAs and PA-N-oxides, including several PAs and PA-N-oxides of the indicine class, which have not previously been reported. The predominant alkaloid, indicine, represents 84% of the reduced PA content, with minor alkaloids identified as intermedine and the newly reported helioamplexine, constituting 7 and 9%, respectively. NMR analysis confirmed the identity of helioamplexine as a previously unreported indicine homologue. This is the first report of the isolation of intermedine, helioamplexine, and 3′-O-angelylindicine from H. amplexicaule. Also described is the identification of N-chloromethyl analogues of the major alkaloids as isolation-derived artifacts from reactions with dichloromethane. Analysis of regional-market honey samples revealed a number of honey samples with PA profiles analogous to that seen in H. amplexicaule, with measured PA contents of up to 2.0 μg of PAs per gram of honey. These results confirm the need for honey producers to be aware of H. amplexicaule as a potential PA source, most particularly in products where honey is sourced from a single location.
Photosensitization is a novel environmentally friendly technology with promising applications in the food industry to extend food shelf life. In this study, the natural food dye curcumin, when combined with visible light (430 nm), was shown to be an effective photosensitizer against the common phytopathogenic fungi Botrytis cinerea (the cause of grey mould). Production of the associated phytotoxic metabolites botrydial and dihydrobotrydial was measured by our newly developed and validated HRAM UPLC-MS/MS method, and was also shown to be reduced by this treatment. With a light dose of 120 J/cm2, the reduction in spore viability was directly proportional to curcumin concentrations, and the overall concentration of both botrydial and dihydrobotrydial also decreased with increasing curcumin concentration above 200 µM. With curcumin concentrations above 600 µM, the percentage reduction in fungal spores was close to 100%. When the dye concentration was increased to 800 µM, the spores were completely inactive and neither botrydial nor dihydrobotrydial could be detected. These results suggest that curcumin-mediated photosensitization is a potentially effective method to control B. cinerea spoilage, and also to reduce the formation of these phytotoxic botryane secondary metabolites.
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