New Sweet-Tasting Gypenosides from "Jiaogulan" () and Their Interactions with the Homology Model of Sweet Taste Receptors.

J Agric Food Chem

Department of Economic Plants and Biotechnology, Yunnan Key Laboratory for Wild Plant Resources, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming 650201, China.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The sweet variety of "Jiaogulan" from Fujian Province, China, has been consumed for centuries as an herbal tea and dietary supplement, yet its sweet components were largely unexplored.
  • - Researchers identified 15 saponins, with 11 proving to be sweet, including 2 new compounds that are 20-200 times sweeter than sucrose, revealing significant potential as natural sweeteners.
  • - Advanced methods, including spectroscopic analysis and UPLC-MS/MS, quantified the sweet compounds, with one being the most abundant at 422.530 mg/kg, and molecular docking studies indicated how these saponins interact with sweet taste receptors.

Article Abstract

has been used as an herbal tea, vegetable, and dietary supplement for hundreds of years in East Asia. The sweet variety, grown in large areas in Fujian Province, China, is an essential source of "Jiaogulan" herbal tea. However, its sweet components are unknown. To investigate the sweet constituents of Fujian "Jiaogulan" and discover new natural high-potency sweeteners, phytochemical and sensory evaluations were combined to obtain 15 saponins, of which 11 (-) were sweet-tasting, including 2 new ones with sweetness intensities 20-200 times higher than that of sucrose, and four (-) were bitter-tasting. Their structures were elucidated using spectroscopic methods (NMR, MS, IR, UV), hydrolysis, and comparison with literature data. The contents of the 15 saponins were quantitatively analyzed using UPLC-MS/MS in multiple reaction monitoring mode. The contents of and sweet-tasting gypenosides were 9.913 ± 1.735 and 35.852 ± 1.739 mg/kg, respectively. The content of the sweetest compound () was 124.969 ± 0.961 mg/kg. Additionally, compound was the most abundant sweet component (422.530 ± 3.702 mg/kg). Furthermore, molecular docking results suggested interactions of sweet saponins with sweet taste receptors. In general, this study revealed the material basis of the Fujian "Jiaogulan" taste.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.4c03566DOI Listing

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