Effects of catechin concentration on the formation of black tea polyphenols during in vitro oxidation |
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Authors: | Alastair Robertson |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge, U.K.;2. Tea Research Foundation of Central Africa, P.O. Box 51 Mulanje, Malawi, Central Africa |
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Abstract: | An in vitro model fermentation system, containing purified catechins and partially purified polyphenol oxidase (EC 1.14.81.1) from green tea shoots, has been used to determine the efrect of catechin mixtures of different concentration and proportions on the formation of theaflavin and thearubigin. Increases in total catechin concentration, 25% above that typical in green tea shoots of Malawi-grown bushes, inhibited polyphenol oxidase activity and, consequently, depressed theaflavin levels. Individual or combined concentrations of epicatechin gallate and epigallocatechin gallate in excess of 110 mM were shown to be responsible for enzyme inhibition, whereas epicatechin and epigallocatechin had no effect. Fermentation of a catechin mixture, containing the four major catechins, epicatechin, epigallocatechin, epigallocatechin gallate and epicatechin gallate, at equal individual concentrations (55 mM), produced, after 3O min, total theaflavin levels 68% higher and thearubigin levels only 25% higher than those from a standard catechin mixture fermented under similar conditions. Continued fermentation of this mixture produced no further theaflavin, but the thearubigin fraction increased significantly, due to subsequent oxidation of the excess of simple catechins. A new catechin mixture was, therefore, calculated to give a similar level of theaflavin to that of the previous mixture without leaving an excess of unoxidized simple catechins. The catechin proportions and concentrations of the latter mixture agree well with those of the green shoots of quality Kenyan teas or similar quality Malawi teas grown during the dry cold season. The results indicate that a high ratio of simple to gallocatechins will facilitate a high theaflavin-thearubigin ratio in black tea. |
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Keywords: | Theaceae model fermentation system HPLC catechins theaflavins thearubigins |
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