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The Possible Reduction Mechanism of Volatile Sulfur Compounds during Durian Wine Fermentation Verified in Modified Buffers

Authors :
Jian-Yong Chua
Pin-Rou Lee
Shao-Quan Liu
Alicia Sarah Yoke Ling Fong
Yuyun Lu
Dejian Huang
Source :
Molecules, Vol 23, Iss 6, p 1456 (2018), Molecules : A Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry, Molecules, Volume 23, Issue 6
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2018.

Abstract

Durian fruit is rich in volatile sulfur compounds (VSCs), especially thiols and disulfides, which contribute to its onion-like odor. After fermentation, these VSCs were reduced to trace or undetectable levels in durian wine. The possible reduction mechanism of these VSCs (especially diethyl disulfide and ethanethiol) was investigated in a modified buffer in the presence of sulfite at different pH. An interconversion between diethyl disulfide and ethanethiol was found to be dependent on the pH: the higher the pH, the higher production of ethanethiol. It is suggested that, during durian wine fermentation, disulfides endogenous to durian pulp might be firstly converted into their corresponding thiols in the presence of reductant sulfite formed by yeast. The produced thiols as well as the thiols endogenous to the durian pulp were then removed by the mannoproteins of yeast lees.

Details

ISSN :
14203049
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecules
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e7eab58f6006ca71fd415840b3fda7f