Hermes L; Römermann J; Cramer B; Esselen M
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedα-Asarone and β-asarone are reported as bioactive constituents of Acorus calamus. Phase I metabolism of asarone isomers results in a multiple spectrum of genotoxic metabolites. Thus, the question arises whether structural analogues of the known phase I metabolites also naturally occur in A. calamus-based food products. A liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method was developed and validated for three product classes, herbal infusions, alcoholic beverages, and food supplements. High asarone contents were detected in herbal infusions (total mean 9.13 mg/kg, n = 8) and food supplements (total mean 14.52 mg/kg, n = 6); hence, these food products can highly contribute to human exposure to genotoxic asarone derivatives. Also, the occurrence of asarone oxidation products found in food and food supplements has to be taken under consideration because data on toxicity is limited so far.
Cramer, Benedikt | Professur für Lebensmittelchemie (Prof. Humpf) |
Esselen, Melanie | Professorship for food chemistry (Prof. Esselen) |
Hermes, Lena | Professorship for food chemistry (Prof. Esselen) |