Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dora.health.qld.gov.au/qldresearchjspui/handle/1/10872
Title: How is Trehalulose Formed by Australian Stingless Bees? - An Intermolecular Displacement of Nectar Sucrose
Authors: Zhang, Jiali
Hungerford, Natasha L
Yates, Hans S A
Smith, Tobias J
Fletcher, Mary T
Issue Date: 1-Jun-2022
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Source: J Agric Food Chem. Vol. 70, Iss. 21, p. 6530-6539
Journal Title: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Journal: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract: Trehalulose, a rare sucrose isomer, is a dominant sugar in stingless bee honey, with traces of the trisaccharide erlose. Incubating sucrose solutions with macerated stingless bee parts (head, thorax, and abdomen) from Tetragonula carbonaria, we observed that sucrose isomerization occurs predominantly in the head incubations, with trehalulose constituting 76.2-80.0% of total detected sugar. By contrast, sucrose hydrolysis occurred in stingless bee abdomen incubations, with glucose and fructose observed as 48.6-51.7% and 48.3-49.7%, respectively, of total detected sugar. Incubating glucose/fructose (1:1) solutions with any bee part did not result in trehalulose formation. In addition, by tracing the 13C isotope-labeled monosaccharide moieties throughout the isomerization from sucrose to trehalulose and erlose, for the first time, the mechanism was established as an enzymatic double displacement reaction. Sucrose acts as a glucose donor giving a β-d-glucosyl enzyme intermediate with fructose release as demonstrated by mixed isotope products. Glucosylation of fructose (inter- or intramolecularly) with isomerization forms trehalulose (favorable), while glucosylation of sucrose forms erlose (less favorable).
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c01732
metadata.dc.rights.holder: Yates, Hans S.A.
Keywords: Analytical chemistry;Trehalulose;Sucrose isomerization
Type: Journal article
Appears in Sites:Forensic and Scientific Services Publications
Queensland Health Publications

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