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A. Heme Pigments: Natural Food Pigments Part 1

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NATURAL FOOD PIGMENTS Part 1

Approximately 1500 colored compounds, also known as natural food pigments, have been isolated from foodstuffs. On the basis of their
chemical structure, these food pigments can be grouped in the following six classes: heme pigments, chlorophylls, carotenoids, flavonoids,
betalains, and miscellaneous pigments.
A. Heme Pigments
Heme (from the Greek for blood) is the basic chemical structure (Fig. 1) responsible for the red color of two important animal pigments:
hemoglobin, the red pigment of blood, and myoglobin, the red pigment of muscles. Practically all the red color of red meat is due to myoglobin,
since the hemoglobin is removed with the bleeding of the slaughtered animal. Other colored muscle compounds (cytochromes, vitamin Bi2,
flavoproteins) do not contribute significantly to the color of red meat.
Myoglobin is a protein that facilitates the transfer of oxygen in muscles. It was the first protein to be fully elucidated with regard to the three-
dimensional arrangement of its atoms. Hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying pigment of blood, is composed of four heme groups attached to four
polypeptide chains.

FIGURE 1 Structure of heme.


The myoglobin in meat is subject to chemical and color changes. Freshly cut meat looks purplish. On exposure to air, the surface of the
meat acquires a more pleasing red hue (blooming of the cut). The color change is due to the oxygenation of myoglobin (an oxygen molecule is
attached to the heme group in a fashion parallel to the oxygenation of hemoglobin). The oxygenated myoglobin is called oxymyoglobin. When
meat is packed in plastic film, the oxygen permeability of the film should be sufficient to keep the myoglobin oxygenated. In both myoglobin and
oxymyoglobin the heme iron is in the Fe2+ form. In the presence of oxygen, myoglobin is eventually oxidized to brown metmyoglobin, in which
the heme iron is in the Fe3+ form. Both the oxygenation and oxidation processes are reversible. Severe oxidative deterioration may result in the
formation of green pigments (sulfmyoglobin, chole-myoglobin).
When meat is cooked, the protein moiety (globin) of myoglobin is denatured and the heme is converted chiefly to nicotinamide hemichrome, the
entire pigment acquiring a brown hue. These changes are irreversible. Heated meat is also subject to the browning reactions discussed in
Section III. A simplified scheme of the red-pigment changes in fresh and heated meat is shown in Fig. 2.
In cured meats, in which nitrite is used, many reactions occur, some of which lead to color changes. Among the established reactions are the
following: (1) the nitrite salt is converted to nitric oxide (NO), nitrate, and water; (2) the NO replaces the H2O attached to the iron of heme and
forms nitrosyl myoglobin, which is reddish; (3) on heating, the nitrosyl myoglobin is transformed to nitrosyl hemochrome, which has the familiar
pink color of cured meats; and (4) any metmyoglobin present in the cured meat is similarly nitrosylated, reduced, and finally converted to nitrosyl
hemochrome.
B. Chlorophylls
Several chlorophylls have been described. Two of them, chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b, are of particular interest in food coloration because they
are common in green plant tissues, in which they are present in the approximate ratio 3:1, respectively. Their structures resemble that of heme
since they are all derivatives of tetrapyrrole. An important difference is that the central metal atom is iron in heme and magnesium in the
chlorophylls. Another difference is that the pyrrole unit IV in the chlorophylls is hydro-genated. In addition, the chlorophylls contain a 20-carbon
hydrophobic "tail," the phytyl group (Fig. 3).
The chlorophylls are located in special cellular bodies, the chloroplasts, where they function as photosynthetic agents. As food pigments,
chlorophylls impart their green color to many leafy (spinach, lettuce, etc.) and nonleafy (green beans and peas, asparagus, etc.) vegetables and
to unripe fruits. They are not very stable pigments, however. Ethylene, a gaseous plant hormone, destroys chlorophylls, and it is occasionally
used to degreen fruits. The acids naturally present, formed, or added to plant tissues during food processing convert the bright green chlorophylls
to dull olive brown pheophytins by replacing the magnesium of the molecule with hydrogen. Unfortunately, no fail-safe procedure has been
proposed for preventing this discoloration in heated and stored green vegetables. Freezing storage is an effective method of preserving the
green color of vegetables.
C. Carotenoids
Many of the yellow, orange, and red colors of plants and animals are due to carotenoids, pigments similar to those of carrots. The basic
structure of carotenoids is a chain of eight isoprenoid units. Certain isoprenoid derivatives with shorter chains (e.g., vitamin A) are also
considered carotenoids. Most of the structural differences among carotenoids exist at the ends of the chain. Some carotenoids are hydrocarbons
and are known as carotenes, while others contain oxygen and are called xanthophylls. The structures of several carotenoids, along with the
foods or tissues in which they are present, are shown in Table I.
Because of the numerous double bonds in the carotenoid molecule, a large number of cistrans isomers are theoretically possible. The
carotenoids of foods, however, are usually in the all-trans form (Table I). Trans to cis transformation is possible and is accelerated by heat, light,
and acidity.
Carotenoids occur free or as esters of fatty acids or as complexes with proteins and carbohydrates; for example, in paprika, capsanthin is
esterified with lauric acid. In live lobster, astaxanthin is complexed with protein; the astaxanthin-protein complex is blue-gray, the color of live
lobster, but on heating, the complex is broken and the freed astaxanthin imparts its red color to the cooked lobster.
Carotenoids are present in a large variety of foods, from yeast and mushrooms, to fruits and vegetables, to eggs, to fats and oils, to fish and
shellfish. As fat-soluble substances, carotenoids tend to concentrate in tissues or products rich in lipids, such as egg yolk and skin fat, vegetable
oils, and fish oils.
Plants and microorganisms synthesize their own carotenoids, while animals appear to obtain theirs from primary producers. In the
development of many fruits (e.g., citrus fruits, apricots, tomatoes) ripening is associated with the accumulation of carotenoids and the
disappearance of chlorophyll. The intensity of the yellow color of certain animal products, such as egg yolk and milk fat or butter, depends on the
carotenoid content of the feed the animals ingest. In view of this dependency, the seasonal variation in the color of these products is
understandable. A nutritionally important interconversion of carotenoids is the formation of retinol (vitamin A) from j-carotene and other
carotenoids possessing a j-ionone ring and known as provitamins A.
FIGURE 3 Structure of chlorophylls a and b.
FIGURE 2 Pigment changes in fresh and heated red meat.
TABLE I Types of Carotenoids and Their Natural Sources

Name and source

f-Carotene (carrot, egg,


orange, chicken fat)

Xanthophyll (vegetables,
egg, chicken fat)

Zeaxanthin (yellow corn,


egg, liver)
Cryptoxanthin (egg, yellow
corn, orange)

Physalien (asparagus,
berries)

Bixin (annatto seeds)

Lycopene (tomato, pink


grapefuit, palm oil)
Capsanthin (paprika)

Astaxanthin (lobster,
shrimp, salmon)

Torularhodin (Rhodotorula
yeast)
Canthaxanthin
(mushrooms)

f -Apo-8′-carotenal
(spinach, orange)

The stability of carotenoids in foods varies greatly, from severe loss to actual gain in carotenoid content during storage. Carotenoid losses
amounting to 20 or 30% have been observed in dehydrated vegetables (e.g., carrots, sweet potatoes) stored in air. These losses are minimized
when the dry product is stored in vacuum or inert gas (e.g., nitrogen), at low temperatures, and protected from light. The main degradative
reaction of carotenoids is oxidation. Oxygen may act either directly on the double bonds or through the hydroperoxides formed during lipid
autoxidation. Hydroperoxides formed during enzymatic lipid oxidation can also bleach carotenoids by a coupled lipid-carotenoid oxidation
mechanism. On the other hand, certain vegetables, such as squash and sweet potatoes, in which carotenoid biosynthesis continues after
harvesting, may manifest an increase in carotenoid content during storage.
D. Flavonoid Pigments
Hundreds of flavone-like pigments are widely distributed among plants. On the basis of their chemical structure, these pigments are grouped in
several classes, the most important of which are listed in Table II. The basic structure of all these compounds comprises two benzene rings, A
and B, connected by a heterocycle. The classification of flavonoids is based on the nature of the heterocycle (which is open in one class).
Most of these pigments are yellow (Latin, flavus). One important exception is the anthocyanins, which display a great variety of red and blue
hues. Because of the strong visual impact of anthocyanins on the marketing of fruits and vegetables, these pigments will be discussed in greater
detail than other flavonoids.
1. Anthocyanins
The name of these pigments was originally coined to designate the blue (kyanos) pigments of flowers (anthos). It is now known that not only the
blue color, but also the purple, violet, magenta, and most of the red hues of flowers, fruits, leaves, stems, and roots are attributable to pigments
chemically similar to the original "flower blues." Two exceptions are notable: tomatoes owe their red color to lycopene and red beets owe theirs to
betanin, pigments not belonging to the anthocyanin group.
Anthocyanins are glycosides of anthocyanidins, the latter being polyhydroxyl and methoxyl derivatives of flavylium. The arrangement of the
hydroxyl and methoxyl groups around the flavylium ion in six anthocyanidins common in foods is shown in Fig. 4.
There are at least 10 more anthocyanidins in nature, practically always appearing as glycosides. The number of anthocyanins far exceeds
that of anthocyanidins, since monosaccharides, disaccharides, and at times trisaccha-rides glycosylate the anthocyanidins at various positions
(always at 3, occasionally at 5, and seldom at other positions). Eventual acylation with p-coumaric, caffeic, and ferulic acids increases the
number of natural anthocyanins. An example of acylated anthocyanin is the dark purple eggplant pigment delphinidin, 3-[4-(p-coumaroyl)-L-
rhamnosyl-(1 ^ 6)-D-glycosido] 5-D-glucoside.
The color of anthocyanins is influenced not only by structural features (hydroxylation, methoxylation, glyco-sylation, acylation), but also by the pH
of the solution in which they are present, copigmentation, metal complexa-tion and self-association.
The pH affects both the color and the structure of an-thocyanins. In very acidic solution, anthocyanins are red, but as the pH rises the redness
diminishes. In freshly prepared alkaline or neutral solution, anthocyanins are blue or violet, but (with the exception of certain multiacylated
anthocyanins) they fade within hours or minutes.
In acidic solution four molecular species of antho-cyanins exist in equilibrium: a bluish quinoidal (or quinonoidal) base A, a red flavylium cation
AH+, a colorless carbinol pseudo-base B, and a colorless or yellowish chalcone C (Fig. 5).

At very low pH (below 1), the red cation AH+ dominates, but as the pH rises to 4 or 5, the concentration of the colorless form B increases
rapidly at the expense of AH+, while forms A and C remain scarce. In neutral and alkaline solutions, the concentration of base A rises and its
phenolic hydroxyls ionize, yielding unstable blue or violet quinoidal anions A- (Fig. 6).
Although it is true that the reaction of most plant tissues pigmented with anthocyanins (fruits, flowers, leaves) is slightly acidic, pH alone
cannot explain the vivid colors encountered in these tissues. One mechanism leading to the enhancement and stability of anthocyanin coloration
is copigmentation, that is, the association of anthocyanins with other organic substances (copigments). This association results in complexes that
absorb more visible light (they are brighter) and light of lower frequency (they look bluer—the bathochromic effect) than the free anthocyanins at
tissue pH. Most of these copig-ments are flavonoids, although compounds belonging to other groups (e.g., alkaloids, amino acids, nucleotides)
can function similarly. A stacked molecular complex between an acylated anthocyanin and a copigment (flavocommelin) is shown in Fig. 7.
TABLE II Major Classes of Flavonoids
FIGURE 4 Six anthocyanidins common in foods. The electric charge shown at position 1 is delocalized over the entire structure by
resonance.
Self-association is the binding of anthocyanin molecules to one another. It has been observed that the complexes absorb more light than the sum
of the single molecules. This explains why a 100-fold increase in the concentration of cyanidin 3,5-glucoside results in a 300fold rise in
absorbance.
FIGURE 5 Four anthocyanin structures present in aqueous acidic solutions: R is usually H, OH, or OCH3. Gl is glycosyl.
Certain anthocyanins form complexes with metals (e.g., iron, aluminum, magnesium), and the result is an augmentation of the anthocyanin color.
At times the complexes involve an anthocyanin, a copigment, and a metal.

A large number of the anthocyanins present in fruits and vegetables have been identified. It is not unusual for a plant tissue to contain several
anthocyanins (17 in certain grape varieties), all genetically controlled. Table III shows the anthocyanidin moieties of anthocyanins in common
fruits and vegetables.

Generally, the attractive color of anthocyanin-pigmented foods is not very stable. Canning of red cherries or berries results in products with
considerable bleaching. Strawberry preserves lose one-half of their anthocyanin content after a few weeks on the shelf, although the browning
reaction may mask the loss. And red grape juice is subject to extensive color deterioration during storage.
FIGURE 6 Absorption spectra recorded immediately after dissolving an anthocyanin (malvin chloride) in buffers of pH 2, 6, and 10. The
absorption peaks at pH 6 and 10 disappeared within 1 to 3 hr.

FIGURE 7 Stacked molecular complex of awobanin and flavo-commelin; p-C. denotes p-coumaroyl.
Exposure to high temperatures and contact with the oxygen of the air appear to be two factors affecting antho-cyanin stability most
adversely. Ascorbic acid accelerates the destruction of anthocyanins, and so does light. Certain oxidizing enzymes, such as phenol oxidase, and
a hydrolyzing enzyme known as anthocyanase may contribute to the degradation of anthocyanin pigments. Oxidizing enzymes act on the
anthocyanidin moiety, while anthocyanase splits off the sugar residue(s); the freed an-thocyanidin is very unstable and loses its color
spontaneously. Sulfur dioxide, which is used for the preservation of some fruit products (pulps, musts), bleaches anthocyanin pigments, but on
heating of the fruit prduct in vacuum the SO2 is removed and the anthocyanin color reappears. Large concentrations of SO2, combined with lime,
decolorize anthocyanins irreversibly and are used in the preparation of maraschino cherries. Anthocyanins act as anodic and cathodic
depolarizers and thereby accelerate the internal corrosion of tin cans. It is therefore necessary to pack anthocyanin-colored products in cans
lined with special enamel. In aging red wines anthocyanins condense with other flavonoids and form polymeric (MW < 3000) redbrown pigments
(Fig. 8). On continued polymerization these pigments become insoluble and form sediments in bottled red wines.
Anthocyanins possessing more than one acyl group show extraordinary color stability over a wide pH range. One of them, peonidin-3-(dicaffeyl
sophoroside) 5-glucoside, isolated from ‘Heavenly Blue’ morning glory flowers (Ipomoea tricolor), has been shown to "produce a wide range of
stable colors in foods and beverages which have a pH range of 2.0 to about 8.0." United States patent 4,172,902 covers its use as a colorant in
foods.

2. Other Flavonoids
Among flavonoids other than anthocyanins, the catechins, flavonols, and leucoanthocyanidins have the widest distribution in foodstuffs, while
flavonone glycosides are of special interest in citrus fruits.

Catechins, or flavan-3-ols, are present mainly in woody tissues. Among common foods, tea leaves contain at least six catechins representing
about 25% of the dry weight of tea leaves. Tea catechins are excellent substrates for the catechol oxidase that is present in tea leaves and
participates in the conversion of green tea to black tea. The reddish brown color of tea brew is due to a mixture of pigments known as theaflavins
and thearubigins. The structure of one of them is shown in Fig. 9.
TABLE III Anthocyanidins Present as Anthocyanins in Fruits and Vegetables
Fruit or vegetable Anthocyanidin
Apple (Malus pumila) Cyanidin
Blackberry (Rubus fructicosus) Cyanidin
Black currant (Ribes nigrum) Cyanidin. delphinidin
Blueberry (lowbush,Vaccinium Delphinidin, petunidin,
angustifolium; highbush, malvidin, peonidin,
V. corymbosum) cyanidin
Cherry (sour, ‘Montmorency,’ Prunus Cyanidin, peonidin
cerasus; sweet, ‘Bing,’ P avium)
Cranberry (Vacinnium macrocarpon) Cyanidin, peonidin
Elderberry (Sambucus nigra) Cyanidin
Fig (Ficus carica) Cyanidin
Gooseberry (Ribes grossularia) Cyanidin
Grape (red European. Vitis vinifera) Malvidin, peonidin,
delphinidin, cyanidin,
petunidin, pelargonidin
Grape (‘Concord,’ Vitis labrusca) Cyanidin, delphinidin,
peonidin, malvidin,
petunidin
Mango (Mangifera indica) Peonidin
Mulberry (Morus nigra) Cyanidin
Olive (Olea europea) Cyanidin
Orange (‘Ruby,’ Citrus sinesis) Cyanidin. delphinidin
Passion fruit (Passiflora edulis) Delphinidin
Peach (Prunus persica) Cyanidin
Pear (Pyrus communis) Cyanidin
Plum (Prunus domestica) Cyanidin, peonidin
Pomegranate (Punica granatum) Delphinidin, cyanidin
Raspberry (Rubus ideaus) Cyanidin
Strawberry (Fragaria chiloensis Pelargonidin, little cyanidin
and F. virginiaca)
Beans (red, black; Phaseolus Pelargonidin, cyanidin,
vulgaris) delphinidin
Cabbage (red, Brassica oleracea) Cyanidin
Corn (red, Zea mays) Cyanidin, pelargonidin
Eggplant (Solanum melongena) Delphinidin
Onion (Alium cepa) Cyanidin, peonidin
Potato (Solanum tuberosum) Pelargonidin, cyanidin,
delphinidin, petunidin
Radish (Raphanus sativus) Pelargonidin, cyanidin
FIGURE 8 Proposed structure for a polymeric red-brown pigment in aging red wine.
Flavonols, like anthocyanidins, exist almost exclusively as glycosides. Three common flavonols are kaempferol, quercetin, and myricetin,
resembling pelargonidin, cyani-din, and delphinidin, respectively, in the hydroxylation pattern of the B ring. Flavonol glycosides impart weak
yellow hues to apples, apricots, cherries, cranberries, grapes, onions, plums, potatoes, strawberries, tea, tomatoes, and other commodities.
Leucoanthocyanidins are compounds of the general formula 1 shown in Fig. 10. They have no color of their own, but in acidic
environments and at elevated temperatures they are converted to colored anthocyanidins (2). This reaction is in competition with the
condensation to a dimeric leucoanthocyanidin (3). Low temperature favors the formation of the dimeric compound, which can polymerize to yield
products with pronounced tanning properties.
FIGURE 9 Structure of theaflavin.

FIGURE 10 Basic structures of leucoanthocyanidins (1), anthocyanidins (2), and dimeric leucoanthocyanidins (3).
The most common leucoanthocyanidins are leu-copelargonidin, leucocyanidin, and leucodelphinidin, which are converted to the corresponding
anthocyanidins. This conversion results in the undesirable "pinking" of certain products such as canned pears, canned banana puree, processed
brussels sprouts, and beer. On the other hand, polymerization to tannins leads to astringency and the formation of haze in beer (insolubilization
of beer proteins).

E. Betalains
Betalain is a relatively new term used to describe a class of water-soluble plant pigments exemplified by the red-violet betacyanins and
yellow betaxanthins. (In a parallel fashion, flavonoids comprise the red-blue anthocyanins and the typical yellow flavonoids that some authors call
anthox-anthins.) Betalains owe their name to the red beet (Beta vulgaris), from which they were originally extracted, and they are not as widely
distributed as flavonoids. Other foods containing betalains include chard, pokeberries, and Indian cactus fruits. The major red pigment of red
beets is betanin, and their major yellow pigment is vulgaxanthin (Fig. 11).

FIGURE 11 Two major pigments of red beets.


Betalains are stable in the pH range 3.5-7.0, which is the pH range of most foods, but they are sensitive to heat, oxidation, and light.

F. Miscellaneous Natural Food Colors


There are several hundred additional natural pigments that are not as widely represented in foods as the previously discussed coloring
substances. Among them are the quinones and xanthones, which are yellow pigments. An example of a quinone is juglone, which is present in
walnuts and pecans. Mangiferin, a representative of xan-thones, is found in mangoes. Tannins include two types of pale yellow to light brown
compounds, characterized by their property to convert animal hides to leather. One type consists of condensed tannins, to which reference was
made in relation to the leucoanthocyanidins, and the other type comprises hydrolyzable tannins, which are esters of a sugar, usually glucose,
with gallic acid, ellagic acid, or both. Corilagin is an example of a gallotannin, in which glucose is esterified with three gallic acid molecules. A
yellow pigment that has attracted much attention because of its toxicity to humans and nonruminant animals is gossypol. It is present in
cottonseeds, which are used as animal feed and have been considered a potential source of protein for human use. Several biologically very
important food constituents are colored, such as phytochrome (yellow), vitamin B2 (riboflavin, orange-yellow), and vitamin B12 (red), although
their contribution to food coloration is negligible.
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