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Dive into the research topics where S. Rodríguez-Sánchez is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Rodríguez-Sánchez.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2011

Derivatization of carbohydrates for GC and GC–MS analyses

Ana I. Ruiz-Matute; Oswaldo Hernández-Hernández; S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; M.L. Sanz; I. Martínez-Castro

GC and GC-MS are excellent techniques for the analysis of carbohydrates; nevertheless the preparation of adequate derivatives is necessary. The different functional groups that can be found and the diversity of samples require specific methods. This review aims to collect the most important methodologies currently used, either published as new procedures or as new applications, for the analysis of carbohydrates. A high diversity of compounds with diverse functionalities has been selected: neutral carbohydrates (saccharides and polyalcohols), sugar acids, amino and iminosugars, polysaccharides, glycosides, glycoconjugates, anhydrosugars, difructose anhydrides and products resulting of Maillard reaction (osuloses, Amadori compounds). Chiral analysis has also been considered, describing the use of diastereomers and derivatives to be eluted on chiral stationary phases.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2013

Prevention of diet-induced obesity by apple polyphenols in Wistar rats through regulation of adipocyte gene expression and DNA methylation patterns

Noemí Boqué; Rocio de la Iglesia; Ana Laura de la Garza; Fermín I. Milagro; Mónica M. Olivares; Óscar Bañuelos; Ana C. Soria; S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; José Alfredo Martínez; Javier Campión

This study was conducted to determine the mechanisms implicated in the beneficial effects of apple polyphenols (APs) against diet-induced obesity in Wistar rats, described in a previous study from our group. Supplementation of high-fat sucrose diet with AP prevented adiposity increase by inhibition of adipocyte hypertrophy. Rats supplemented with AP exhibited improved glucose tolerance while adipocytes isolated from these rats showed an enhanced lipolytic response to isoproterenol. AP intake led to reduced Lep, Plin, and sterol regulatory element binding transcription factor 1 (Srebf1) mRNA levels and increased aquaporin 7 (Aqp7), adipocyte enhancer binding protein 1 (Aebp1), and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma co-activator 1 alpha (Ppargc1a) mRNA levels in epididymal adipocytes. In addition, we found different methylation patterns of Aqp7, Lep, Ppargc1a, and Srebf1 promoters in adipocytes from apple-supplemented rats compared to high-fat sucrose fed rats. The administration of AP protects against body weight gain and fat deposition and improves glucose tolerance in rats. We propose that AP exerts the antiobesity effects through the regulation of genes involved in adipogenesis, lipolysis, and fatty acid oxidation, in a process that could be mediated in part by epigenetic mechanisms.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2014

Characterization by the solvation parameter model of the retention properties of commercial ionic liquid columns for gas chromatography.

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Plácido Galindo-Iranzo; Ana C. Soria; M.L. Sanz; Jesús Eduardo Quintanilla-López; Rosa Lebrón-Aguilar

For the first time, four commercial ionic liquid columns (SLB-IL59, SLB-IL76, SLB-IL82 and SLB-IL100) for gas chromatography have been comprehensively evaluated in terms of efficiency, polarity and solvation properties. Grob tests and McReynolds constants showed that they were all high-efficiency columns of high polarity, but with low inertness to compounds with hydrogen bonding capabilities. The solvation parameter model was used to characterize the solvation interactions of the four columns in the 80-160°C temperature range. Results revealed that all the ionic liquids studied can be considered moderately hydrogen-bond acid and highly cohesive stationary phases, on which the dominant contributions to retention were the dipolar-type and hydrogen-bond base interactions, while π-π and n-π interactions were barely significant. The SLB-IL59 column provided the best separation of homologs, while the SLB-IL76 and SLB-IL100 columns had the most basic and the most acidic phases, respectively. A principal component analysis for the commonly used stationary phases in capillary GC showed that these commercial ionic liquid columns fill an empty area of the available selectivity space, which clearly enhances the separation capacity of this technique.


Food Chemistry | 2014

Optimization of pressurized liquid extraction of inositols from pine nuts (Pinus pinea L.)

Laura Ruiz-Aceituno; S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; J. Sanz; M.L. Sanz; Lourdes Ramos

Pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) has been used for the first time to extract bioactive inositols from pine nuts. The influence of extraction time, temperature and cycles of extraction in the yield and composition of the extract was studied. A quadratic lineal model using multiple linear regression in the stepwise mode was used to evaluate possible trends in the process. Under optimised PLE conditions (50°C, 18 min, 3 cycles of 1.5 mL water each one) at 10 MPa, a noticeable reduction in extraction time and solvent volume, compared with solid-liquid extraction (SLE; room temperature, 2h, 2 cycles of 5 mL water each one) was achieved; 5.7 mg/g inositols were extracted by PLE, whereas yields of only 3.7 mg/g were obtained by SLE. Subsequent incubation of PLE extracts with Saccharomyces cerevisiae (37°C, 5h) allowed the removal of other co-extracted low molecular weight carbohydrates which may interfere in the bioactivity of inositols.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2013

Optimisation of a biotechnological procedure for selective fractionation of bioactive inositols in edible legume extracts

Laura Ruiz-Aceituno; S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Ana I. Ruiz-Matute; Lourdes Ramos; Ana C. Soria; M.L. Sanz

BACKGROUND Currently, disorders such as diabetes mellitus, obesity or atherosclerosis are recognised as major global health problems. The use of inositols for treating these illnesses has attracted considerable attention and their extraction from natural sources presents added value as they are considered bioactive ingredients in the food industry. Legumes are natural and rich sources of inositols; however, the co-existence of other low molecular weight carbohydrates (LMWCs) in their extracts, which interfere in their bioactivity, might constitute an important drawback, thereby making their removal essential. RESULTS LMWCs, including inositols, methyl-inositols and glycosyl-inositols of different legume extracts, were determined by GC-MS; the presence of bornesitol (2.35 mg g(-1) ) and lathyritol (0.27 mg g(-1) ) were reported for the first time in grass peas. The use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the selective removal of interfering carbohydrates was optimised. Incubation time (3-40 h) was highly dependent on the composition of the legume considered; inositol contents were generally stable along the treatment. CONCLUSION Removal of interfering LMWCs from inositol-enriched extracts was successfully achieved using a clean and easily scalable fractionation methodology. This biotechnological procedure not only represents high interest for the production of bioactive food ingredients but for applications in other research areas.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2013

New methodologies for the extraction and fractionation of bioactive carbohydrates from mulberry (morus alba) leaves

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Laura Ruiz-Aceituno; M.L. Sanz; Ana C. Soria

Pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) was applied for the first time to extract bioactive low molecular weight carbohydrates (iminosugars and inositols) from mulberry ( Morus alba ) leaves. Under optimized conditions, PLE provided a similar yield to the conventional process used to extract these bioactives, but in less time (5 vs 90 min). To remove carbohydrates that interfere with the bioactivity of iminosugars from PLE extracts, two fractionation treatments were evaluated: yeast ( Saccharomyces cerevisiae ) incubation and cation-exchange chromatography (CEC). Both methods allowed complete removal of major soluble carbohydrates (fructose, glucose, galactose, and sucrose), without affecting the content of mulberry bioactives. As an advantage over CEC, the yeast treatment preserves bioactive inositols, and it is an affordable methodology that employs food grade solvents. This work found PLE followed by yeast treatment to be an easily scalable and automatable procedure that can be implemented in the food industry.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2010

Analysis of cyclitols in different Quercus species by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Ana I. Ruiz-Matute; M.E. Alañón; M.S. Pérez-Coello; Luis F de Julio-Torres; Ramón Morales; I. Martínez-Castro

BACKGROUND The carbohydrate profile of some woods used for aging wines and spirits has been recently studied using a pressurized liquid extraction method, the main differences found being related to cyclitol content. The aim of this study was to perform a detailed study of these compounds in woods of different Quercus species in order to identify two unknown compounds which appeared in the extracts and to verify whether the obtained profile was homogeneous for other Quercus species. RESULTS Besides the known monosaccharides and five cyclitols previously described, three deoxy-inositols (epi-, vibo- and scyllo-quercitol) were identified. The presence of these eight cyclitols was confirmed in all subgenera and species of Quercus analyzed, allowing a characteristic cyclitol profile. CONCLUSIONS Three deoxy-inositols (quercitols) have been identified in the carbohydrate profile of oak wood. All examined Quercus species displayed a common profile consisting of four inositols and four quercitols, which represent a good dataset for characterization of this genus.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2013

Improvement of a gas chromatographic method for the analysis of iminosugars and other bioactive carbohydrates

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Ana C. Soria; Ana I. Ruiz-Matute; M.L. Sanz

The analysis of derivatised iminosugars and other bioactive low molecular weight carbohydrates present at low concentrations in different vegetable extracts (hyacinth, mulberry and buckwheat) required the improvement of a previously developed gas chromatographic method. Among the different parameters optimized, the temperature of the injection port, evaluated for the first time, resulted to be the most important. Thus, 240 °C was chosen as a tradeoff to achieve the required volatility, to avoid degradation and to provide symmetric peaks for bioactive carbohydrates highly retained such as glycosyl inositols. GC-MS operating under selective ion monitoring (SIM) acquisition mode and GC-FID provided limits of detection and quantitation for the target compounds of 0.2 and 0.7 ng g(-1) and of 1 and 3 ng g(-1) on average, respectively. Therefore, both methodologies could be considered appropriate to extend the range of quantitation of these bioactives.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2015

Analysis of iminosugars and other low molecular weight carbohydrates in Aglaonema sp. extracts by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry.

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; María Jesús García-Sarrió; Jesús Eduardo Quintanilla-López; Ana C. Soria; M.L. Sanz

A method by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HILIC-MS(2)) has been successfully developed for the simultaneous analysis of bioactive iminosugars and other low molecular weight carbohydrates in Aglaonema leaf extracts. Among other experimental chromatographic conditions, mobile phase eluents, additives and column temperature were evaluated in terms of retention time, resolution, peak width and symmetry provided for target carbohydrates. In general, narrow peaks (wh: 0.2-0.6min) with good symmetry (As: 0.9-1.3) and excellent resolution (Rs>1.8) were obtained for iminosugars using an acetonitrile:water gradient with 5mM ammonium acetate in both eluents at 55°C. Tandem mass spectra were used to confirm the presence of previously detected iminosugars in Aglaonema extracts and to tentatively identify for the first time others such as miglitol isomer, glycosyl-miglitol isomers and glycosyl-DMDP isomers. Concentration of total iminosugars varied from 1.35 to 2.84mgg(-1) in the extracts of the different Aglaonema samples analyzed. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a HILIC-MS(2) method has been proposed for the simultaneous analysis of iminosugars and other low molecular weight carbohydrates of Aglaonema sp. extracts.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2014

Evaluation of different hydrophilic stationary phases for the simultaneous determination of iminosugars and other low molecular weight carbohydrates in vegetable extracts by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry

S. Rodríguez-Sánchez; Jesús Eduardo Quintanilla-López; Ana C. Soria; M.L. Sanz

Iminosugars are considered potential drug candidates for the treatment of several diseases, mainly as a result of their α-glycosidase inhibition properties. A method by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry has been optimized for the first time for the simultaneous determination of complex mixtures of bioactive iminosugars and other low molecular weight carbohydrates (LMWC) in vegetable extracts. Three hydrophilic stationary phases (sulfoalkylbetaine zwitterionic, polyhydroxyethyl aspartamide and ethylene bridge hybrid (BEH) with trifunctionally bonded amide) were compared under both basic and acidic conditions. The best sensitivity (limits of detection between 0.025 and 0.28ngmL-1) and overall chromatographic performance in terms of resolution, peak width and analysis time were obtained with the BEH amide column using 0.1% ammonium hydroxide as a mobile phase additive. The optimized method was applied to the analysis of extracts of hyacinth bulbs, buckwheat seeds and mulberry leaves. Iminosugar and other LMWC structures were tentatively assigned by their high resolution daughter ions mass spectra. Several iminosugars such as glycosyl-fagomine in mulberry extract were also described for the first time. Among the extracts analysed, mulberry showed the widest diversity of iminosugars, whereas the highest content of them was found in hyacinth bulb (2.5mgg-1) followed by mulberry (1.95 mgg-1).

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M.L. Sanz

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana C. Soria

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana I. Ruiz-Matute

Spanish National Research Council

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I. Martínez-Castro

Spanish National Research Council

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Cipriano Carrero-Carralero

Spanish National Research Council

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J. Sanz

Spanish National Research Council

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Laura Ruiz-Aceituno

Spanish National Research Council

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Lourdes Ramos

Spanish National Research Council

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A. Martín-Ortiz

Spanish National Research Council

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