Lipidome of cricket species used as food

The variation in lipidome of house cricket, banded cricket, Jamaican field cricket and two-spotted cricket was studied using high-throughput screening techniques for fingerprinting (MALDI TOF MS, GC–MS and LC MS-MS) and well-stablished chromatographic techniques for quantification (HPLC-ELSD, GC- FID). Although the four cricket species were reared in identical conditions, two-spotted & banded crickets had a lipid content 1.5 fold higher than house cricket. The lipids were high in UFA (>63%) and unsaturated TAG (>98%) making them liquid at room temperature, thus an oil. Cholesterol and several phytosterols were profiled finding high cholesterol concentration which is a point of concern. Eight phospholipid types (211 species) were identified with no major differences among cricket species. Using high-throughput screening techniques we demonstrate the complexity of cricket lipidome. Information on the lipidome of these crickets with high commercial value is important to estimate its nutritional value and their potential food applications.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A., Dewettinck, Koen, Provijn, Paul, Brouwers, Jos F., de Meulenaer, Bruno, Oonincx, Dennis G.A.B.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Entomophagy, Insect oil, Insects as food, Lipidomics, Novel food,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/lipidome-of-cricket-species-used-as-food
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5792472025-01-14 Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A. Dewettinck, Koen Provijn, Paul Brouwers, Jos F. de Meulenaer, Bruno Oonincx, Dennis G.A.B. Article/Letter to editor Food Chemistry 349 (2021) ISSN: 0308-8146 Lipidome of cricket species used as food 2021 The variation in lipidome of house cricket, banded cricket, Jamaican field cricket and two-spotted cricket was studied using high-throughput screening techniques for fingerprinting (MALDI TOF MS, GC–MS and LC MS-MS) and well-stablished chromatographic techniques for quantification (HPLC-ELSD, GC- FID). Although the four cricket species were reared in identical conditions, two-spotted & banded crickets had a lipid content 1.5 fold higher than house cricket. The lipids were high in UFA (>63%) and unsaturated TAG (>98%) making them liquid at room temperature, thus an oil. Cholesterol and several phytosterols were profiled finding high cholesterol concentration which is a point of concern. Eight phospholipid types (211 species) were identified with no major differences among cricket species. Using high-throughput screening techniques we demonstrate the complexity of cricket lipidome. Information on the lipidome of these crickets with high commercial value is important to estimate its nutritional value and their potential food applications. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/lipidome-of-cricket-species-used-as-food 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129077 https://edepot.wur.nl/541843 Entomophagy Insect oil Insects as food Lipidomics Novel food Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Entomophagy
Insect oil
Insects as food
Lipidomics
Novel food
Entomophagy
Insect oil
Insects as food
Lipidomics
Novel food
spellingShingle Entomophagy
Insect oil
Insects as food
Lipidomics
Novel food
Entomophagy
Insect oil
Insects as food
Lipidomics
Novel food
Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A.
Dewettinck, Koen
Provijn, Paul
Brouwers, Jos F.
de Meulenaer, Bruno
Oonincx, Dennis G.A.B.
Lipidome of cricket species used as food
description The variation in lipidome of house cricket, banded cricket, Jamaican field cricket and two-spotted cricket was studied using high-throughput screening techniques for fingerprinting (MALDI TOF MS, GC–MS and LC MS-MS) and well-stablished chromatographic techniques for quantification (HPLC-ELSD, GC- FID). Although the four cricket species were reared in identical conditions, two-spotted & banded crickets had a lipid content 1.5 fold higher than house cricket. The lipids were high in UFA (>63%) and unsaturated TAG (>98%) making them liquid at room temperature, thus an oil. Cholesterol and several phytosterols were profiled finding high cholesterol concentration which is a point of concern. Eight phospholipid types (211 species) were identified with no major differences among cricket species. Using high-throughput screening techniques we demonstrate the complexity of cricket lipidome. Information on the lipidome of these crickets with high commercial value is important to estimate its nutritional value and their potential food applications.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Entomophagy
Insect oil
Insects as food
Lipidomics
Novel food
author Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A.
Dewettinck, Koen
Provijn, Paul
Brouwers, Jos F.
de Meulenaer, Bruno
Oonincx, Dennis G.A.B.
author_facet Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A.
Dewettinck, Koen
Provijn, Paul
Brouwers, Jos F.
de Meulenaer, Bruno
Oonincx, Dennis G.A.B.
author_sort Tzompa-Sosa, Daylan A.
title Lipidome of cricket species used as food
title_short Lipidome of cricket species used as food
title_full Lipidome of cricket species used as food
title_fullStr Lipidome of cricket species used as food
title_full_unstemmed Lipidome of cricket species used as food
title_sort lipidome of cricket species used as food
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/lipidome-of-cricket-species-used-as-food
work_keys_str_mv AT tzompasosadaylana lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
AT dewettinckkoen lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
AT provijnpaul lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
AT brouwersjosf lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
AT demeulenaerbruno lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
AT oonincxdennisgab lipidomeofcricketspeciesusedasfood
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