Unlocking coffee’s hidden chemistry: new diterpenes show anti-diabetic promise
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Unlocking coffee’s hidden chemistry: new diterpenes show anti-diabetic promise

15.08.2025 TranSpread

Three of the compounds demonstrated significant inhibitory effects on α-glucosidase, a key enzyme in carbohydrate digestion. The findings could pave the way for new functional food ingredients targeting type 2 diabetes.

Functional foods are known not only for their nutritional value but also for delivering biologically active compounds with potential health benefits, such as antioxidant, neuroprotective, or glucose-lowering properties. Identifying these compounds from complex food matrices remains a major challenge. Traditional methods are often time-consuming and inefficient. As a result, scientists have been turning to advanced techniques like nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to speed up the discovery of bioactive molecules, especially in chemically diverse systems like roasted coffee.

A study (DOI: 10.48130/bpr-0024-0035) published in Beverage Plant Research on 18 February 2025 by Minghua Qiu’s team, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, shows promising anti-diabetic potential and expands our understanding of coffee’s functional components.

In this study, researchers developed a three-step, activity-oriented strategy to efficiently identify bioactive diterpene esters in roasted Coffea arabica beans. The goal was to discover both abundant and trace-level compounds with α-glucosidase inhibitory activity, while minimizing solvent use and analysis time. The first step involved dividing the crude diterpene extract into 19 fractions via silica gel chromatography, followed by ^1H NMR and α-glucosidase activity screening. A cluster heatmap based on ^1H NMR spectral data grouped the fractions and pinpointed Fr.9–Fr.13 as the most bioactive, characterized by distinct proton signals. Next, ^13C-DEPT NMR of representative fraction Fr.9 revealed an aldehyde group, consistent with the ^1H NMR data. Fr.9 was then purified using semi-preparative HPLC, and three new diterpene esters—named caffaldehydes A, B, and C—were isolated. Structural elucidation through 1D and 2D NMR and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRESIMS) confirmed their identities. These compounds, differing in their fatty acid chains (palmitic, stearic, and arachidic acids), showed moderate α-glucosidase inhibitory activity with IC₅₀ values of 45.07, 24.40, and 17.50 μM respectively—more potent than the control drug acarbose. To detect trace bioactives beyond the scope of NMR or HPLC, the team performed LC-MS/MS on pooled fraction groups and constructed a molecular network using GNPS and Cytoscape. This revealed three additional unknown diterpene esters (compounds 4–6) closely related to caffaldehydes A–C, sharing common fragment ions but featuring different fatty acids (magaric, octadecenoic, and nonadecanoic acids). Their absence in compound databases confirmed their novelty. Together, these findings demonstrate the effectiveness of this integrative dereplication approach in discovering structurally diverse, biologically relevant compounds in complex food matrices like roasted coffee.

This research opens the door to developing new functional food ingredients or nutraceuticals derived from coffee, targeting glucose regulation and potentially aiding in diabetes management. More broadly, the dereplication strategy introduced here—using minimal solvent and advanced spectral analysis—can be adapted for rapid screening of bioactive metabolites in other complex food matrices. Future work will explore the biological activity of the newly identified trace diterpenes and assess their safety and efficacy in vivo.

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References

DOI

10.48130/bpr-0024-0035

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.48130/bpr-0024-0035

Funding information

This study was supported financially by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, China (U1902206) , Key Research and Development Project of Yunnan Province (202003AD15 0006), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2023M743591), Postdoctoral Fellowship Program of CPSF (GZC20232766), Special Research Assistant of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Yunnan Caiyun Postdoctoral Program, Coffee Industry Science and Technology Mission in Zhenkang County, Yunnan (202204BI090009), Project of Yunnan International Joint Innovation platform (202203AP140106), Project of Expert workstation of Yunnan Science and Technology Association (2024).

About Beverage Plant Research

Beverage Plant Research (e-ISSN 2769-2108) is the official journal of Tea Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences and China Tea Science Society. Beverage Plant Research is an open access, online-only journal published by Maximum Academic Press which publishing original research, methods, reviews, editorials, and perspectives, which advance the biology, chemistry, processing, and health functions of tea and other important beverage plants.

Title of original paper: Bioactive oriented discovery of diterpenoids in Coffea arabica basing on 1D NMR and LC-MS/MS molecular network
Authors: Guilin Hu, Chenxi Quan, Abdulbaset Al-Romaima, Haopeng Dai & Minghua Qiu
Journal: Beverage Plant Research
Original Source URL: https://doi.org/10.48130/bpr-0024-0035
DOI: 10.48130/bpr-0024-0035
Latest article publication date: 18 February 2025
Subject of research: Not applicable
COI statement: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Angehängte Dokumente
  • Figure 1 General strategy for discovery of bioactive ingredients in roasted coffee.
15.08.2025 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, China
Keywords: Health, Food, Well being, Medical

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