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Determination of chlorogenic acid, polyphenols and antioxidants in green coffee by thin-layer chromatography, effect-directed analysis and dot blot - comparison to HPLC and spectrophotometry methods.

The great prevalence of thin-layer chromatography over HPLC is connected with the possibility of analyzing many samples in parallel. Therefore, the method is often used in screening and/or effect directed analysis to compare composition and chemical/biological properties of many samples in one run. It was already proved, that high performance thin-layer chromatography, in many cases, can replace HPLC for quantitative analysis. The main aim of the paper is to show that also simple thin-layer chromatography can be used as a quantitative or at least as a semi-quantitative method, even when it concerns effect directed analysis e.g. direct bioautography. Chlorogenic acid content was measured in four methanol extracts of various green coffees and in one extract of black coffee using thin-layer chromatography with ultraviolet detection and thin-layer chromatography with effect directed detection. The HPLC was used as a reference method. Additionally, total contents of polyphenols and antioxidants were estimated using thin-layer chromatography or dot-blot on chromatography plates. These results were compared to spectrophotometric methods. It was proved that thin-layer chromatography can be used as a quantitative (using densitometry) or semi-quantitative method (using other detection methods including effect directed detection) as well as for estimating total antioxidants or polyphenols content. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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