Affiliation:
1. Department of Tobacco Chemistry, Yunnan Academy of Tobacco Sciences, 650021, Kunming, China
Abstract
Introduction:
Cherry-red tobacco is a flue-cured variant that possesses a distinctive
“sticky rice” flavor, which is highly valued by the tobacco industry. However, the value of cherryred
tobacco is dubious due to the possible health risks associated with tobacco-specific nitrosamines
(TSNAs).
Objective:
This study aimed to investigate the chemical origin of the “sticky rice” flavor and to assess
the potential health hazards of TSNAs.
Method:
An optimized untargeted analysis with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and a targeted
analysis with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry were conducted.
Result:
Over one hundred compounds were identified and quantified. Cherry-red tobacco and the
normal control showed significant differences in forty-three of these compounds. Pyridine alkaloids
and their derivatives constituted the main difference. Nornicotine, a demethylated product of nicotine
in cherry-red tobacco, was confirmed to be pyrolyzed to 3-ethylpyridine, 3-methylpyridine, and other
homologues, and transferred to the smoke during smoking. The smoke of cherry-red tobacco was
found to contain much higher levels of N’-nitrosonornicotine, a TSNA derived from nornicotine,
than that of normal flue-cured tobacco, while the levels of the other detected TSNAs were lower. The
two types of tobacco had similar total amounts of the four TSNAs.
Conclusion:
The pyrolysis of nornicotine into 3-ethylpyridine and its homologues during smoking
may be the main cause of the “sticky rice” flavor of cherry-red tobacco. The level of TSNAs does
not reflect the difference in health risk between cherry-red tobacco and the control.
Funder
foundation of China National Tobacco Company Yunnan branch
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.