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Identification of the major glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl glucosinolate) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket).
Phytochemistry. 2002 Sep; 61(1):25-30.P

Abstract

The major and structurally unique glucosinolate (GLS) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket) was identified as 4-mercaptobutyl GLS. Both 4-methylthiobutyl GLS and 4-methylsulfinylbutyl GLS were also present, but at lower concentrations. The 4-mercaptobutyl GLS was observed to oxidise under common GLS extraction conditions, generating a disulfide GLS that may be reduced efficiently by tris(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine hydrochloride (TCEP) to reform the parent molecule. The identities of 4-mercaptobutyl GLS and of the corresponding dimeric GLS were confirmed by LC/MS, MS/MS and NMR. Myrosinase treatment of an enriched GLS fraction or of the purified dimer GLS generated a mixture of unique bi-functional disulfides, including bis-(4-isothiocyanatobutyl) disulfide (previously identified elsewhere). TCEP reduction of the purified dimer, followed by myrosinase treatment, yielded only 4-mercaptobutyl ITC. GLS-derived volatiles generated by autolysis of fresh seedlings and true leaves were 4-mercaptobutyl ITC (from the newly identified GLS), 4-methylthiobutyl ITC (from 4-methylthiobutyl GLS) and 4-methylsulfinylbutyl ITC (from 4-methylsulfinyl-butyl GLS); no unusual bi-functional disulfides were found in fresh leaf autolysate. These results led to the conclusion that, in planta, the new GLS must be present as 4-mercaptobutyl GLS and not as the disulfide found after extraction and sample concentration. This new GLS and its isothiocyanate are likely to contribute to the unique odour and flavour of E. sativa.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Food Research, Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UA, UK. richard.bennett@bbsrc.ac.ukNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12165298

Citation

Bennett, Richard N., et al. "Identification of the Major Glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl Glucosinolate) in Leaves of Eruca Sativa L. (salad Rocket)." Phytochemistry, vol. 61, no. 1, 2002, pp. 25-30.
Bennett RN, Mellon FA, Botting NP, et al. Identification of the major glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl glucosinolate) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket). Phytochemistry. 2002;61(1):25-30.
Bennett, R. N., Mellon, F. A., Botting, N. P., Eagles, J., Rosa, E. A., & Williamson, G. (2002). Identification of the major glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl glucosinolate) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket). Phytochemistry, 61(1), 25-30.
Bennett RN, et al. Identification of the Major Glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl Glucosinolate) in Leaves of Eruca Sativa L. (salad Rocket). Phytochemistry. 2002;61(1):25-30. PubMed PMID: 12165298.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Identification of the major glucosinolate (4-mercaptobutyl glucosinolate) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket). AU - Bennett,Richard N, AU - Mellon,Fred A, AU - Botting,Nigel P, AU - Eagles,John, AU - Rosa,Eduardo A S, AU - Williamson,Gary, PY - 2002/8/8/pubmed PY - 2002/12/12/medline PY - 2002/8/8/entrez SP - 25 EP - 30 JF - Phytochemistry JO - Phytochemistry VL - 61 IS - 1 N2 - The major and structurally unique glucosinolate (GLS) in leaves of Eruca sativa L. (salad rocket) was identified as 4-mercaptobutyl GLS. Both 4-methylthiobutyl GLS and 4-methylsulfinylbutyl GLS were also present, but at lower concentrations. The 4-mercaptobutyl GLS was observed to oxidise under common GLS extraction conditions, generating a disulfide GLS that may be reduced efficiently by tris(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine hydrochloride (TCEP) to reform the parent molecule. The identities of 4-mercaptobutyl GLS and of the corresponding dimeric GLS were confirmed by LC/MS, MS/MS and NMR. Myrosinase treatment of an enriched GLS fraction or of the purified dimer GLS generated a mixture of unique bi-functional disulfides, including bis-(4-isothiocyanatobutyl) disulfide (previously identified elsewhere). TCEP reduction of the purified dimer, followed by myrosinase treatment, yielded only 4-mercaptobutyl ITC. GLS-derived volatiles generated by autolysis of fresh seedlings and true leaves were 4-mercaptobutyl ITC (from the newly identified GLS), 4-methylthiobutyl ITC (from 4-methylthiobutyl GLS) and 4-methylsulfinylbutyl ITC (from 4-methylsulfinyl-butyl GLS); no unusual bi-functional disulfides were found in fresh leaf autolysate. These results led to the conclusion that, in planta, the new GLS must be present as 4-mercaptobutyl GLS and not as the disulfide found after extraction and sample concentration. This new GLS and its isothiocyanate are likely to contribute to the unique odour and flavour of E. sativa. SN - 0031-9422 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12165298/Identification_of_the_major_glucosinolate__4_mercaptobutyl_glucosinolate__in_leaves_of_Eruca_sativa_L___salad_rocket__ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -