The enzymic and non-enzymic degradation of colneleic acid, an unsaturated fatty acid ether intermediate in the lipoxygenase pathway of linoleic acid oxidation in potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers.
Кључне речи
Апстрактан
Colneleic acid is an unsaturated ether fatty acid derived from linoleic acid via a lipoxygenase-mediated enzyme pathway. It is degraded (a) by an enzyme in potato tubers which is heat-labile and non-dialysable and (b) by a model system containing catalytic amounts of Fe(2+) ions. Both enzyme- and Fe(2+)-catalysed systems have similar properties with respect to pH optima (pH5.0-5.5), oxygen requirement (0.6-0.7 mol of O(2) consumed/mol of ether degraded), inhibitors and reaction products. An unstable product breaks down to C(8) and C(9) carbonyl fragments. Both systems are inhibited by low concentrations of antioxidants (e.g. 5mum-butylated hydroxytoluene) and some chelating agents (e.g. 5mum-diethyldithio-carbamate). The model system is strongly inhibited by metal ions, particularly Cu(2+) and Fe(3+), at 20mum. Hydrogen peroxide and haemoproteins do not substitute for the enzyme or Fe(2+) ions but the non-haem iron protein, ferredoxin, does catalyse the degradation.