Limitations of feeding experiments in studying alkaloid biosynthesis in Peganum harmala callus cultures |
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Authors: | Lesley Nettleship Michael Slaytor |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, The University of Sydney, Sydney, N.S.W. 2006, Australia |
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Abstract: | Feeding and trapping experiments to Peganum harmala callus cultures were limited by compartmentation; exogenous substrates were detoxified by precipitation, presumably as polymers or conjugates, or by conversion to water-soluble products, such as phenols and glucosides, easily stored in vacuoles. Alkaloid-producing and non-alkaloid-producing callus cultures were readily able to convert tryptamine to 5-hydroxytryptamine and harmaline to dihydroruine (8-hydroxyglucosylharmaline). Phenolic substrates, including 5- and 6-hydroxy-tryptophan, 5- and 6-hydroxytryptamine and harmalol, were not metabolized. In alkaloid-producing callus cultures, radioactivity from [methylene-14C]-l-tryptophan and [methyl-14C-]-harmaline was incorporated into harmine. The dilution of radioactivity was 30000- and 2-fold respectively. |
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Keywords: | Zygophyllaceae biosynthesis alkaloids β-carbolines callus cultures compartmentation. |
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