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1.
Since cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) is a staple food item of several million people in the tropics, its toxicity cannot be underestimated. Therefore an attempt has been made to understand the metabolic changes caused by the chronic administration of sublethal doses linamarin, the principal cyanoglucoside of cassava, to rabbits. A significant rise in lactic acid and total cholesterol in liver and brain and a highly significant depletion of phospholipids of brain tissue was observed. There were also significant variations in the lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme pattern of treated animals as compared with the control rabbits. The findings suggest that some of the biological effects of linamarin are similar to those of free cyanide.  相似文献   

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Summary An enzyme-bound linamarin indicator paper strip was developed which was based on the hydrolysis of linamarin by cassava leaf linamarase and the detection of the cyanide released by alkaline picrate reagent. The linamarase could be stabilized with gelatin or gelatin in combination with polyvinylpyrrolidone-10 or trehalose. A positive reaction was observed within 15 minutes at 37°C and it could detect linamarin concentration as low as 0.5 to 1 mM. The indicator strip could be used to estimate linamarin content in cassava semiquantitatively.  相似文献   

4.
Summary An enzyme-immobilized microplate for determination of linamarin was prepared by covalently linking cassava leaf linamarase to the microplate. For linamarin determination, cassava roots were homogenised in 0.1 Mo-phosphoric acid and the filtrate adjusted to pH 6 with NaOH prior to adding into the wells. The cyanide released was then determined spectrophotometrically. One nmol linamarin can be detected. The microplate method is suitable for analysis of large number of samples and is useful for screening purposes.  相似文献   

5.
Cassava is the major source of calories for more than 250 million Sub-Saharan Africans, however, it has the lowest protein-to-energy ratio of any major staple food crop in the world. A cassava-based diet provides less than 30% of the minimum daily requirement for protein. Moreover, both leaves and roots contain potentially toxic levels of cyanogenic glucosides. The major cyanogen in cassava is linamarin which is stored in the vacuole. Upon tissue disruption linamarin is deglycosylated by the apolplastic enzyme, linamarase, producing acetone cyanohydrin. Acetone cyanohydrin can spontaneously decompose at pHs >5.0 or temperatures >35°C, or is enzymatically broken down by hydroxynitrile lyase (HNL) to produce acetone and free cyanide which is then volatilized. Unlike leaves, cassava roots have little HNL activity. The lack of HNL activity in roots is associated with the accumulation of potentially toxic levels of acetone cyanohydrin in poorly processed roots. We hypothesized that the over-expression of HNL in cassava roots under the control of a root-specific, patatin promoter would not only accelerate cyanogenesis during food processing, resulting in a safer food product, but lead to increased root protein levels since HNL is sequestered in the cell wall. Transgenic lines expressing a patatin-driven HNL gene construct exhibited a 2-20 fold increase in relative HNL mRNA levels in roots when compared with wild type resulting in a threefold increase in total root protein in 7 month old plants. After food processing, HNL overexpressing lines had substantially reduced acetone cyanohydrin and cyanide levels in roots relative to wild-type roots. Furthermore, steady state linamarin levels in intact tissues were reduced by 80% in transgenic cassava roots. These results suggest that enhanced linamarin metabolism contributed to the elevated root protein levels.  相似文献   

6.
The first committed steps in the biosynthesis of the two cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin in cassava are the conversion of L-valine and L-isoleucine, respectively, to the corresponding oximes. Two full-length cDNA clones that encode cytochromes P-450 catalyzing these reactions have been isolated. The two cassava cytochromes P-450 are 85% identical, share 54% sequence identity to CYP79A1 from sorghum, and have been assigned CYP79D1 and CYP79D2. Functional expression has been achieved using the methylotrophic yeast, Pichia pastoris. The amount of CYP79D1 isolated from 1 liter of P. pastoris culture exceeds the amounts that putatively could be isolated from 22,000 grown-up cassava plants. Each cytochrome P-450 metabolizes L-valine as well as L-isoleucine consistent with the co-occurrence of linamarin and lotaustralin in cassava. CYP79D1 was isolated from P. pastoris. Reconstitution in lipid micelles showed that CYP79D1 has a higher k(c) value with L-valine as substrate than with L-isoleucine, which is consistent with linamarin being the major cyanogenic glucoside in cassava. Both CYP79D1 and CYP79D2 are present in the genome of cassava cultivar MCol22 in agreement with cassava being allotetraploid. CYP79D1 and CYP79D2 are actively transcribed, and production of acyanogenic cassava plants would therefore require down-regulation of both genes.  相似文献   

7.
We have purified cassava (Manihot esculenta) linamarase to apparent homogeneity using a simplified extraction procedure using low pH phosphate buffer. Three isozymes of cassava linamarase were identified in leaves based on differences in isoelectric point. The enzyme is capable of hydrolyzing a number of β-glycosides in addition to linamarin. The enzyme is unusually stable and has a temperature optimum of 55°C. Immunogold labeling studies indicate that linamarase is localized in the cell walls of cassava leaf tissue. Since linamarin must cross the cell wall following synthesis in the leaf for transport to the root, it is likely that linamarin must cross the cell wall in a nonhydrolyzable form, possibly as the diglucoside, linustatin. In addition, we have quantified the levels of linamarin and linamarase activity in leaves of cassava varieties which differ in the linamarin content of their roots. We observed no substantial differences in the steady state linamarin content or linamarase activity of leaves from high or low (root) cyanogenic varieties. These results indicate that the steady state levels of linamarin and linamarase in leaves of high and low cyanogenic varieties are not correlated with the varietal differences in the steady state levels of linamarin in roots.  相似文献   

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Cassava (Manihot esculenta, Crantz) roots are the primary source of calories for more than 500 million people, the majority of whom live in the developing countries of Africa. Cassava leaves and roots contain potentially toxic levels of cyanogenic glycosides. Consumption of residual cyanogens (linamarin or acetone cyanohydrin) in incompletely processed cassava roots can cause cyanide poisoning. Hydroxynitrile lyase (HNL), which catalyses the conversion of acetone cyanohydrin to cyanide, is expressed predominantly in the cell walls and laticifers of leaves. In contrast, roots have very low levels of HNL expression. We have over-expressed HNL in transgenic cassava plants under the control of a double 35S CaMV promoter. We show that HNL activity increased more than twofold in leaves and 13-fold in roots of transgenic plants relative to wild-type plants. Elevated HNL levels were correlated with substantially reduced acetone cyanohydrin levels and increased cyanide volatilization in processed or homogenized roots. Unlike acyanogenic cassava, transgenic plants over-expressing HNL in roots retain the herbivore deterrence of cyanogens while providing a safer food product.  相似文献   

10.
Cassava, a staple food in many tropical countries, has been suspected as a cause of human congenital defects. Ingestion of the material during pregnancy has been reported to induce limb defects, microcephaly, open eye, and growth retardation in rats. Linamarin is a natural cyanogenic glycoside that occurs in high concentrations in cassava. In the present study, pregnant hamsters received an oral dose of 70,100, 120 or 140 mg/kg linamarin or an equivalent volume of isotonic saline during the early primitive streak stage of gestation. A dose of 120 or 140 mg/kg of the glycoside was associated with an increased incidence of vertebral and rib anomalies as well as the production of encephaloceles in the offspring. These larger doses of linamarin also resulted in obvious maternal toxicity. Linamarin treatment had no effect on fetal body weight, ossification of fetal skeletons, embryonic mortality, or litter size. Although ingestion of the cyanogenic glycoside was associated with a significant teratogenic response, the effects occurred only at doses that elicited signs of maternal intoxication.  相似文献   

11.
When cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) root was cut into blocks and incubated under laboratory conditions, the blocks showed more widespread and more even symptoms of physiological deterioration than those under natural conditions. Thus, the tissue block system has potential for biochemical studies of natural deterioration of cassava root. The changes in cyanide content and linamarase (linamarin β-d-glucoside glucohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.21) activity in various tissues during physiological deterioration were investigated. Total cyanide content increased in all parts of block tissue after 3-day incubation. The degree of increase in cyanide was most pronounced in white parenchymal tissue, 2 to 3 millimeters thick, next to the cortex (A-part tissue), where no physiological symptoms appeared. On the other hand, linamarase activity was decreased in all parts of block tissue after a 3-day incubation. A time course analysis of A-part tissue indicated a clear reciprocal relationship between changes in total cyanide and linamarase activity; total cyanide increased, while linamarase activity decreased. Free cyanide constituted a very small portion of the total cyanide and did not change markedly.  相似文献   

12.
The hypothesis that cyanogenic potential in cassava is a defense mechanism against arthropod pests is one of the crucial questions relevant to current efforts to reduce or eliminate cyanogenic potential (CNP) in cassava. The generalist arthropod Cyrtomenus bergi, which attacks cassava roots, was used in a bioassay relating oviposition and survival to CNP, concentration of nonglycosidic cyanogens, and linamarase (beta-glycosidase) activity in twelve selfed cassava siblings and their parental clone, which has segregated for different levels of cyanogenesis. Electron microscopic evaluation revealed an intracellular pathway of the stylet of C. bergi in the cassava root tissue to rupture cell walls. This feeding behavior causes cyanogenesis and increased linamarin content in the hemolymph of C. bergi while feeding on a cyanogenic diet. This diet resulted in a significant reduction in oviposition, especially at levels of CNP above 150 ppm (expressed as hydrogen cyanide) on fresh weight basis (or 400 ppm on dry weight basis) in cassava roots. An exponential decline in oviposition was observed with increasing levels of CNP, beginning 12 d after exposure to the cyanogenic diet. Cyanogenic potential and dry matter content showed a positive effect on survival. No relationship was found between concentrations of nonglycosidic cyanogens or linamarase activity in the cassava root and either oviposition or survival. According to our results, there is a significant difference between potentially noncyanogen and high cyanogen clones, but there may not be a significant difference between potentially noncyanogen and low cyanogen clones. Consequently, more frequent outbreaks or higher levels of damage might not be anticipated in potentially noncyanogen cassava clones than that anticipated in low cyanogenic clones. The negative effect of cyanogenesis on oviposition concurrent with a positive effect on survival of this pest is most likely the result of a physiological trade-off between survival and oviposition. The question of whether ovipositional rates could be recovered after a long-term exposure to cyanide remains unanswered.  相似文献   

13.
 The effects of fermentation of cassava by Aspergillus niger B-1 β-glucosidase on its cyanide and protein content, and the optimal conditions for this enzyme’s activity, were examined. This fermentation process reduced the cyanide content of cassava by 95% to 2 mg/kg, and increased its total protein content by 50%, thereby improving its nutritional value. A significant decrease in cyanogenic glycosides was detected after 3 days of fermentation. The optimal pH for A. nigerβ-glucosidase activity on the cyanogenic glycoside linamarin was determined to be 3, the optimal temperature 55 °C, and its K m 0.3 mM. The findings presented here will facilitate the development of an improved method for detoxification of cassava and for enhancement of its nutritional value. Received: 17 August 1995/Received revision: 27 October 1995/Accepted: 30 October 1995  相似文献   

14.
Investigation of nine patients with tropical ataxic neuropathy showed an absence or diminution of sulphur-containing amino-acids—cysteine and methionine—and a variable concentration of most other essential amino-acids. The pattern was unlike that found in kwashiorkor. The levels of serum cholesterol and total protein were normal, and the serum vitamin B12 levels were normal or high. Plasma thiocyanate concentration was high.All the patients gave a history of a monotonous diet of cassava derivatives. Cassava contains a cyanogenetic glycoside (linamarin) from which cyanide is released on hydrolysis. The excessive cyanide detoxication may be responsible for the low concentration of the sulphur-containing amino-acids.  相似文献   

15.
Microsomal preparations from flax seedlings have recently been shown to convert L-valine to acetone cyanohydrin, the precursor of the cyanogenic glucoside linamarin [A. J. Cutler and E. E. Conn (1981) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 212, 468-474]. Further details of this four-step biosynthetic sequence and also details of the analogous reactions in lotaustralin biosynthesis have been obtained. The lotaustralin precursor, 2-methylbutyraldoxime, is the best substrate for cyanide production (Vmax = 413 nmol h-1 g fresh wt-1) and inhibits the conversion of valine and isoleucine into products. Similarly, the linamarin precursor isobutyraldoxime is an excellent substrate (Vmax = 400 nmol h-1 g fresh wt-1) and also inhibits oxidation of the amino acids. The substrate specificity of the oxime-metabolizing step is low and a variety of aliphatic oximes are converted to cyanide. On the other hand, the activity of the microsomal extract is highly selective with regard to the amino acid substrate since, of the aliphatic amino acids tested, only valine and isoleucine are metabolized. We were unable to demonstrate product formation from isobutyronitrile (a linamarin precursor) but did observe detectable cyanide formation from 2-methylcyanobutane, the corresponding precursor of lotaustralin. Competition experiments showed that the biosynthesis of linamarin and lotaustralin is not likely to be catalyzed by separate enzyme systems.  相似文献   

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A phytochemical analysis of cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) fresh roots and roots suffering from post-harvest physiological deterioration (PPD) has been carried out. The first isolation and identification of galactosyl diacylglycerides from fresh cassava roots is reported, as well as β-carotene, linamarin, and β-sitosterol glucopyranoside. The hydroxycoumarin scopoletin and its glucoside scopolin were identified from cassava roots during PPD, as well as trace quantities of esculetin and its glucoside esculin. There is no isoscopoletin in cassava roots during PPD.  相似文献   

18.
Generation of cyanogen-free transgenic cassava   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Siritunga D  Sayre RT 《Planta》2003,217(3):367-373
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19.
Cassava is the most agronomically important of the cyanogeniccrops. Linamarin, the predominant cyanogenic glycoside in cassava,can accumulate to concentrations as high as 500 mg kg–1fresh weight in roots and to higher levels in leaves. Recently,the pathway of linamarin synthesis and the cellular site oflinamarin storage have been determined. In addition, the cyanogenicenzymes, linamarase and hydroxynitrile lyase, have been characterizedand their genes cloned. These results, as well as studies onthe organ- and tissue-specific localization of linamarase andhydroxy-nitrile lyase, allow us to propose models for the regulationof cyanogenesis in cassava. There remain, however, many unansweredquestions regarding the tissue-specific synthesis, transport,and accumulation of cyanogenic glycosides. The resolution ofthe sequestions will facilitate the development of food processing,biochemical and transgenic plant approaches to reducing thecyanogen content of cassava foods. Key words: Cyanide, cyanogenic glycosides, linamarin, cyanogens  相似文献   

20.
A new chemiluminescence assay was developed for the quantitative determination of linamarin, a cyanogenic glucoside present in cassava. The assay involved hydrolysis of linamarin by a specific enzyme, linamarase, to release glucose, which was then quantitated by a chemiluminescence system consisting of glucose oxidase-peroxidase-luminol. The new assay was more sensitive than the conventional spectrophotometric method for quantitating linamarin in cassava extracts. However, the following agents were found to interfere with the new assay: Vanadate, Mg2+, and Cu2+, were inhibitory to the luminescence of the H2O2-peroxidase-luminol system used in the coupling reaction, whereas EDTA and EGTA activated the system. In addition, Hg2+, which inhibits glucose oxidase, and Tris ion, which inhibits linamarase, both interfered with the new assay.  相似文献   

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