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Sterols and Asparagine in the Rice Plant,Endogenous Factors Related to Resistance against the Brown Planthopper (Nilaparvata lugens)
Authors:Yoshio Shigematsu  Noboru Murofushi  Kiyomitsu Ito  Chukichi Kaneda  Susumu Kawabe  Nobutaka Takahashi
Institution:1. Department of Agricultural Chemistry, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan;2. Agricultural Research Center, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan;3. Agricultural Research Center, Konosu, Saitama 365, Japan;4. Tohoku Agricultural Experiment Station, ōmagari, Akita 014-01, Japan
Abstract:The garlic-derived antibacterial principle, alk(en)yl sulfinate compounds, has long been considered as very short-lived substance. However, there are some data showing a rather more stable nature of allicin. We determined here the thermostability of allicin by a systematic analyses employing chemical quantification and an antibacterial activity assay. Allicin in an aqueous extract of garlic was degraded stoichiometrically in proportion to the temperature; we estimated the half-life of allicin to be about a year at 4 °C (from 1.8 mg/ml to 0.9 mg/ml) and 32 d at 15 °C, but only 1 d at 37 °C (from 2.0 mg/ml to 1.0 mg/ml). The half-life values for antibacterial activity showed a similar trend in results: 63 d or more at 4 °C for both antibacterial activities, 14 d for anti-staphylococcal activity, and 26 d for anti-escherichia activity at 15 °C, but only 1.2 d and 1.9 d for the respective activities at 37 °C. Such antibacterial activities were attributable to the major allicin, allyl 2-propenylthiosulfinate. Surprisingly, the decline in the quantity of allicin was not accompanied by its degradation; instead, allicin became a larger molecule, ajoene, which was 3-times larger than allicin.
Keywords:allicin  garlic  thermostability  ajoene  antibacterial activity
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