نتایج جستجو برای: myrosinase

تعداد نتایج: 277  

Journal: :Phytochemistry 2004
Nathan V Matusheski John A Juvik Elizabeth H Jeffery

Sulforaphane, an isothiocyanate from broccoli, is one of the most potent food-derived anticarcinogens. This compound is not present in the intact vegetable, rather it is formed from its glucosinolate precursor, glucoraphanin, by the action of myrosinase, a thioglucosidase enzyme, when broccoli tissue is crushed or chewed. However, a number of studies have demonstrated that sulforaphane yield fr...

Journal: :The arabidopsis book 2010
Ute Wittstock Meike Burow

Glucosinolates are a group of thioglucosides in plants of the Brassicales order. Together with their hydrolytic enzymes, the myrosinases, they constitute the 'mustard oil bomb' involved in plant defense. Here we summarize recent studies in Arabidopsis that have provided molecular evidence that the glucosinolate-myrosinase system is much more than a 'two-component defense system,' and started to...

Journal: :International Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied Sciences 2016

Journal: :Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2015
Julia Budnowski Laura Hanske Fabian Schumacher Hansruedi Glatt Stefanie Platz Sascha Rohn Michael Blaut

Chemoprotective or genotoxic effects of glucosinolates occurring in Brassica vegetables are attributed to their hydrolysis products formed upon tissue damage by plant myrosinase. Since Brassica vegetables, in which myrosinase has been heat-inactivated, still display bioactivity, glucosinolate activation has been attributed to intestinal bacteria. The aim of this study was to investigate whether...

2014
Tahereh Aghajanzadeh Malcolm J. Hawkesford Luit J. De Kok

Brassica juncea seedlings contained a twofold higher glucosinolate content than B. rapa and these secondary sulfur compounds accounted for up to 30% of the organic sulfur fraction. The glucosinolate content was not affected by H2S and SO2 exposure, demonstrating that these sulfur compounds did not form a sink for excessive atmospheric supplied sulfur. Upon sulfate deprivation, the foliarly abso...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2004
Ute Wittstock Niels Agerbirk Einar J Stauber Carl Erik Olsen Michael Hippler Thomas Mitchell-Olds Jonathan Gershenzon Heiko Vogel

Plants protect themselves against herbivory with a diverse array of repellent or toxic secondary metabolites. However, many herbivorous insects have developed counteradaptations that enable them to feed on chemically defended plants without apparent negative effects. Here, we present evidence that larvae of the specialist insect, Pieris rapae (cabbage white butterfly, Lepidoptera: Pieridae), ar...

Journal: :CNS neuroscience & therapeutics 2013
Sabrina Giacoppo Maria Galuppo Renato Iori Gina R De Nicola Giovanni Cassata Placido Bramanti Emanuela Mazzon

AIM The discovery of new natural compounds with pharmacological properties is a field of interest widely growing. Recent literature shows that Brassica vegetables (Cruciferae) possess therapeutic effects particularly ascribed due to their content in glucosinolates, which upon myrosinase hydrolysis release the corresponding isothiocyanates. This study examines the potential neuroprotective and i...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2008
Zhixin Zhao Wei Zhang Bruce A Stanley Sarah M Assmann

We isolated a total of 3 x 10(8) guard cell protoplasts from 22,000 Arabidopsis thaliana plants and identified 1734 unique proteins using three complementary proteomic methods: protein spot identification from broad and narrow pH range two-dimensional (2D) gels, and 2D liquid chromatography-matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization multidimensional protein identification technology. This exte...

Journal: :Carcinogenesis 2002
Cyrille Krul Christèle Humblot Catherine Philippe Martijn Vermeulen Marleen van Nuenen Robert Havenaar Sylvie Rabot

Cruciferous vegetables, such as Brassica, which contain substantial quantities of glucosinolates, have been suggested to possess anticarcinogenic activity. Cutting and chewing of cruciferous vegetables releases the thioglucosidase enzyme myrosinase, which degrades glucosinolates to isothiocyanates and other minor metabolites. Cooking of cruciferous vegetables inactivates the myrosinase enzyme, ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید