Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants

Ivica Blažević, Sabine Montaut, Franko Burčul, Carl Erik Olsen, Meike Burow, Patrick Rollin, Niels Agerbirk

Phytochemistry · 2019

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Summary

The glucosinolates (GSLs) is a well-defined group of plant metabolites characterized by having an S-β-d-glucopyrano unit anomerically connected to an O-sulfated (Z)-thiohydroximate function. After enzymatic hydrolysis, the sulfated aglucone can undergo rearrangement to an isothiocyanate, or form a nitrile or other products. The number of GSLs known from plants, satisfactorily characterized by modern spectroscopic methods (NMR and MS) by mid-2018, is 88. In addition, a group of partially characterized structures with highly variable evidence counts for approximately a further 49. This means that the total number of characterized GSLs from plants is somewhere between 88 and 137. The diversity of GSLs in plants is critically reviewed here, resulting in significant discrepancies with previous

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100
Catalogue ID
SNmp4zkmha-yrmgks
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