piperitenone has been researched along with isopiperitenone* in 3 studies
3 other study(ies) available for piperitenone and isopiperitenone
Article | Year |
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Isolation and characterization of isopiperitenol dehydrogenase from piperitenone-type Perilla.
Studying the biosynthesis of oil compounds in Perilla will help to elucidate regulatory systems for secondary metabolites and reaction mechanisms for natural product synthesis. In this study, two types of alcohol dehydrogenases, isopiperitenol dehydrogenases 1 and 2 (ISPD1 and ISPD2), which are thought to participate the oxidation of isopiperitenol in the biosynthesis of perilla, were isolated from three pure lines of perilla. Both ISPD1 and ISPD2 oxidized isopiperitenol into isopiperitenone with an oxidized form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) cofactor. ISPD1 used both isopiperitenol diastereomers, whereas ISPD2 used cis-isomer as a substrate. However, only ISPD2 was isolated from piperitenone-type perilla. These results suggests that in perilla, ISPD2 is related to the biosynthesis of piperitenone, which was formed via (-)-cis-isopiperitenol. Topics: Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Amino Acid Sequence; Biosynthetic Pathways; Cloning, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Monoterpenes; NAD; NAD (+) and NADP (+) Dependent Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Oils, Volatile; Perilla; Terpenes | 2014 |
Metabolism of monoterpenes: demonstration that (+)-cis-isopulegone, not piperitenone, is the key intermediate in the conversion of (-)-isopiperitenone to (+)-pulegone in peppermint (Mentha piperita).
Piperitenone is commonly considered to be the key intermediate in the conversion of (-)-isopiperitenone to (+)-pulegone in peppermint; however, [3H]piperitenone gave rise only to the inert metabolite (+)-piperitone when incubated with peppermint leaf discs. Under identical conditions, (-)-[3H]isopiperitenone was efficiently incorporated into (+)-pulegone, (-)-menthone, and (+)-isomenthone in leaf discs, and yielded an additional metabolite identified as (+)-cis-isopulegone; piperitenone was poorly labeled. Moreover, (+)-cis-[3H]isopulegone was rapidly converted to (+)-pulegone, (-)-menthone, and (+)-isomenthone in leaf discs, and the reduction of (+)-[3H]pulegone to (-)-menthone and (+)-isomenthone was similarly documented. Each step of the pathway was demonstrated in a crude soluble preparation from peppermint leaf epidermis and each of the relevant enzymes was partially purified in order to compare relative rates of catalysis. The results of these studies indicate that the endocyclic double bond of (-)-isopiperitenone is reduced to yield (+)-cis-isopulegone, which is isomerized to (+)-pulegone as the immediate precursor of (-)-menthone and (+)-isomenthone, and they rule out piperitenone as an intermediate of the pathway. Topics: Biotransformation; Cell-Free System; Chromatography, Gas; Cyclohexane Monoterpenes; Menthol; Monoterpenes; Oxidation-Reduction; Plants; Stereoisomerism; Terpenes | 1986 |
Metabolism of monoterpenes: oxidation of isopiperitenol to isopiperitenone, and subsequent isomerization to piperitenone by soluble enzyme preparations from peppermint (Mentha piperita) leaves.
Soluble enzyme extracts from peppermint leaves, when treated with polystyrene resin to remove endogenous monoterpenes and assayed with unlabeled substrates coupled with capillary gas-liquid chromatographic/mass spectrometric detection methods, were shown to oxidize isopiperitenol to isopiperitenone, and to isomerize isopiperitenone to piperitenone. The enzymes responsible for the monoterpenol dehydrogenation and the subsequent allylic isomerization were separated and partially purified by chromatography on Sephadex G-150, and were shown to have molecular weights of approximately 66,000 and 54,000, respectively. The general properties of the NAD-dependent dehydrogenase were examined, and specificity studies indicated that a double bond adjacent to the carbinol carbon was a required structural feature of the monoterpenol substrate. General properties of the isomerase were also determined, and it was demonstrated that the double bond migration catalyzed by this enzyme involved an intramolecular 1,3-hydrogen transfer. These enzymatic transformations represent two key steps in the metabolic pathway for the conversion of the initially formed cyclic olefin, (+/-)-limonene, to (-)-menthol and related monoterpenes characteristic of peppermint. Some stereochemical features of these reactions, and of the overall biogenetic scheme, are described. Topics: Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Carbon-Carbon Double Bond Isomerases; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Chromatography, Gel; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Isomerases; Isomerism; Monoterpenes; NAD (+) and NADP (+) Dependent Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Oxidation-Reduction; Plants, Medicinal; Solubility; Stereoisomerism; Terpenes | 1985 |