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

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Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants. / Blažević, Ivica; Montaut, Sabine; Burčul, Franko; Olsen, Carl Erik; Burow, Meike; Rollin, Patrick; Agerbirk, Niels.

In: Phytochemistry, Vol. 169, 112100, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Blažević, I, Montaut, S, Burčul, F, Olsen, CE, Burow, M, Rollin, P & Agerbirk, N 2020, 'Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants', Phytochemistry, vol. 169, 112100. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100

APA

Blažević, I., Montaut, S., Burčul, F., Olsen, C. E., Burow, M., Rollin, P., & Agerbirk, N. (2020). Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants. Phytochemistry, 169, [112100]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100

Vancouver

Blažević I, Montaut S, Burčul F, Olsen CE, Burow M, Rollin P et al. Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants. Phytochemistry. 2020;169. 112100. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100

Author

Blažević, Ivica ; Montaut, Sabine ; Burčul, Franko ; Olsen, Carl Erik ; Burow, Meike ; Rollin, Patrick ; Agerbirk, Niels. / Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants. In: Phytochemistry. 2020 ; Vol. 169.

Bibtex

@article{8d3f54bc0c3346d690a98ea021dba0c3,
title = "Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants",
abstract = "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 reviews. In general, the well-characterized GSLs show resemblance to C-skeletons of the amino acids Ala, Val, Leu, Trp, Ile, Phe/Tyr and Met, or to homologs of Ile, Phe/Tyr or Met. Insufficiently characterized, still hypothetic GSLs include straight-chain alkyl GSLs and chain-elongated GSLs derived from Leu. Additional reports (since 2011) of insufficiently characterized GSLs are reviewed. Usually the crucial missing information is correctly interpreted NMR, which is the most effective tool for GSL identification. Hence, modern use of NMR for GSL identification is also reviewed and exemplified. Apart from isolation, GSLs may be obtained by organic synthesis, allowing isotopically labeled GSLs and any kind of side chain. Enzymatic turnover of GSLs in plants depends on a considerable number of enzymes and other protein factors and furthermore depends on GSL structure. Identification of GSLs must be presented transparently and live up to standard requirements in natural product chemistry. Unfortunately, many recent reports fail in these respects, including reports based on chromatography hyphenated to MS. In particular, the possibility of isomers and isobaric structures is frequently ignored. Recent reports are re-evaluated and interpreted as evidence of the existence of {"}isoGSLs{"}, i.e. non-GSL isomers of GSLs in plants. For GSL analysis, also with MS-detection, we stress the importance of using authentic standards.",
author = "Ivica Bla{\v z}evi{\'c} and Sabine Montaut and Franko Bur{\v c}ul and Olsen, {Carl Erik} and Meike Burow and Patrick Rollin and Niels Agerbirk",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100",
language = "English",
volume = "169",
journal = "Phytochemistry",
issn = "0031-9422",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Glucosinolate structural diversity, identification, chemical synthesis and metabolism in plants

AU - Blažević, Ivica

AU - Montaut, Sabine

AU - Burčul, Franko

AU - Olsen, Carl Erik

AU - Burow, Meike

AU - Rollin, Patrick

AU - Agerbirk, Niels

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - 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 reviews. In general, the well-characterized GSLs show resemblance to C-skeletons of the amino acids Ala, Val, Leu, Trp, Ile, Phe/Tyr and Met, or to homologs of Ile, Phe/Tyr or Met. Insufficiently characterized, still hypothetic GSLs include straight-chain alkyl GSLs and chain-elongated GSLs derived from Leu. Additional reports (since 2011) of insufficiently characterized GSLs are reviewed. Usually the crucial missing information is correctly interpreted NMR, which is the most effective tool for GSL identification. Hence, modern use of NMR for GSL identification is also reviewed and exemplified. Apart from isolation, GSLs may be obtained by organic synthesis, allowing isotopically labeled GSLs and any kind of side chain. Enzymatic turnover of GSLs in plants depends on a considerable number of enzymes and other protein factors and furthermore depends on GSL structure. Identification of GSLs must be presented transparently and live up to standard requirements in natural product chemistry. Unfortunately, many recent reports fail in these respects, including reports based on chromatography hyphenated to MS. In particular, the possibility of isomers and isobaric structures is frequently ignored. Recent reports are re-evaluated and interpreted as evidence of the existence of "isoGSLs", i.e. non-GSL isomers of GSLs in plants. For GSL analysis, also with MS-detection, we stress the importance of using authentic standards.

AB - 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 reviews. In general, the well-characterized GSLs show resemblance to C-skeletons of the amino acids Ala, Val, Leu, Trp, Ile, Phe/Tyr and Met, or to homologs of Ile, Phe/Tyr or Met. Insufficiently characterized, still hypothetic GSLs include straight-chain alkyl GSLs and chain-elongated GSLs derived from Leu. Additional reports (since 2011) of insufficiently characterized GSLs are reviewed. Usually the crucial missing information is correctly interpreted NMR, which is the most effective tool for GSL identification. Hence, modern use of NMR for GSL identification is also reviewed and exemplified. Apart from isolation, GSLs may be obtained by organic synthesis, allowing isotopically labeled GSLs and any kind of side chain. Enzymatic turnover of GSLs in plants depends on a considerable number of enzymes and other protein factors and furthermore depends on GSL structure. Identification of GSLs must be presented transparently and live up to standard requirements in natural product chemistry. Unfortunately, many recent reports fail in these respects, including reports based on chromatography hyphenated to MS. In particular, the possibility of isomers and isobaric structures is frequently ignored. Recent reports are re-evaluated and interpreted as evidence of the existence of "isoGSLs", i.e. non-GSL isomers of GSLs in plants. For GSL analysis, also with MS-detection, we stress the importance of using authentic standards.

U2 - 10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100

DO - 10.1016/j.phytochem.2019.112100

M3 - Review

C2 - 31771793

VL - 169

JO - Phytochemistry

JF - Phytochemistry

SN - 0031-9422

M1 - 112100

ER -

ID: 236473496