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Plant Physiology 76:647-653 (1984)
© 1984 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Metabolism of Monoterpenes 1

Early Steps in the Metabolism of d-Neomenthyl-{beta}-D-Glucoside in Peppermint (Mentha piperita) Rhizomes

Rodney Croteau, Virendar K. Sood, Britta Renstrøm and Ravi Bhushan2

Institute of Biological Chemistry, and Biochemistry/Biophysics Program, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164

Previous studies have shown that the monoterpene ketone l-[G-3H] menthone is reduced to the epimeric alcohols l-menthol and d-neomenthol in leaves of flowering peppermint (Mentha piperita L.), and that a portion of the menthol is converted to menthyl acetate while the bulk of the neomenthol is transformed to neomenthyl-{beta}-D-glucoside which is then transported to the rhizome (Croteau, Martinkus 1979 Plant Physiol 64: 169-175). Analysis of the disposition of l-[G-3H]menthone applied to midstem leaves of intact flowering plants allowed the kinetics of synthesis and transport of the monoterpenyl glucoside to be determined, and gave strong indication that the glucoside was subsequently metabolized in the rhizome. Studies with d-[G-3H]neomenthyl-{beta}-D-glucoside as substrate, using excised rhizomes or rhizome segments, confirmed the hydrolysis of the glucoside as an early step in metabolism at this site, and revealed that the terpenoid moiety was further converted to a series of ether-soluble, methanol-soluble, and water-soluble products. Studies with d-[G-3H]neomenthol as the substrate, using excised rhizomes, showed the subsequent metabolic steps to involve oxidation of the alcohol back to menthone, followed by an unusual lactonization reaction in which oxygen is inserted between the carbonyl carbon and the carbon bearing the isopropyl group, to afford 3,4-menthone lactone. The conversion of menthone to the lactone, and of the lactone to more polar products, were confirmed in vivo using l-[G-3H]menthone and l-[G-3H]-3,4-menthone lactone as substrates. Additional oxidation products were formed in vivo via the desaturation of labeled neomenthol and/or menthone, but none of these transformations appeared to lead to ring opening of the p-menthane skeleton. Each step in the main reaction sequence, from hydrolysis of neomenthyl glucoside to lactonization of menthone, was demonstrated in cell-free extracts from the rhizomes of flowering mint plants. The lactonization step is of particular significance in providing a means of cleaving the p-menthane ring to afford an acyclic carbon skeleton that can be further degraded by modifications of the well-known {beta}-oxidation sequence.


2 Present address: Department of Chemistry, University of Roorkee, Roorkee, India.

1 Supported in part by Department of Energy Contract DE-AM06-76RL02221, Agreement DE-AT06-82ER12027, and by grants from the Washington Mint Commission and Mint Industry Research Council. Scientific Paper No. 6838, Project 0268, College of Agriculture Research Center, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164.




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J. Gershenzon, M. E. McConkey, and R. B. Croteau
Regulation of Monoterpene Accumulation in Leaves of Peppermint
Plant Physiology, January 1, 2000; 122(1): 205 - 214.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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