Plant Physiology 43:93-98 (1968)
© 1968 American Society of Plant Biologists
Articles
Phytochemical Studies on the Tobacco Alkaloids. XII. Identification of -Methylaminobutyraldehyde and its Precursor Role in Nicotine Biosynthesis
Shigenobu Mizusaki,
Takuro Kisaki1 and
Einosuke Tamaki
a Division of Plant Biochemistry, Central Research Institute, Japan Monopoly Corporation, 1-28-3, Nishishinagawa, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo, Japan
-Methylaminobutyraldehyde (N-methylpyrroline) labeled with 14C was isolated from tobacco roots which had metabolized ornithine-2-14C. It was labeled most strongly 4 hours after adding ornithine-2-14C to the root, also labeled by putrescine-1,4-14C and methionine-14CH3, and observed in the root but not in the aerial portions of tobacco plants. -Methyl-aminobutyraldehyde when added back to the root was an efficient precursor of nicotine. Identity of -methylaminobutyraldehyde from tobacco roots was confirmed by comparison with the authentic compound.
The existence of -methylaminobutyraldehyde (N-methylpyrroline) in the biosynthetic pathway of nicotine indicates that the methyl group must be introduced before condensation of the pyridine moiety with the pyrrolidine moiety.
1 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, until fall of 1968, thereafter the Central Research Institute, Japan Monopoly Corporation, Tokyo, Japan.
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A. Katoh, T. Shoji, and T. Hashimoto
Molecular Cloning of N-methylputrescine Oxidase from Tobacco
Plant Cell Physiol.,
March 1, 2007;
48(3):
550 - 554.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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