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Indoleacetic acid origin

Important indole derivatives (see Scheme 2) include (i) indigo, a vat dye known and widely used since antiquity, and originally obtained from indican, a (3-glucoside of indoxyl which occurs in some plants. Indigo is now prepared synthetically. Tyrian purple, a natural dye used since classical times, is 6,6 -dibromoindigo (ii) the numerous indole alkaloids, with complex derivatives such as yohimbine and strychnine (iii) tryptophan, an essential amino acid found in most proteins. Its metabolites include skatole and tryptamine and (iv) 3-indoleacetic acid, which is important as a plant growth hormone. [Pg.57]

Tryptophan can be converted to indolepyruvic acid either by oxidative deamination or by transamination (e.g., 739, 912) and the indolepyruvic acid can give rise to indoleacetic acid. The fate of indoleacetic acid formed by the bacterial flora of the mammalian gut is discussed below. Bacterial indolelactic acid (e.g., 757) is presumably derived from indolepyruvic acid, but indolelactic acid excreted by mammals (e.g. 17) may be of true mammalian rather than bacterial origin. Indolepropionic acid can also be formed by bacteria (e.g., 412, 633), but further metabolism in mammals of any indolepropionic acid formed in the gut is still obscure (904). Skatole (3-methylindole) has long been known as a product of bacterial decomposition of protein and is formed from tryptophan not only by the bacterial flora of the gut but also in putrefying secretions, e.g., sputum (756). It may well arise by decarboxylation of indoleacetic acid. [Pg.109]

Sequeira, L. Origin of indoleacetic acid in tobacco plants infected by Psuedontonas solanacearum. Phytopathology 55 (1965) 1232-1236. [Pg.1449]

Investigations of indolic auxin metabolism in plants have centered about attempts to understand plant growth regulation. As a consequence, factors which limit the concentration of indoleacetic acid in plant tissue have received the most attention. These include its S3mthesis, its catabolism, and its removal from the site of action by other means. This will also provide a convenient division for discussion here. Full reference to the original work has been provided elsewhere. ... [Pg.124]


See other pages where Indoleacetic acid origin is mentioned: [Pg.142]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.165]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.110 ]




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