Glucoside

Glucoside
Chemical structure of decyl glucoside, a plant-derived glucoside used as a surfactant.

A glucoside is a glycoside that is derived from glucose. Glucosides are common in plants, but rare in animals. Glucose is produced when a glucoside is hydrolysed by purely chemical means, or decomposed by fermentation or enzymes.

The name was originally given to plant products of this nature, in which the other part of the molecule was, in the greater number of cases, an aromatic aldehydic or phenolic compound (exceptions are sinigrin and jalapin or scammonin). It has now been extended to include synthetic ethers, such as those obtained by acting on alcoholic glucose solutions with hydrochloric acid, and also the polysaccharoses, e.g. cane sugar, which appear to be ethers also. Although glucose is the most common sugar present in glucosides, many are known which yield rhamnose or iso-dulcite; these may be termed pentosides. Much attention has been given to the non-sugar parts (aglyca) of the molecules; the constitutions of many have been determined, and the compounds synthesized; and in some cases the preparation of the synthetic glucoside effected.

The simplest glucosides are the alkyl ethers which have been obtained by reacting hydrochloric acid on alcoholic glucose solutions. A better method of preparation is to dissolve solid anhydrous glucose in methanol containing hydrochloric acid. A mixture of alpha- and beta-methylglucoside results.

Classification of the glucosides is a matter of some intricacy. One method based on the chemical constitution of the non-glucose part of the molecules has been proposed that posits four groups: (I) alkyl derivatives, (2) benzene derivatives, (3) styrolene derivatives, and (4) anthracene derivatives. A group may also be constructed to include the cyanogenic glucosides, i.e. those containing prussic acid. Alternate classifications follow a botanical classification, which has several advantages; in particular, plants of allied genera contain similar compounds. In this article the chemical classification will be followed, and only the more important compounds will be discussed herein.

Contents

Ethylene Derivatives

These are generally mustard oils, which are characterized by a burning taste; their principal occurrence is in mustard and Tropaeolum seeds. Sinigrin, or the potassium salt of inyronic acid not only occurs in mustard seed[1] but also in black pepper and in horseradish root. Hydrolysis with baryta, or decomposition by the ferment myrosin, gives glucose, allyl mustard oil and potassium hydrogen sulfate. Sinalbin occurs in white pepper; it decomposes to the mustard oil, glucose and sinapin, a compound of choline and sinapic acid. Jalapin or scammonin occurs in scammony; it hydrolyses to glucose and jalapinolic acid.

Benzene Derivatives

These are generally oxy and oxyaldehydic compounds.

Benzoic acid derivatives

The benzoyl derivative cellotropin has been used for tuberculosis. Populin, which occurs in the leaves and bark of Populus tremula, is benzoyl salicin. Benzoyl-beta-D-glucoside is a compound found in Pteris ensiformis.

Phenol derivatives

There are a number of glucosides found in natural phenols and polyphenols, as, for example, in the flavonoids chemical family. Arbutin, which occurs in bearberry along with methyl arbutin, hydrolyses to hydroquinone and glucose. Pharmacologically it acts as a urinary antiseptic and diuretic; Salicin, also termed saligenin and glucose occurs in the willow. The enzymes ptyalin and emulsin convert it into glucose and saligenin, ortho-oxybenzylalcohol. Oxidation gives the aldehyde helicin.

Styrolene Derivatives

This group contains a benzene and also an ethylene group, being derived from styrolene. Coniferin, C16H22O8, occurs in the cambium[disambiguation needed ] of conifer wood. Emulsin converts it into glucose and coniferyl alcohol, while oxidation gives glycovanillin, which yields with emulsin, glucose and vanillin. Syringin, which occurs in the bark of Syringa vulgaris, is a methoxyconiferin. Phloridzus occurs in the root-bark of various fruit trees; it hydrolyses to glucose and phloretin, which is the phloroglucin ester of paraoxyhydratropic acid. It is related to the pentosides naringin, C27H32O14, which hydrolyses to rhamnose and naringenin, the phioroglucin ester of para-oxycinnamic acid, and hesperidin, which hydrolyses to rhamnose and hesperetin, the phloroglucin ester of meta-oxy-para-methoxycinnamic acid or isoferulic acid, C10H10O4.

  • Aesculin (C21H24O13), occurring in horse-chestnut and California buckeye,[2] and daphnin, occurring in Daphne alpina, are isomeric; the former hydrolyses to glucose and aesculetin (C9H6O4 — 6,7-dihydroxycoumarin), the latter to glucose and daphnetin (7,8-dihydroxycoumarin).
  • Fraxin, occurring in Fraxinus excelsior, and with aesculin, hydrolyses to glucose and fraxetin, 7,8-dihydroxy-6-methoxycoumarin.
  • Flavone or benzo-7-pyrone derivatives are numerous; in many cases they (or the non-sugar part of the molecule) are vegetable dyes.
  • Quercitrin is a yellow dyestuff found in Quercus velutina;[3] it hydrolyses to rhamnose and quercetin, a dioxy-~3-phenyl-trioxybenzoy-pyrone.
  • Rhamnetin, a splitting product of the glucosides of Rhamnus, is monomethyl quercetin; fisetin, from Rhus cotinus, is monoxyquercetin; chrysin is phenyl-dioxybenzo-y-pyrone.
  • Saponarin, a glucoside found in Saponaria officinalis, is a related compound.
  • Strophanthin is the name given to two different compounds, g-strophanthin (ouabain) obtained from Strophanthus gratus and k-strophanthin from Stroph. kombé.

Anthracene Derivatives

These are generally substituted anthraquinones; many have medicinal applications, being used as purgatives, while one, ruberythric acid, yields the valuable dyestuff madder, the base of which is alizarin. Chrysophanic acid, a dioxymethylanthraquinone, occurs in rhubarb, which also contains emodin, a trioxymethylanthraquinone; this substance occurs in combination with rhamnose in Frangula bark.

The most important cyanogenetic glucoside is amygdalin, which occurs in bitter almonds. The enzyme maltase decomposes it into glucose and mandelic nitrile glucoside; the latter is broken down by emulsin into glucose, benzaldehyde and prussic acid. Emulsin also decomposes amygdalin directly into these compounds without the intermediate formation of mandelic nitrile glucoside.

Several other glucosides of this nature have been isolated. The saponins are a group of substances characterized by forming a lather with water; they occur in soap-bark. Mention may also be made of indican, the glucoside of the indigo plant; this is hydrolysed by the indigo ferment, indimulsiri, to indoxyl and indiglucin.

Line notes

  1. ^ Jen-Fon Jen, Tsai-Hung Lina, Jenn-Wen Huang and Wen-Chuan Chung (2001) Direct determination of sinigrin in mustard seed without desulfatation by reversed-phase ion-pair liquid chromatography, Journal of Chromatography A, Volume 996, Issues 1-2, 9 May 2003, Pages 85-93, Published by Elsevier Science B.V.
  2. ^ C. Michael Hogan. 2008. Aesculus californica, Globaltwitcher.com, ed. N. Stromberg [1]
  3. ^ Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (1948) v.37

References

M Brito-Arias Synthesis and Characterization of Glycosides editorial Springer 2007


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • glucoside — [ glykozid ] n. m. • 1859; de glucose et ide ♦ Hist. des sc., biochim. Substance d origine végétale constituée de glucose lié à une fraction non glucidique. La saponine, la salicine sont des glucosides. ⇒ hétéroside, holoside. ● glucoside nom… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Glucoside — Glu co*side, n. [See {Glucose}.] (Chem.) One of a large series of amorphous or crystalline substances, occurring very widely distributed in plants, rarely in animals, and regarded as influental agents in the formation and disposition of the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Glucoside —   Plural, Glykoside, die Glucose als Zuckerkomponente enthalten …   Universal-Lexikon

  • glucoside — [glo͞o′kə sīd΄] n. [ GLUCOS(E) + IDE] 1. former term for GLYCOSIDE 2. a glycoside whose sugar constituent is glucose glucosidic [glo͞o΄kəsid′ik] adj …   English World dictionary

  • Glucoside — Als Glucoside bezeichnet man eine Gruppe von organischen Substanzen, bei welchen ein Alkohol oder Phenol (R OH) über eine glycosidische Bindung an Glucose gebunden ist. Es handelt sich somit um eine Untergruppe der Glycoside.[1] Glucoside spalten …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Glucoside — Un glucoside est un hétéroside dérivé du glucose. Portail de la chimie Portail de la …   Wikipédia en Français

  • glucoside — A compound of glucose with an alcohol or other R–OH compound involving loss of the H atom of the 1 OH (hemiacetal) group of the glucose, yielding a –C–O–R link from the C 1 of the glucose; a glycoside of glucose. * * * glu·co·side glü kə .sīd n …   Medical dictionary

  • glucoside — gliukozidas statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis Gliukozės glikozidas. atitikmenys: angl. glucoside rus. глюкозид …   Chemijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • Glucoside 3-dehydrogenase — In enzymology, a glucoside 3 dehydrogenase (EC number|1.1.99.13) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction:sucrose + acceptor ightleftharpoons 3 dehydro alpha D glucosyl beta D fructofuranoside + reduced acceptorThus, the two substrates… …   Wikipedia

  • glucoside — noun Date: 1855 glycoside; especially a glycoside that yields glucose on hydrolysis • glucosidic adjective …   New Collegiate Dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”