Further researches upon the inhibiting action of lycorine on ascorbic acid biosynthesis
- PMID: 2096880
Further researches upon the inhibiting action of lycorine on ascorbic acid biosynthesis
Abstract
Lycorine, an alkaloid extracted from Amarillidaceae, strongly inhibits the "in vivo" conversion of galactono-gamma-lactone to ascorbic acid. Lycorine seems to act as a non-competitive inhibitor on galactono-gamma-lactone oxidase, because the alkaloid rapidly forms a stable bound with the enzyme. In fact, a short incubation period with 50 microM lycorine gets a high inhibitory effect that persists when the alkaloid is removed from the incubation medium. Considering that lycorine induces scurvy-like symptoms in ascorbic acid-synthesising animals, it is reasonable to suppose that in both plants and animals lycorine inhibits the last step in the biosynthetic pathway leading from sugar to ascorbate.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Medical