Planta Med 1989; 55(6): 523-524
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-962085
Papers

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Effects of Exogenous Polyamines on Tropane Alkaloid Production by a Root Culture of Duboisia myoporoides

Toshihiro Yoshioka1 , Hikaru Yamagata1 , Aya Ithoh1 , Horoshi Deno1 , Yasuhiro Fujita1 , Yasuyuki Yamada2
  • 1Bioscience Research Laboratories, Mitsui Petrochemical Industries, Ltd., 6-1-2 Waki-cho, Kuga-gun, Yamaguchi-ken, 740, Japan
  • 2Research Center for Cell and Tissue Culture, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606, Japan
Further Information

Publication History

1988

Publication Date:
24 January 2007 (online)

Abstract

The addition of putrescine, a precursor of tropane alkaloids, to the culture medium increased scopolamine production of Duboisia myoporoides R. Br. (Solanaceae) roots (RB-1), whereas, other precursors (ornithine, arginine, and tropine) increased the content of scopolamine only slightly or not at all. Spermidine, a natural polyamine and a direct metabolite of putrescine, increased the scopolamine content of the cultured roots to the same degree as putrescine increased it. High scopolamine root contents were obtained in media supplemented with 3 mM putrescine (0.96%) and 3 mM spermidine (0.94%), whereas spermine decreased scopolamine production. The putrescine analogues diaminomethane, diaminoethane, diaminopropane, and cadaverine also increased the scopolamine content of the Duboisia root culture from 0.56% to the respective values of 0.86%, 0.90%, 1.06%, and 1.04%. Other diamines with long alkyl chains and agmatine did not increase scopolamine production.

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