Taxonomic group: plant / Streptophyta
(Phylum: Streptophyta)
NCBI PubMed ID: 10995367Publication DOI: 10.1021/jf000147+Journal NLM ID: 0374755Publisher: American Chemical Society
Correspondence: inger.wahlberg

swedishmatch.se
Institutions: Research & Analysis, Swedish Match, Stockholm, Sweden
The ability of 20 compounds, all but one tobacco constituents, to inhibit the formation of tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines (TSNA) was investigated in buffer and detergent solution and in tobacco midrib and lamina systems. In solution at pH 5.5, ascorbic acid and the phenolic acids caffeic and ferulic acid were the most potent inhibitors of the reaction between nornicotine and nitrite, with nearly complete inhibition at molar ratios test compound/nitrite > 1:1. Also, cysteine > dihydrocaffeic acid > protocatechuic acid approximately catechin acted as strong inhibitors with >90% inhibition at a ratio of 3:1. Lower inhibitions were observed with chlorogenic acid > p-coumaric acid > sclareol > serine. Rutin showed an inhibition of 34% at a ratio of 0.1:1. Sclareol, alanine, proline, and serine did not significantly affect the N-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) formation. alpha-Tocopherol and glutathione enhanced NNN formation at pH 5.5 but were inhibitors at pH 3. Cinnamic acid, vanillic acid, eugenol, and esculin enhanced NNN formation. Increased NNN formation was also observed for dihydrocaffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, protocatechuic acid, and catechin at a less-than-equimolar ratio of test compound to nitrite. The tobacco matrix experiments were performed with air-cured, ground tobacco midrib and lamina. Caffeic acid, ferulic acid, dihydrocaffeic acid and catechin were potent inhibitors of the formation of TSNA in the midrib as well as in the lamina. Also protocatechuic acid, glutathione, ascorbic acid, p-coumaric acid, chlorogenic acid and cysteine were inhibitors, while alpha-tocopherol and rutin inhibited the reaction in the midrib but not in the lamina. Cinnamic acid, vanillic acid, eugenol, alanine, proline and serine showed small effects only. The molar ratio of secondary alkaloid(s)/nitrite in the test systems were 0.1:1 (solution), approximately 0.25:1 (midrib), and approximately 1:1 (lamina) and is most likely the major contributor to the observed order of inhibition potency (solution > midrib > lamina) of the test compounds. The vicinal phenolic hydroxyl groups of polyphenols and the simultaneous presence of a phenol group and an olefinic bond in hydroxycinnamic acids were the most characteristic structural elements of the potent inhibitors.
Tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines; nitrosation; nornicotine; secondary alkaloids; nitrite scavengers; ascorbic acid; R-tocopherol; phenolic acids; flavonoids; coumarins, amino acids; tobacco matrix; midrib; lamina
Structure type: oligomer
C
27H
30O
16Location inside paper: p. 4382, Fig. 1, rutin
Trivial name: rutin, rutoside, rutin, quercetin rutinoside, rutoside, quercetin 3-O-rutinose, quercetin-3-O-rutinoside, quercetin 3-O-rutinoside
Compound class: saponin glycoside, glycoside, flavonoid glycoside, flavonol glycoside, flavone glycoside
Contained glycoepitopes: IEDB_136105,IEDB_142488,IEDB_144144,IEDB_146664,IEDB_225177,IEDB_885823,IEDB_983931,SB_192
Methods: biological assays
Related record ID(s): 67527, 67528
NCBI Taxonomy refs (TaxIDs): 4097Reference(s) to other database(s): CCSD:
50720, CBank-STR:3399
Show glycosyltransferases
There is only one chemically distinct structure: