In barley leaves, the application of jasmonates leads to dramatic alterations of gene expression. Among the up-regulated gene products lipoxygenases occur abundantly. Here, at least four of them were identified as 13-lipoxygenases exhibiting acidic pH optima between pH 5.0 and 6.5. (13S,9Z,11E,15Z)-13-hydroxy-9,11,15-octadecatrienoic acid was found to be the main endogenous lipoxygenase-derived polyenoic fatty acid derivative indicating 13-lipoxygenase activity in vivo. Moreover, upon methyl jasmonate treatment . 78% of the fatty acid hydroperoxides are metabolized by hydroperoxide lyase activity resulting in the endogenous occurrence of volatile aldehydes. (2E)-4-Hydroxy-2-hexenal, hexanal and (3Z)-plus (2E)-hexenal were identified as 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazones using HPLC and identification was confirmed by GC/MS analysis. This is the first proof that (2E)-4-hydroxy-2-hexenal is formed in plants under physiological conditions. Quantification of (2E)-4-hydroxy-2-hexenal, hexanal and hexenals upon methyl jasmonate treatment of barley leaf segments revealed that hexenals were the major aldehydes peaking at 24 h after methyl jasmonate treatment. Their endogenous content increased from 1.6 nmol´g 21 fresh weight to 45 nmol´g 21 fresh weight in methyl-jasmonate-treated leaf segments, whereas (2E)-4-hydroxy-2-hexenal, peaking at 48 h of methyl jasmonate treatment increased from 9 to 15 nmol´g 21 fresh weight. Similar to the hexenals, hexanal reached its maximal amount 24 h after methyl jasmonate treatment, but increased from 0.6 to 3.0 nmol´g 21 fresh weight. In addition to the classical leaf aldehydes, (2E)-4-hydroxy-2-hexenal was detected, thereby raising the question of whether it functions in the degradation of chloroplast membrane constituents, which takes place after methyl jasmonate treatment.
There is large interest in 4-hydroxy-(2E)-alkenals because of their cytotoxicity in mammals. However, the biosynthetic pathway for these compounds has not been elucidated yet. In plants, 4-hydroxy-(2E)-alkenals were supposed to be derived by the subsequent actions of lipoxygenase and a peroxygenase on (3Z)-alkenals. The presence of 9-hydroxy-12-oxo-(10E)-dodecenoic acid (9-hydroxy-traumatin) in incubations of 12-oxo-(9Z)-dodecenoic acid (traumatin) in the absence of lipoxygenase or peroxygenase, has prompted us to reinvestigate its mode of formation. We show here that in vitro 9-hydroxy-traumatin, 4-hydroxy-(2E)-hexenal and 4-hydroxy-(2E)-nonenal, are formed in a nonenzymatic process. Furthermore, a novel product derived from traumatin was observed and identified as 11-hydroxy-12-oxo-(9Z)-dodecenoic acid. The results obtained here strongly suggest that the 4-hydroxy-(2E)-alkenals, observed in crude extracts of plants, are mainly due to autoxidation of (3Z)-hexenal, (3Z)-nonenal and traumatin. This may have implications for the in vivo existence and previously proposed physiological significance of these products in plants.
A particular isoform of lipoxygenase (LOX) localized on lipid bodies was shown by earlier investigations to play a role in initiating the mobilization of triacylglycerols during seed germination. Here, further physiological functions of LOXs within whole cotyledons of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) were analyzed by measuring the endogenous amounts of LOX-derived products. The lipid-body LOX-derived esterified (13 S)-hydroperoxy linoleic acid was the dominant metabolite of the LOX pathway in this tissue. It accumulated to about 14 micromol/g fresh weight, which represented about 6% of the total amount of linoleic acid in cotyledons. This LOX product was not only reduced to its hydroxy derivative, leading to degradation by beta-oxidation, but alternatively it was metabolized by fatty acid hydroperoxide lyase leading to formation of hexanal as well. Furthermore, the activities of LOX forms metabolizing linolenic acid were detected by measuring the accumulation of volatile aldehydes and the allene oxide synthase-derived metabolite jasmonic acid. The first evidence is presented for an involvement of a lipid-body LOX form in the production of volatile aldehydes.
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