лупа
Search Loader

Alan Crozier & Mike N. Clifford 
Plant Secondary Metabolites 
Occurrence, Structure and Role in the Human Diet

поддержка
Plant secondary metabolites have been a fertile area of chemical investigation for many years, driving the development of both analytical chemistry and of new synthetic reactions and methodologies. The subject is multi-disciplinary with chemists, biochemists and plant scientists all contributing to our current understanding. In recent years there has been an upsurge in interest from other disciplines, related to the realisation that secondary metabolites are dietary components that may have a considerable impact on human health, and to the development of gene technology that permits modulation of the contents of desirable and undesirable components.

Plant Secondary Metabolites: Occurrence, Structure and Role in the Human Diet addresses this wider interest by covering the main groups of natural products from a chemical and biosynthetic perspective with illustrations of how genetic engineering can be applied to manipulate levels of secondary metabolites of economic value as well as those of potential importance in diet and health. These descriptive chapters are augmented by chapters showing where these products are found in the diet, how they are metabolised and reviewing the evidence for their beneficial bioactivity.
€196.99
Способы оплаты

Содержание

Contributors.

1 Phenols, Polyphenols and Tannins: An Overview (Alan Crozier, Indu B. Jaganath and Michael N. Clifford).

1.1 Introduction.

1.2 Classification of phenolic compounds.

1.3 Biosynthesis.

1.4 Genetic engineering of the flavonoid biosyntheticpathway.

1.5 Databases.

2 Sulphur-Containing Compounds (Richard Mithen).

2.1 Introduction.

2.2 The glucosinolates-myrosinase system.

2.3 Chemical diversity of glucosinolates in dietarycrucifers.

2.4 Biosynthesis.

2.5 Genetic factors affecting glucosinolate content.

2.6 Environmental factors affecting glucosinolate content.

2.7 Myrosinases and glucosinolate hydrolysis.

2.8 Hydrolytic products.

2.9 Metabolism and detoxification of isothiocyanates.

2.10 The Alliin-alliinase system.

2.11 Biological activity of sulphur-containing compounds.

2.12 Anti-nutritional effects in livestock and humans.

2.13 Beneficial effects of sulphur-containing compounds in thehuman diet.

3 Terpenes (Andrew J. Humphrey and Michael H.Beale).

3.1 Introduction.

3.2 The biosynthesis of IPP and DMAPP.

3.3 Enzymes of terpene biosynthesis.

3.4 Isoprenoid biosynthesis in the plastids.

3.5 Isoprenoid biosynthesis in the cytosol.

3.6 Terpenes in the environment and human health: futureprospects.

4 Alkaloids (Katherine G. Zulak, David K. Liscombe, Hiroshi Ashihara and Peter J. Facchini).

4.1 Introduction.

4.2 Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids.

4.3 Tropane alkaloids.

4.4 Nicotine.

4.5 Terpenoid indole alkaloids.

4.6 Purine alkaloids.

4.7 Pyrrolizidine alkaloids.

4.8 Other alkaloids.

4.9 Metabolic engineering.

5 Acetylenes and Psoralens (Lars P. Christensen and Kirsten Brandt).

5.1 Introduction.

5.2 Acetylenes in common food plants.

5.3 Psoralens in common food plants.

5.4 Perspectives in relation to food safety.

6. Functions of the Human Intestinal Flora: The Use of Probiotics and Prebiotics (Kieran M. Tuohy and Glenn R.Gibson).

6.1 Introduction.

6.2 Composition of the gut microflora.

6.3 Successional development and the gut microflora in oldage.

6.4 Modulation of the gut microflora through dietary means.

6.5 In vitro and in vivo measurement of microbialactivities.

6.6 Molecular methodologies for assessing microflorachanges.

6.7 Assessing the impact of dietary modulation of the gutmicroflora-does it improve health, what are the likelihoods forsuccess and what are the biomarkers of efficacy?

6.8 Justification for the use of probiotics and prebiotics tomodulate the gut flora composition.

7 Secondary Metabolites in Fruits, Vegetables, Beverages and Other Plant-Based Dietary Components (Alan Crozier, Takao Yokota, Indu B. Jaganath, Serena Marks, Michael Saltmarsh and Michael N. Clifford).

7.1 Introduction.

7.2 Dietary phytochemicals.

7.3 Vegetables.

7.4 Fruits.

7.5 Herbs and spices.

7.6 Cereals.

7.7 Nuts.

7.8 Algae.

7.9 Beverages.

7.10 Databases.

8 Absorption and Metabolism of Dietary Plant Secondary Metabolites (Jennifer L. Donovan, Claudine Manach, Richard M. Faulks and Paul A. Kroon).

8.1 Introduction.

8.2 Flavonoids.

8.3 Hydroxycinnamic acids.

8.4 Gallic acid and ellagic acid.

8.5 Dihydrochalcones.

8.6 Betalains.

8.7 Glucosinolates.

8.8 Carotenoids.

8.9 Conclusions.

Index.

Об авторе

Alan Crozier is Professor of Plant Biochemistry and Human
Nutrition in the Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences at the
University of Glasgow, UK, Mike Clifford is Professor of Food
Safety in the School of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences at the
University of Surrey, UK, and Hiroshi Ashihara is Professor of
Plant Biochemistry in the Department of Biology at Ochanomizu
University, Tokyo, Japan.

Contributors to the book:

Dr Michael H Beale

Dr Kirsten Brandt

Dr Lars P Christensen

Dr Jennifer L Donovan

Professor Peter J Facchini

Dr Richard M Faulks

Professor Glenn R Gibson

Dr Andrew J Humphrey

Dr Indu B Jaganath

Dr Paul A Kroon

Dr David K Liscombe

Dr Claudine Manach

Dr Serena Marks

Professor Richard Mithen

Dr Michael Saltmarsh

Dr Kieran M Tuohy

Dr Takao Yokota

Dr Katherine G Zulak
язык английский ● Формат PDF ● страницы 384 ● ISBN 9780470994139 ● Размер файла 8.9 MB ● редактор Alan Crozier & Mike N. Clifford ● издатель John Wiley & Sons ● опубликованный 2008 ● Издание 1 ● Загружаемые 24 месяцы ● валюта EUR ● Код товара 2327306 ● Защита от копирования Adobe DRM
Требуется устройство для чтения электронных книг с поддержкой DRM

Больше книг от того же автора (ов) / редактор

6 770 Электронные книги в этой категории