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  • Nonenzymatic acetolactate oxidation to diacetyl by flavin, nicotinamide and quinone coenzymes.

Nonenzymatic acetolactate oxidation to diacetyl by flavin, nicotinamide and quinone coenzymes.

Biochimica et biophysica acta (1995-12-14)
H S Park, R Xing, W B Whitman
ABSTRACT

Acetolactate nonenzymatically reduced flavins, quinones and nicotinamide coenzymes in a time-dependent manner at physiological pH and moderate temperature. In the presence of excess acetolactate, the reduction of FAD and NAD+ followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. The rate of reduction was proportional to the concentration of acetolactate, and the rate constants at 37 degrees C and pH 7.5 were 4.8 x 10(-2) M-1 s-1 and 7.4 x 10(-3) M-1 s-1 for FAD and NAD+, respectively. In contrast, ubiquinone reduction followed pseudo-zero-order kinetics in the presence of excess acetolactate. At 37 degrees C and pH 7.5, the rate of reduction was proportional to the acetolactate concentration, and the apparent rate constant was 8.3 x 10(-6) s-1. In contrast to FAD, the rate of reduction of ubiquinone was higher at low pH. The kinetics of ubiquinone reduction suggested that the rate-limiting step was acetolactate decarboxylation and formation of the enolate anion, whereas the rate of FAD reduction was governed by the second-order reaction of the enolate anion. Following the oxidation, acetolactate was converted to diacetyl. Reduced FAD formed by the reaction with acetolactate generated a low rate of O2 consumption during assays of the oxygenase activity of acetohydroxy acid synthase. The reaction of acetolactate with quinones may provide a mechanism for the nonenzymatic formation diacetyl in whole milk.

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Sigma-Aldrich
(±)-2-Acetoxypropionic acid, ≥97.0% (GC)