The discussion in this chapter will be limited to the mineral or inorganic constituents. This eliminates Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen. Sulfur and Phosphorus are usually included among the inorganic constituents although a certain portion of these two elements may exist in organic compounds and may be lost in conventional methods for determining ash content of plant materials.
In table 11 will be found the results of chemical analysis of the whole corn plant. It is apparent that the mineral elements do not comprise a very large proportion of the plant. Total ash of plants may vary roughly from 1 to 15 per cent of the dry weight. Fleshy fruits and woody tissues are usually very low in minerals, often containing 1 per cent or less of ash. Both qualitative and quantitative composition of plants or plant tissues may vary with environmental conditions.
A study of the inorganic constituents of plants should be of interest to research workers in several fields, such as nutrition medicine and others, because plants constitute direct or indirect sources of many of the elements which are essential to animals, including man. We shall therefore discuss several of the mineral elements, indicating either the compound or the part of the plant where one can expect to find a particular element. And, where possible we shall indicate the plants or plant organs which tend to accumulate certain elements.
Table 13 contains a list of the elements essential to plants and those essential to animals. Ten of those (Cu, Ca, Mg, K, P, S, Fe, Mn, Zn and Cl), are required by both types organisms. But in addition to these ten there are two, B and Mo, required by plants, and five others, Na, Co, I, and Si, which are required by animals. Two borderline cases (Cl and Co [both of these are required to make vitamins for humans]) are extremely interesting. In view of the work of Broyer and associates we have added Chlorine to the list of elements essential to plants.
Digestive enzymes are typical of this group. They catalyze such reactions as the hydrolysis of starches to sugar, fats to fatty acids and glycerol, proteins to polypeplides and amino acids.
Desmolyzing enzymes catalyze reactions other than hydrolyzing. They play dominant roles in the chemical reactions involved in respiration and fermentation. They catalyze the breaking of linkages between Carbon atoms. The addition of an atom or an atomic group to a molecule or the removal of an atomic or atom from the molecule, and the shifting of atoms or groups from one part of a molecule to another part. Those enzymes that have been isolated, have been found to be proteins. More than 67 enzymes have been isolated studied. [As of publishing date] Copper, Iron, Manganese, Zinc are constituents of enzymes. Ascorbic acid oxidase is a Copper protein.
Indole-3-acetic acid is a naturally occurring growth regulator. This compound is active in inducing root formation.
Unsaturated fatty acids which are often found in natural fats are Linoleic (C18H32O2), Linolenic (C18H30O2) and Erucic (C22H42O2). Linolenic and Linoleic acids are essential to man.
Essential Oils ordinarily occur in localized regions of the plant. Marked quantities of essential oils are produced by roughly 2000 species of plants. It is possible that all known species are capable of producing volative oils to some extent.
The biochemical significance of essential oils to plants is not clearly understood. Many of these oils are attractive to insects and thereby assure cross-fertilization in plants. Others are repugnant to animals and in this manner serve to preserve the plants from extinction. But, it is in the economy of man that essential oils have come to play an important role. Many are employed for flavoring of foods, beverages, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and tobacco. In addition, essential oils find extensive use in medicine as local stimulants, mild antiseptics, local irritants, parasiticides, sedative, urinary antiseptics, diuretics and antiemetics.
II. Water-soluble or vacular pigments
Structurally both molecules consist of four pyrrole rings with an atom of Magnesium (Mg) in the center. (B) differs from (A) in having a CHO group in place of a CH3 radical. They are both methytphyty esters of a complex acid called Chlorophyllin.
So far as it is known chlorophyll (A) is present in all photosynthetic organisms except green and purple bacteria. Chlorophyll (B) occurs in higher plants and in green algae, But is not present in most other algae. Several other types chlorophyll are now known. Chlorophyll (C) has been reported in diatoms and brown algae which do not contain chlorophyll (B). Red algae contain a fourth type of chlorophyll (D), but no (B). Bacterioxhlorophyll is found in purple bacteria. Bactercoviridin is the pigment which occurs in green bacteria and is similar to the chlorophylls. All these pigments contain magnesium. All the chlorophylls possess the property of fluorescence, i.e. when illuminated, they re-radiate light of wavelengths other than those absorbed. Thus an alcoholic solution of chlorophyll (A) is green by transmitted light and deep blood red by reflected light. Ether solutions of both chlorophylls (A) and (B) exhibit maximum absorption in the blue violet region and a secondary maximum in the short red. It was found that the wavelengths of light most efficient in bringing about the destruction of carotenoids were the same wavelenghts that are most strongly absorbed by protochtorophyll the final precursor of chlorophyll
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