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Wikipedia

Lupulone

Lupulone is an organic chemical compound with the molecular formula C26H38O4 and an appearance of a yellow powder which was historically used in beer brewing. However, recent studies have revealed numerous antibacterial and anti-cancer abilities of lupulone.[3]

Lupulone

Lupulone chemical structure
Names
IUPAC name
3,5-Dihydroxy-2,6,6-tris(3-methylbuten-2-yl)-4-(3-methyl-1-oxobutyl)cyclohexa-2,4-dien-1-one [1]
Identifiers
  • 468-28-0 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
6983327
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:6574
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL480267
ChemSpider
  • 13433819
ECHA InfoCard 100.006.734
EC Number
  • 207-405-3
KEGG
  • C10706
  • 68051
RTECS number
  • OK5950000
UNII
  • B7425USG94 Y
  • DTXSID00875553
  • InChI=1S/C26H38O4/c1-16(2)9-10-20-23(28)22(21(27)15-19(7)8)25(30)26(24(20)29,13-11-17(3)4)14-12-18(5)6/h9,11-12,19,28,30H,10,13-15H2,1-8H3
    Key: WPVSVIXDXMNGGN-UHFFFAOYSA-N[2]
  • O=C1C(/C\C=C(/C)C)=C(/O)\C(=C(\O)C1(C\C=C(/C)C)C\C=C(/C)C)C(=O)CC(C)C
Properties
C26H38O4
Molar mass 414.586 g·mol−1
Melting point 92–94 °C (198–201 °F; 365–367 K)
Boiling point 498 °C (928 °F; 771 K)
Insoluble
Acidity (pKa) 4.20
Hazards
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Health 1: Exposure would cause irritation but only minor residual injury. E.g. turpentineFlammability 2: Must be moderately heated or exposed to relatively high ambient temperature before ignition can occur. Flash point between 38 and 93 °C (100 and 200 °F). E.g. diesel fuelInstability 0: Normally stable, even under fire exposure conditions, and is not reactive with water. E.g. liquid nitrogenSpecial hazards (white): no code
1
2
0
Flash point 269°C
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).

History edit

Since lupulone is found as a component of hops, the history of the compound can be traced back to 736 AD in southern Germany where hops plant were first cultivated. The commercial production of using lupulone in brewing was not until 1079 AD. The reason that lupulone was not utilized in beer brewing earlier on may be due to the fact that the hops plants has a bitter taste. However, brewers began to realize that beta acids of hops provided very little bitterness to the beer. Eventually, hops brewing with the use of lupulone made its way to the United States about 6 centuries later in 1629 after England introduced it.[4]

Synthesis edit

A synthesis pathway of lupulone involves the alkenylation of 2-acylcyclohexane-1, 3, 5-triones with bromides and liquid ammonia in ether as a base, which yields 4,6,6-trialkenyl derivatives (β-acids)[5]

Lupulones are hops β-acids, which are one the main ingredients of hops resin. Hops are important for beer brewing because they provides the unique bitter taste, smell and foam stability of beer. More importantly, lupulones are a natural alternative to antibiotics for bioethanol production. The problem with lupulone is that it oxidizes easily, resulting in the loss of its antimicrobial activity. Lupulones are very reactive with 1-hydroxyethyl radicals, as shown by the free energy change for an electron-transfer reaction. 1-hydroxyethyl is a major radical species formed during beer brewing. The major products of this reaction were hydroxylated lupulone derivatives and 1-hydroxylethyl radicals. These results suggest that the prenyl side chains of hops β-acids are the reaction centers.[6][3]

 

Reactions edit

Lupolones are very reactive towards the 1-hydroxyethyl radical and are very oxidizable. Oxidation causes decomposition resulting in loss of the lupulone antimicrobial activity. The β-acid is less acidic and water solubule than the isomerized α-acids. The hop acids act as ionophores against Gram-positive bacteria, inhibiting their growth. This activity results from the hydrophobic interactions of prenyl groups present in a α- and β-acid structure with the bacterial cell walls.[6]

Uses edit

Derived from the cones of the female hop plant, lupulone is otherwise called a β-acid that contributes to the overall bitter flavor and aroma of beer along with α-acids. Both acids of the hops plant are added as the malted barley is boiled in water. This boiling process causes the bitter α-acids to go through thermal isomerization to form the extremely bitter taste of iso-α-acids. The β-acids, in this case lupulone, are oxidized during the boiling process to create products that also influence the taste and aroma of the beer but not as to a great extent as the α-acids. The bitterness of a brew greatly depends on the concentration of the α and β-acids, the amount of hops used and the length of time spent boiling.[7]

Lupulone also has an ability to control bacterial growth and be used in antibiotics. In past studies, lupulone has been shown to be important in controlling the growth of the bacteria Lactobacillus during fermentation as well as an antibiotic alternative in chickens. The antibiotic made from lupulone worked by inhibiting gastrointestinal levels of inoculated pathogenic clostridia within the chicken gastrointestinal tract. Lastly, lupulone has a rising use in antibiotics in the food industry as well as in bioethanol production.[6]

Another use of lupulone is its calming abilities in drugs. Studies show that extracts from the hop plant, Humulus lupulus, are now being used a phytomedicines in restlessness, sleep disorders and tenseness. The lupulone is combined with herbal drugs and passion flower to be used as sedating drugs.[8]

Lupulone has also been evaluated for anticancer activity against two specific breast cancer cell lines, MCF-7 and MDA-MB 231. Both natural and unnatural lupulone were evaluated. It was confirmed that unnatural lupulone derivatives were efficiently killing cancer cells through apoptosis. However, this process is time-dependent. Lupulone is somewhat challenging to work with since it undergoes aerial oxidation and solvent dependent keto-enol tautomerism. This limits the production of derivatives of lupulone since it is difficult to work with natural lupulone.[3]

In a somewhat similar study, lupulone was tested for its chemopreventive effects on a model of colon cancer. SW620 is a human metastatic colon carcinoma-derived cell line. After 48 hours of being exposed to lupulone, SW260 cell growth was inhibited by 70%. The expression of molecules that induce apoptosis were also up-regulated by lupulones. It was observed that lupulone resulted in an increase in mitochondrial membrane permeability. In an experiment where rats were treated with lupulones in their drinking water, there was a 70-80% reduction in the total number of tumors in the colon of the rats when compared to the control group. Since lupulones induced apoptosis in SW620 colon metastatic cells, it could possibly be a way to treat colon cancer.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/Chemicals/26000/24364.html
  2. ^ "Lupulone | C26H38O4 | ChemSpider".
  3. ^ a b c Tyrrell, Elizabeth; Archer, Roland; Tucknott, Matt; Colston, Kay; Pirianov, Grisha; Ramanthan, Dharahana; Dhillon, Rajdeep; Sinclair, Alex; Skinner, G.A. (March 2012). "The synthesis and anticancer effects of a range of natural and unnatural hop β-acids on breast cancer cells". Phytochemistry Letters. 5 (1): 144–149. Bibcode:2012PChL....5..144T. doi:10.1016/j.phytol.2011.11.011.
  4. ^ http://www.hopunion.com/14_Hops.cfm?p3=open
  5. ^ Collins, M.; Laws, D. R. J.; McGuinness, J. D.; Elvidge, J. A. (1971). "Chemistry of hop constituents. Part XXXVIII. Alkenylation of 2-acylcyclohexane-1,3,5-triones and further evidence concerning the fine structure of hop β-acids". J. Chem. Soc. C: 3814–3818. doi:10.1039/J39710003814.
  6. ^ a b c de Almeida, Natália E. C.; do Nascimento, Eduardo S. P.; Cardoso, Daniel R. (24 October 2012). "On the Reaction of Lupulones, Hops β-Acids, with 1-Hydroxyethyl Radical". Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 60 (42): 10649–10656. doi:10.1021/jf302708c. PMID 23031058.
  7. ^ Pyle, N. Norm Pyle’s Hop FAQ. http://realbeer.com/hops/FAQ.html (accessed 1-3-07). 4 Harris, D.C. Quantitative Chemical Analysis ,6th Edition; W.H. Freeman and Co.: New York, 2003: pp 734-739.
  8. ^ Schiller, H.; Forster, A.; Vonhoff, C.; Hegger, M.; Biller, A.; Winterhoff, H. (11 September 2006). "Sedating effects of Humulus lupulus L. extracts". Phytomedicine. 13 (8): 535–541. doi:10.1016/j.phymed.2006.05.010. PMID 16860977.
  9. ^ Lamy, Virginie; Roussi, Stamatiki; Chaabi, Mehdi; Gossé, Francine; Schall, Nicolas; Lobstein, Annelise; Raul, Francis (July 2007). "Chemopreventive effects of lupulone, a hop β-acid, on human colon cancer-derived metastatic SW620 cells and in a rat model of colon carcinogenesis". Carcinogenesis. 28 (7): 1575–1581. doi:10.1093/carcin/bgm080. PMID 17434926.

lupulone, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, assist, . This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lupulone is an organic chemical compound with the molecular formula C26H38O4 and an appearance of a yellow powder which was historically used in beer brewing However recent studies have revealed numerous antibacterial and anti cancer abilities of lupulone 3 Lupulone Lupulone chemical structureNamesIUPAC name 3 5 Dihydroxy 2 6 6 tris 3 methylbuten 2 yl 4 3 methyl 1 oxobutyl cyclohexa 2 4 dien 1 one 1 IdentifiersCAS Number 468 28 0 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageBeilstein Reference 6983327ChEBI CHEBI 6574ChEMBL ChEMBL480267ChemSpider 13433819ECHA InfoCard 100 006 734EC Number 207 405 3KEGG C10706PubChem CID 68051RTECS number OK5950000UNII B7425USG94 YCompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID00875553InChI InChI 1S C26H38O4 c1 16 2 9 10 20 23 28 22 21 27 15 19 7 8 25 30 26 24 20 29 13 11 17 3 4 14 12 18 5 6 h9 11 12 19 28 30H 10 13 15H2 1 8H3Key WPVSVIXDXMNGGN UHFFFAOYSA N 2 SMILES O C1C C C C C C C O C C O C1 C C C C C C C C C C C O CC C CPropertiesChemical formula C 26H 38O 4Molar mass 414 586 g mol 1Melting point 92 94 C 198 201 F 365 367 K Boiling point 498 C 928 F 771 K Solubility in water InsolubleAcidity pKa 4 20HazardsNFPA 704 fire diamond 120Flash point 269 CExcept where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa Infobox references Contents 1 History 2 Synthesis 3 Reactions 4 Uses 5 ReferencesHistory editSince lupulone is found as a component of hops the history of the compound can be traced back to 736 AD in southern Germany where hops plant were first cultivated The commercial production of using lupulone in brewing was not until 1079 AD The reason that lupulone was not utilized in beer brewing earlier on may be due to the fact that the hops plants has a bitter taste However brewers began to realize that beta acids of hops provided very little bitterness to the beer Eventually hops brewing with the use of lupulone made its way to the United States about 6 centuries later in 1629 after England introduced it 4 Synthesis editA synthesis pathway of lupulone involves the alkenylation of 2 acylcyclohexane 1 3 5 triones with bromides and liquid ammonia in ether as a base which yields 4 6 6 trialkenyl derivatives b acids 5 Lupulones are hops b acids which are one the main ingredients of hops resin Hops are important for beer brewing because they provides the unique bitter taste smell and foam stability of beer More importantly lupulones are a natural alternative to antibiotics for bioethanol production The problem with lupulone is that it oxidizes easily resulting in the loss of its antimicrobial activity Lupulones are very reactive with 1 hydroxyethyl radicals as shown by the free energy change for an electron transfer reaction 1 hydroxyethyl is a major radical species formed during beer brewing The major products of this reaction were hydroxylated lupulone derivatives and 1 hydroxylethyl radicals These results suggest that the prenyl side chains of hops b acids are the reaction centers 6 3 nbsp Reactions editLupolones are very reactive towards the 1 hydroxyethyl radical and are very oxidizable Oxidation causes decomposition resulting in loss of the lupulone antimicrobial activity The b acid is less acidic and water solubule than the isomerized a acids The hop acids act as ionophores against Gram positive bacteria inhibiting their growth This activity results from the hydrophobic interactions of prenyl groups present in a a and b acid structure with the bacterial cell walls 6 Uses editDerived from the cones of the female hop plant lupulone is otherwise called a b acid that contributes to the overall bitter flavor and aroma of beer along with a acids Both acids of the hops plant are added as the malted barley is boiled in water This boiling process causes the bitter a acids to go through thermal isomerization to form the extremely bitter taste of iso a acids The b acids in this case lupulone are oxidized during the boiling process to create products that also influence the taste and aroma of the beer but not as to a great extent as the a acids The bitterness of a brew greatly depends on the concentration of the a and b acids the amount of hops used and the length of time spent boiling 7 Lupulone also has an ability to control bacterial growth and be used in antibiotics In past studies lupulone has been shown to be important in controlling the growth of the bacteria Lactobacillus during fermentation as well as an antibiotic alternative in chickens The antibiotic made from lupulone worked by inhibiting gastrointestinal levels of inoculated pathogenic clostridia within the chicken gastrointestinal tract Lastly lupulone has a rising use in antibiotics in the food industry as well as in bioethanol production 6 Another use of lupulone is its calming abilities in drugs Studies show that extracts from the hop plant Humulus lupulus are now being used a phytomedicines in restlessness sleep disorders and tenseness The lupulone is combined with herbal drugs and passion flower to be used as sedating drugs 8 Lupulone has also been evaluated for anticancer activity against two specific breast cancer cell lines MCF 7 and MDA MB 231 Both natural and unnatural lupulone were evaluated It was confirmed that unnatural lupulone derivatives were efficiently killing cancer cells through apoptosis However this process is time dependent Lupulone is somewhat challenging to work with since it undergoes aerial oxidation and solvent dependent keto enol tautomerism This limits the production of derivatives of lupulone since it is difficult to work with natural lupulone 3 In a somewhat similar study lupulone was tested for its chemopreventive effects on a model of colon cancer SW620 is a human metastatic colon carcinoma derived cell line After 48 hours of being exposed to lupulone SW260 cell growth was inhibited by 70 The expression of molecules that induce apoptosis were also up regulated by lupulones It was observed that lupulone resulted in an increase in mitochondrial membrane permeability In an experiment where rats were treated with lupulones in their drinking water there was a 70 80 reduction in the total number of tumors in the colon of the rats when compared to the control group Since lupulones induced apoptosis in SW620 colon metastatic cells it could possibly be a way to treat colon cancer 9 References edit http ull chemistry uakron edu erd Chemicals 26000 24364 html Lupulone C26H38O4 ChemSpider a b c Tyrrell Elizabeth Archer Roland Tucknott Matt Colston Kay Pirianov Grisha Ramanthan Dharahana Dhillon Rajdeep Sinclair Alex Skinner G A March 2012 The synthesis and anticancer effects of a range of natural and unnatural hop b acids on breast cancer cells Phytochemistry Letters 5 1 144 149 Bibcode 2012PChL 5 144T doi 10 1016 j phytol 2011 11 011 http www hopunion com 14 Hops cfm p3 open Collins M Laws D R J McGuinness J D Elvidge J A 1971 Chemistry of hop constituents Part XXXVIII Alkenylation of 2 acylcyclohexane 1 3 5 triones and further evidence concerning the fine structure of hop b acids J Chem Soc C 3814 3818 doi 10 1039 J39710003814 a b c de Almeida Natalia E C do Nascimento Eduardo S P Cardoso Daniel R 24 October 2012 On the Reaction of Lupulones Hops b Acids with 1 Hydroxyethyl Radical Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 60 42 10649 10656 doi 10 1021 jf302708c PMID 23031058 Pyle N Norm Pyle s Hop FAQ http realbeer com hops FAQ html accessed 1 3 07 4 Harris D C Quantitative Chemical Analysis 6th Edition W H Freeman and Co New York 2003 pp 734 739 Schiller H Forster A Vonhoff C Hegger M Biller A Winterhoff H 11 September 2006 Sedating effects of Humulus lupulus L extracts Phytomedicine 13 8 535 541 doi 10 1016 j phymed 2006 05 010 PMID 16860977 Lamy Virginie Roussi Stamatiki Chaabi Mehdi Gosse Francine Schall Nicolas Lobstein Annelise Raul Francis July 2007 Chemopreventive effects of lupulone a hop b acid on human colon cancer derived metastatic SW620 cells and in a rat model of colon carcinogenesis Carcinogenesis 28 7 1575 1581 doi 10 1093 carcin bgm080 PMID 17434926 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lupulone amp oldid 1180941915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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