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Science 5 November 1965:
Vol. 150. no. 3697, pp. 766 - 767
DOI: 10.1126/science.150.3697.766

Articles

Trans-Aconitic Acid in Range Grasses in Early Spring

R. Burau 1 and P. R. Stout 1

1 Department of Soils and Plant Nutrition and Kearney Foundation of Soil Science, University of California, Davis

trans-Aconitate ion, an inhibitor of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, was identified in range grasses as trans-aconitic acid, which was isolated in crystalline form. It occurs in surprisingly high concentrations in early-season forage grasses. Dry-weight concentrations of trans-aconitate vary with season and species; concentrations of between I and 2.5 percent are common in mixed pasture grasses, but are higher in certain species such as Hordeum leporinum (3.5 percent) and Phalaris tuberosa var. stenoptera (4.2 percent). Leaves of western larkspur (Delphinium hesperium) contain 12.2 percent trans-aconitate. trans-Aconitate may be partially responsible for nutritional disorders, such as grass tetany (hypomagnesemia), that occur in grazing cattle in early spring.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
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A Novel Methyltransferase Catalyzes the Methyl Esterification of trans-Aconitate in Escherichia coli.
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