The seed oil of Rindera oblongifolia
Article
First Online:
Received:
- 24 Downloads
Summary
The oil of the seeds ofRindera oblongifolia, family Boraginaceae, growing in Central Asia, has been studied for the first time. Among the acids of the triglycerides of the oil five types of monoenoic acid differing by the length of the carbon chain but having the same length of the terminal carbon chain — 18:19, 20:111, 22:113, 24:115, and 26:117 — have been detected for the first time. This is the first time that the last of these acids has been found in a seed oil of this family.
Keywords
Methyl Ester Dicarboxylic Acid Adipic Acid Monoenoic Acid Ethylenic BondPreview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Literature cited
- 1.C. R. Smith, J. W. Hageman, and I. A. Wolff, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,41, 290 (1964).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 2.H. Wagner and H. König, Biochem. J.,339, 212 (1963).Google Scholar
- 3.B. M. Craig and M. K. Bhatty, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,41, 209 (1964).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 4.R. Kleiman, F. R. Earle, I. A. Wolff, and Q. Jones, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,41, 459 (1964).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 5.E. C. M. Coxworth, J. Am. Oil. Chemists' Soc.,42, 891 (1965).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 6.F. R. Earle, E. H. Melvin, L. H. Mason, C. H. van Etten, I. A. Wolff, and Q. Jones, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,36, 304 (1959).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 7.V. M. Dil'man, I. S. Kozhina, L. A. Klyuchnikova, P. N. Kibal'chich, and Yu. Yu. Kusov, Voprosy Onkologii,14, No. 7, 86 (1968).Google Scholar
- 8.E. Rudloff, Can. J. Chem.,34, 1413 (1956).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 9.E. Rudloff, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,33, 126 (1956).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 10.A. P. Tulloch and B. M. Craig, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,41, 322 (1964).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 11.É. I. Gigienova, A. L. Markman, and A. U. Umarov, Technical and Economic Information, Series: Methods of Analysis and the Control of Production in the Chemical Industry [in Russian], No. 3, NIITÉKhIM (1970), p. 5.Google Scholar
- 12.R. G. Ackman, J. Am. Oil Chemists' Soc.,40, 558, 564 (1963).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 13.J. K. Haken, J. Chromatogr.,23, 375 (1966).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 14.É. I. Gigienova and A. U. Umarov, Technical and Economic Information, Series: Methods of Analysis and the Control of Production in the Chemical Industry [in Russian], No.10, NIITÉKhIM (1973), p. 9.Google Scholar
- 15.É. I. Gigienova and A. U. Umarov, Technical and Economic Information, Series: Methods of Analysis and the Control of Production in the Chemical Industry [in Russian], No.9, NIITÉKhIM (1974), p. 36.Google Scholar
- 16.H. Burchfield and E. Storrs, Biochemical Applications of Gas Chromatography, Academic Press (1962).Google Scholar
- 17.B. Laker, Paint Manufact.34, No. 12, 42 (1964).Google Scholar
- 18.R. G. Ackman and R. D. Burgher, J. Chromatogr.,11, 185 (1963).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Copyright information
© Plenum Publishing Corporation 1977