| Literature DB >> 17462701 |
Lucian Copolovici1, Ulo Niinemets.
Abstract
Foliar emission rates of plant-generated volatile monoterpenes depend on monoterpene partitioning between air, aqueous and lipid-phases in the leaves. While Henry's law constants (H pc, equilibrium gas/water partition coefficient) and octanol/water partition coefficients (K OW) for pure water have been previously used to simulate monoterpene emissions from the leaves, aqueous phase in plants is a complex solution of electrolytes and neutral osmotica. We studied the effects of dissociated compounds KCl and glycine and sugars glucose, sorbitol and sucrose with concentrations between 0 and 1M on H pc and K OW values for limonene and linalool. Linalool with ca. 1500-fold lower H(pc) (2.62 Pa m(3)mol(-1) for pure water at 30 degrees C) and ca. 30-fold lower K OW (955 mol mol(-1) for pure water at 25 degrees C) is the more hydrophilic compound of the two monoterpenes. H pc of both monoterpenes increased with increasing concentration of both ionic compounds and sorbitol, but decreased with increasing glucose and sucrose concentrations. The salting-out coefficients for H pc (kH) were ca. an order of magnitude larger for more hydrophilic compound linalool than for more hydrophobic limonene. For linalool, co-solutes modified H pc by 30-50% at the highest concentration (1M) tested. The effect of temperature on the salting-out coefficient of KCl was minor. As with H pc, K OW increased with increasing the concentration of KCl, glycine and sorbitol, and decreased with increasing glucose and sucrose concentrations. For limonene, co-solutes modified K OW by 20-50% at the highest concentration used. For linalool, the corresponding range was 10-35%. Salting-out coefficients for H pc and K OW were correlated, but the lipid-solubility was more strongly affected than aqueous solubility in the case of limonene. Overall, these data demonstrate physiologically important effects of co-solutes on H pc and K OW for hydrophilic monoterpenes and on K OW for hydrophobic monoterpenes that should be included in current emission models.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17462701 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2007.02.066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086