Abstract

The ring hydroxylation of m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol to gentisyl alcohol by a particulate preparation from Penicillium patulum has been characterised. The activity was shown to be closely associated with, but not necessarily identical to, m-cresol 2-hydroxylase activity of the 105 000 X g microsomal fraction. As with both the m-cresol hydroxylases of this system, m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol hydroxylase required oxygen and NADPH for activity. A Km value for m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol of 15 muM was measured. Inhibition of the hydroxylase activity and its reversal by light, as well as the action of cytochrome c, KCN and other effectors suggested a mixed-function oxidase reaction of the cytochrome P-450, NADPH-cytochrome reductase type. m-Hydroxybenzaldehyde was not ring hydroxylated by any preparation from P. patulum. Apart from the previously described conversion to m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol by a predominantly soluble dehydrogenase, m-hydroxybenzaldehyde was metabolized to m-hydroxybenzoic acid by a particulate fraction. This activity required NADPH. It was concluded that the main biosynthetic pathway to patulin must be through m-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, gentisyl alcohol and gentisaldehyde.

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