Protein Information

ID 207
Name casein
Synonyms Alpha; Alpha s1 casein; Alpha s1 casein precursor; CASA; CSN 1; CSN1; CSN1S1; Casein…

Compound Information

ID 343
Name cresol
CAS methylphenol

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
7171537 Martin AK: The origin of urinary aromatic compounds excreted by ruminants. 3. Br J Nutr. 1982 Nov;48(3):497-507.
The metabolism of phenolic compounds to simple phenols.. Dietary phenolic cinnamic acids are hydrogenated in the side-chain, demethylated and dehydroxylated in the rumen and are responsible for the large urinary output of benzoic acid by ruminants. 2. Decarboxylation of phenolic acids to simple phenols is another reaction of the intestinal microflora and experiments were made to determine the extent of this reaction in the rumen of sheep. 3. In five experiments phenolic compounds, quinic acid or casein were infused into the rumen or abomasum of sheep and increments in urinary outputs of phenolic acids and phenols determined by thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. 4. Production of phenols was almost exclusively confined to reactions in the rumen. 5. Rumen administration of phenolic benzoic or phenylacetic acids which contained a 4-hydroxy substituent yielded large increments in urinary phenol outputs. Other phenolic benzoic and phenylacetic acids were not decarboxylated. Rumen decarboxylation of 4-hydroxy-3-phenylpropionic acid did not occur and decarboxylation of 4-hydroxycinnamic acids was slight. 6. Nearly half the tyrosine content of rumen-administered casein was excreted as p-cresol, a decarboxylation product of 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid, p-Cresol was the principal phenol found in sheep urine. 7. Catechol and phenol were consistently found in sheep urine samples and p-ethylphenol, resorcinol, quinol, 4-methylcatechol, orcinol and pyrogallol were also found when suitable precursors were infused to the rumen. 8. It is concluded that p-cresol is a rumen metabolite of tyrosine. The other phenols found are microbial metabolites of phenolic precursors which are either widely distributed in plants such as 4-hydroxybenzoic, protocatechuic and vanillic acids or of more limited distribution such as the orcinol glycosides of some Ericaceous plants.
2(0,0,0,2)