Glucosinolates belong to a group of thioglycosides, which naturally occur in cruciferous vegetables. The products of the enzymatic or non-enzymatic hydrolysis of these compounds are biologically active
compounds with diverse effects on human health (Ciska, Martyniak-Przybyszewska, & Kozlowska, 2000). These substances may also act as antioxidants by scavenging free radicals and reducing oxidative stress, which is responsible for triggering chronic degenerative diseases (Verkerk et al., 2009). Several authors suggest that the ingestion of GL-containing vegetables may reduce the risk of cancer due to an increase in detoxifying enzyme activity and by direct inhibition of transcription factors involved Apitolisib in vitro in cancer cell signaling pathways (Hu et al., 2006, Tang and Zhang, 2005 and Verkerk et al., 2009). Chemically, these compounds are identified as thioglycosides, and they exist in vegetable cell vacuoles with the thioglucosidase enzyme (EC 3.2.3.1), also known as myrosinase. However, this selleck screening library enzyme is compartmentalized in specific myrosin cells and is physically separated from its GL substrates (Andréasson, Jorgensen, Hoglund, Rask, & Meijer, 2001). Any physical or chemical damage to the cellular apparatus such as breaking of the cell membranes, processing, chewing, digestion,
and bacterial or fungal infection allows myrosinase to encounter its GL substrates and leads to the production of bioactive compounds. Thus, processing and food preparation can modify the glucosinolate-myrosinase system due to partial or total inactivation of myrosinase (Rungapamestry, Duncan, Fuller, & Ratcliffe, 2006). Other factors such as the cultivation procedure (organic or conventional) may influence the plant glucosinolate content. The objective of this work was to quantify total glucosinolate concentrations through the utilization NADPH-cytochrome-c2 reductase of an enzymatic assay and to determine the benzylglucosinolate (glucotropaeolin) content in the plant via higher performance liquid chromatography
(HPLC). Quantification of these compounds was conducted on vegetable models that were cultivated either organically or with conventional procedures. All vegetables used in the study belong to the Brassicaceae family, and all were picked at their ideal harvest period. Plants were cultivated in São Paulo State (Brazil – latitude 22°53′09″ South, longitude 48°26′42″ West and 804 m altitude) in organic cultivation areas; manure contained organic compounds were used, and integrated pest management was conducted. The organic cultivation area was separated from the conventionally cultivated plants. Conventional cultivation utilized chemical fertilizers, and chemicals were used for the control of pests and phytopathological diseases. Weeding was carried out in the same manner for both organically and conventionally cultivated plants.