Saltar al contenido
Merck

Phytanic acid: production from phytol, its breakdown and role in human disease.

Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS (2006-06-27)
D M van den Brink, R J A Wanders
RESUMEN

Phytanic acid is a branched-chain fatty acid that accumulates in a variety of metabolic disorders. High levels of phytanic acid found in patients can exceed the millimolar range and lead to severe symptoms. Degradation of phytanic acid takes place by alpha-oxidation inside the peroxisome. A deficiency of its breakdown, leading to elevated levels, can result from either a general peroxisomal dysfunction or from a defect in one of the enzymes involved in alpha-oxidation. Research on Refsum disease, belonging to the latter group of disorders and characterized by a deficiency of the first enzyme of alpha-oxidation, has extended our knowledge of phytanic acid metabolism and pathology of the disease greatly over the past few decades. This review will centre on this research on phytanic acid: its origin, the mechanism by which its alpha-oxidation takes place, its role in human disease and the way it is produced from phytol.

MATERIALES
Referencia del producto
Marca
Descripción del producto

Sigma-Aldrich
Phytanic acid, ≥96%, mixture of isomers