- Phytanic acid
Chembox new
ImageFile = Phytanic acid.png
ImageSize = 250px
IUPACName = ("7R,11R")-3,7,11,15-Tetramethylhexadecanoic acid
OtherNames = phytanoic acid
Section1 = Chembox Identifiers
CASNo = 14721-66-5
PubChem = 468706
SMILES = CC(C)CCC [C@@H] (C)CCC [C@@H] (C)CCCC(C)CC(=O)O
MeSHName = Phytanic+acid
Section2 = Chembox Properties
Formula = C20H40O2
MolarMass = 312.53 g/mol
Appearance =
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Section3 = Chembox Hazards
MainHazards =
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Autoignition =Phytanic acid (or 3,7,11,15-tetramethyl hexadecanoic acid) is present in human diet or in animal tissues where it may be derived from
chlorophyll in plant extracts. Phytanic acid derives from the corresponding alcohol, "phytol ", and is oxidized intopristanic acid .Human pathology
It can also characterize a precise human pathology,
Refsum's syndrome .This inherited
neurological disorder is characterized by an accumulation of a normalmetabolite ofphytol ("phytanic acid") in blood and tissues, and the disorder was later found to be related to deficiency in the α-oxidation pathway in the liver.Function in other animals
Freshwater sponges containterpenoid acids such as 4,8,12-trimethyltridecanoic, phytanic andpristanic acid s, which indicates that these acids may have chemotaxonomical significance for both marine and freshwater sponges.Phytanic acid accumulates in the fat of
ruminant animals. Most animals lack the necessary enzyme to cleave phytol from chlorophyll. Therumen microorganism s, however, can cleave this bond and release phytol, which is converted to phytanic acid and subsequently incorparated into the animal's fat. [Verhoeven, N. M., Wanders, R. J., "et al." 1998. The metabolism of phytanic acid and pristanic acid in man: a review. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Diseases 21, 697-728.]References
External links
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