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The Quantitative Yield in Purification of Cytokinins. Model‐experiments with Kinetin, 6‐Furfuryl‐amino‐purine
Author(s) -
HEMBERG TORSTEN,
WESTLIN PER ERIK
Publication year - 1973
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1973.tb01180.x
Subject(s) - kinetin , cytokinin , auxin , chemistry , ether , ethyl acetate , yield (engineering) , chromatography , petroleum ether , diethyl ether , extraction (chemistry) , botany , biochemistry , organic chemistry , biology , materials science , in vitro , tissue culture , metallurgy , gene
Model‐experiments with kinetin, 6‐furfuryl‐amino‐purine, to determine the quantitative yield in purification of cytokinin extracts have been performed. If kinetin in acidic water solution is partitioned three times with equal volumes of ethyl ether, about 50 per cent of the kinetin passes into the ether phases. In similar experiments with ethyl acetate more than 90 per cent of the kinetin goes over to the ethyl acetate phases. Accordingly, use of these two solvents in purification of cytokinin extracts leads to very large losses. Use of petroleum ether or n ‐hexane on the other hand leads to none or very small losses. Partitioning of alkaline kinetin solutions three times with equal volumes of 1‐butanol results in an almost quantitatitve extraction of the kinetin from the water solution. About 7 per cent of the original amount of kinetin follows the acid auxin, when a saturated ether solution of kinetin is extracted according to a common method for acid auxins. Kinetin may thus interfere in later analyses for auxins. The dangers involved when cytokinins are “purified” according to normal practice are pointed out.