Info For Onion Criers
January 22, 2008 at 11:26 pm | In blogging | 2 CommentsTags: Food, info, natural, plants, Random
Why does chopping an onion make you cry?
It is not the strong odor of the onion that makes us cry, but the gas that the onion releases when we sever this member of the lily family.
The onion itself contains oil, which contains sulfur, an irritant to both our noses and to our eyes. Cutting an onion arouses a gas contained within the onion, propanethiol S-oxide, which then couples with the enzymes in the onion to emit a passive sulfur compound. When this upwardly mobile gas encounters the water produced by the tear ducts in our eyelids, it produces sulfuric acid.
In response to the caustic acid, our eyes automatically blink, and produce tears which irrigate the eye, and which flush out the sulfuric acid.
Another reflex to rid the eyes of a foreign substance, that of rubbing our eyes with our hands, often exacerbates the situation, because our hands are coated with the caustic, sulfuric acid producing oil from cutting the onion, which we then rub directly into our eyes.
Much to our chagrin, the only remedy for ridding the onion of its pungent, irritating oil is to boil it, not to slice it or dice it.
Onions produce the chemical irritant known as syn-propanethial-S-oxide. It stimulates the eyes’ lachrymal glands so they
release tears. Scientists used to blame the enzyme allinase for the instability of substances in a cut onion. Recent studies from Japan, however, proved that lachrymatory-factor synthase, (a previously undiscovered enzyme) is the culprit
The process goes as follows:
- Lachrymatory-factor synthase is released into the air when we cut an onion.
- The synthase enzyme converts the sulfoxides (amino acids) of the onion into sulfenic acid.
- The unstable sulfenic acid rearranges itself into syn-ropanethial-S-oxide.
- Syn-propanethial-S-oxide gets into the air and comes in contact with our eyes. The lachrymal glands become irritated and produces the tears!

glycoside
January 16, 2008 at 10:49 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a CommentTags: Glycosides, health, natural, pharma, pharmacology, phytochemistry, plants

- Any of a group of organic compounds, occurring abundantly in plants , that yield a sugar and one or more non-sugar substances on hydrolysis
- a simple sugar (monosaccharide) by replacing the hydrogen atom of one of its hydroxyl groups (OH) with the bond to another biologically active molecule.
- occur abundantly in plants, especially as pigments, and are used in medicines, dyes, and cleansing agents.
Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.



