Purple anthocyanin colouration on lower (abaxial) leaf surface of Hemigraphis colorata (Acanthaceae)
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Date
2014Author
Skaar, Irene
Adaku, Christopher
Jordheim, Monica
Byamukama, Robert
Kiremire, Bernard
Andersen, Øyvind M.
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The functional significance of anthocyanin colouration of lower (abaxial) leaf surfaces is not clear.
Two anthocyanins, 5-O-methylcyanidin 3-O-(300-(b-glucuronopyranosyl)-b-glucopyranoside) (1) and 5-O-methylcyanidin 3-O-b-glucopyranoside (2), were isolated from Hemigraphis colorata (Blume) (Acanthaceae) leaves with strong purple abaxial colouration (2.2 and 0.6 mg/g fr. wt., respectively). The glycosyl moiety of 1, the disaccharide 300-(b-glucuronopyranosyl)-b-glucopyranoside), has previously been reported to occur only in a triterpenoid saponin, lindernioside A. The structural assignment of the aglycone of 1 and 2 is the first complete characterisation of a natural 7-hydroxy-5-methoxyanthocyanidin. Compared to nearly all naturally occurring anthocyanidins, the 5-O-methylation of this anthocyanidin limits the type of possible quinoidal forms of 1 and 2 to be those forms with keto-function in only
their 7- and 40-positions.
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