Luteolin and daphnetin derivatives in the juncaceae and their systematic significance |
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Authors: | Cjristine A. Williams Jeffrey B. Harborne |
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Affiliation: | Phytochemical Unit, Plant Science Laboratories, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 2AS, England |
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Abstract: | During a chemosystematic survey of 38 representative species of the Juncaceae for leaf and stem flavonoids, the 5-methyl ether of luteolin was discovered for the first time in plants. It occurs both free and as the 7-glucoside; its identity was confirmed by synthesis. Flavone sulphates were also found in the family and the 7-glucosidesulphates of luteolin and chrysoeriol were characterised for the first time. 7,3′,4′-Trihydroxyflavone and its 7-glucoside, not previously reported in the monocotyledons, were found in three species. The presence of luteolin 5-methyl ether or its glucoside in 70% of the species surveyed serves to distinguish the Juncaceae from the morphologically related Centrolepidaceae, Restionaceae and Thurniaceae. Flavone C-glycosides, common in grasses and sedges, were found only in Prionium, a genus which on anatomical grounds is anomalous in the Juncaceae. Among other phenolics detected during the survey, the uncommon 7,8-dihydroxycoumarin, daphnetin, was identified in Juncus effusus and its 8-methyl ether in four Luzula species. Taken together, these chemical findings show that the Juncaceae are very distinctive in their phenolic pattern and confirm the correctness of assigning them an isolated position in a separate order, the Juncales. The results indicate that the Juncaceae are chemically specialized, in spite of the facts that the family has been regarded as ancestral to the Cyperaceae and Gramineae and that they have been assigned a low advancement index by Sporne. |
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Keywords: | Juncaceae 7,3′4′-trihydroxyflavone daphnetin daphnetin 8-methyl ether biochemical systematics |
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