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A heartwood pigment in Dalbergia cell cultures.
Authors:M Czakó  L Márton
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina, 700 Sumter Street, Columbia SC 29208, USA. czako-mihaly@sc.edu
Abstract:In an extensive survey of the genera Baphia, Caesalpinia, Dalbergia, Haematoxylon, and Pterocarpus, we have identified a number of species whose cell cultures accumulated pigments similar to those in heartwood. Thirteen rosewood (Dalbergia) species produced a purple quinonemethide pigment in the callus that was apparently identical between the species. The pigment was first purified from D. retusa cell culture and its structure was elucidated by mass, infrared, and detailed 1H and 13C NMR and NOE spectroscopic studies including 2D experiments (COSY, NOESY, HMQC, and HMBC). Retusapurpurin A (1a) is a C(30) isoflavan of novel skeleton whose formation can be rationalized to occur via regioselective oxidative coupling of an isoflavan to 4,4'-dihydroxy-2'-methoxychalcone. Retusapurpurin A was also isolated from D. parviflora heartwood and cell culture indicating that stress metabolism pathways that are shared with heartwood-type secondary metabolism subpathways are initiated in Dalbergia cell cultures. Therefore, Dalbergia cell cultures afford a good model system for studying heartwood-type metabolic differentiation.
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