Anthocyanin,flavonol copigments,and pH responsible for larkspur flower color |
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Authors: | Sam Asen Robert N. Stewart Karl H. Norris |
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Affiliation: | Ornamentals Laboratory, Plant Genetics and Germplasm Institute; and Instrumentation Laboratory, Agricultural Marketing Institute, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705 U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | The anthocyanin and flavonol glycosides in Larkspur flowers (cv. Dark Blue Supreme) are delphinidin 3-di(p-hydroxybenzoyl)glucosylglucoside, kaempferol 3-robinobioside-7-rhamnoside (robinin), kaempferol 3-rutinoside, kaempferol 7-rhamnoside, and kaempferol 3-(caffeylgalactosylxyloside)-7-rhamnoside. As young flowers age the pH of epidermal tissue increases from 5·5 to 6·6 and the color of many of the cells changes from moderate reddish-purple to light purplish-blue. Many of the older cells also contain blue crystals. Visible absorption spectra of moderate reddish-purple and light purplish-blue cells were simulated with a solution of the anthocyanin (10−2 M) plus robinin (5 × 10−3 M) at pH 5·6 and 7·1, respectively. Changes in the absorption spectra of living tissue with heating or cooling and of concentrated solutions of the anthocyanin with dilution or moderate heat, indicate that in the natural state the pigment is present in an associated form. |
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Keywords: | Ranunculaceae kaempferol glycosides kaempferol 3-(caffeylgalactosylxyloside)-7-rhamnoside epidermal pH anthocyanin polymerization |
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