The presence of gigartinine in a New Zealand Gracilaria species |
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Authors: | Sarah J. Wilcox Stephen J. Bloor Jacqueline A. Hemmingson Richard H. Furneaux Wendy A. Nelson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Industrial Research Limited, PO Box 31-310, Lower Hutt, New Zealand;(2) Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, PO Box 467, Wellington, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Gigartinine, 5-(3-amidinoureido)-2-aminovaleric acid, serves as achemotaxonomic marker to distinguish two species of Gracilaria withvery similar morphologies. Gigartinine was identified by 13C-NMRspectroscopy and amino acid analysis of a cold-water extract from Gracilaria sp. nov., collected from a sheltered harbour localityat Blockhouse Bay, Auckland, New Zealand. Levels of this amino acid,naturally ca. 5% by dry weight of seaweed, were able to be depleted andthen restored during a nitrogen pulsing experiment. In contrast, native andpulsed samples of Gracilaria chilensis from Point Arthur, Wellingtonshowed no extractable gigartinine. Although these two species are unableto be distinguished in the field by morphological characteristics, they canbe separated by the presence or absence of gigartinine. |
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Keywords: | gigartinine chemotaxonomic marker nitrogen pulse Gracilaria New Zealand |
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