KINETIC AND THERMODYNAMIC CONTROL OF FLAVYLIUM HYDRATION IN THE PELARGONIDIN CINNAMIC ACID COMPLEXATION - ORIGIN OF THE EXTRAORDINARY FLOWER COLOR DIVERSITY OF PHARBITIS-NIL
O. Dangles et al., KINETIC AND THERMODYNAMIC CONTROL OF FLAVYLIUM HYDRATION IN THE PELARGONIDIN CINNAMIC ACID COMPLEXATION - ORIGIN OF THE EXTRAORDINARY FLOWER COLOR DIVERSITY OF PHARBITIS-NIL, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 115(8), 1993, pp. 3125-3132
During the past decade, structural elucidation of heavily substituted
anthocyanins present, for instance, in the bright ornamental flowers,
has brought to light the role played by sugar and phenolic acid residu
es in the fascinating pigmentation properties of such natural molecule
s. It now appears that higher plants have developed in their flowers a
nd fruits extremely sensitive and powerful color stabilization and var
iation mechanisms related to the presence of glycosidic acylated antho
cyanidins. In these molecules, a sugar unit, bearing the anthocyanidin
chromophore and a cinnamic acid residue, brings sufficient flexibilit
y for the latter two moieties to interact through complexation, accord
ing to a mechanism called intramolecular copigmentation. Here, on the
basis of UV-visible spectroscopic measurements, we give kinetic and th
ermodynamic evidence supporting the existence of folded conformations
which involve the stacking of either one cinnamic acid residue on the
anthocyanidin chromophore or two cinnamic acid residues on both sides
of the chromophore (sandwich-type association). Pigments investigated
in this work were obtained from red-purple cultivars of Pharbitis nil
(morning glory). They correspond to four pelargonidin derivatives (1-4
): one which is not acylated (reference compound 1), two of the monoac
ylated type (2 and 3), and one diacylated (4). The cornerstone of our
study rests on the hydration reaction of the anthocyanidin chromophore
when in its flavylium form. Indeed, the kinetic and thermodynamic par
ameters of this reaction and the way they are affected by the presence
of one or two cinnamic acid residue(s) is of considerable value in th
e understanding of anthocyanin intramolecular complex formation. Copig
mentation more frequently occurs as an intermolecular process, pigment
and copigment being in that case two distinct molecules. By running c
ompetitive intra- and intermolecular copigmentation experiments, we al
so demonstrate that the phenomenon in which pigment and copigment are
linked together is much more efficient.