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Anthocyanins with unusual furanose sugar (apiose) from leaves of Synadenium grantii (Euphorbiaceae).

Four anthocyanins, cyanidin 3-O-(2''-(5'''-(E-p-coumaroyl)-beta-apiofuranosyl)-beta-xylopyranoside)-5-O-beta-glucopyranoside, cyanidin 3-O-(2''-(5'''-(E-p-coumaroyl)-beta-apiofuranosyl)-beta-xylopyranoside), cyanidin 3-O-(2''-(5'''-(E-caffeoyl)-beta-apiofuranosyl)-beta-xylopyranoside) and cyanidin 3-O-(2''-(5'''-(E-feroyl)-beta-apiofuranosyl)-beta-xylopyranoside) were isolated from leaves of African milk bush, (Synadenium grantii Hook, Euphorbiaceae) together with the known cyanidin 3-O-beta-xylopyranoside-5-O-beta-glucopyranoside and cyanidin 3-O-beta-xyloside. The four former pigments are the first reported anthocyanins containing the monosaccharide apiose, and the three 5'''-cinnamoyl derivative-2''-(beta-apiosyl)-beta-xyloside subunits have previously not been reported for any compound.[1]

References

  1. Anthocyanins with unusual furanose sugar (apiose) from leaves of Synadenium grantii (Euphorbiaceae). Andersen, Ø.M., Jordheim, M., Byamukama, R., Mbabazi, A., Ogweng, G., Skaar, I., Kiremire, B. Phytochemistry (2010) [Pubmed]
 
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