4.6 Article

The chemical mechanism for Al3+ complexing with delphinidin: A model for the bluing of hydrangea sepals

Journal

JOURNAL OF INORGANIC BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 104, Issue 7, Pages 732-739

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2010.03.006

Keywords

Aluminum; Anthocyanin; Bluing; Delphinidin; Hydrangea

Funding

  1. Thomas F. and Kate Miller Jeffress Memorial Trust
  2. Virginia Military Institute

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The blooms of many hydrangea cultivars can be red or blue, with the color depending on the soil pH. This dependence reflects the availability of Al3+ to the plant under acidic conditions, as Al3+ changes the color of the anthocyanin pigment in hydrangea sepals from red to blue. A chemical model, Al3+ and delphinidin in acidic ethanol, was developed to understand the spectral characteristics and bluing of the hydrangea sepals. Delphinidin as its flavylium cation leads to red solutions in the model system. In the presence of Al3+, the Al3+ removes H+ ions from delphinidin, transforming delphinidin's flavylium cation to its blue quinoidal base anion which complexes with the Al3+. To further stabilize this complex, a second flavylium cation stacks on top of the complexed quinoidal base anion, creating a bathochromic shift of the cation's spectral signature and accentuating the blue color. This Al3+-delphinidin entity forms in adequate concentration for bluing only if there is a sufficient excess of Al3+, the exact excess being a function of pH and concentration. The role of Al3+ in bluing is not just to form a primary complex with delphinidin, but also to create a template for the stacking of delphinidin (or possibily co-pigments). (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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