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Protocyanin



Protocyanin is an anthocyanin pigment that is responsible for the red colouration of roses, but in cornflowers is blue. The pigment was first isolated in 1913 from the blue cornflower,[1] and the identical pigment was isolated from a red rose in 1915.[2] The difference in colour difference was previously explained as a difference in flower-petal pH,[2] but the pigment in the blue cornflower has been shown to be a supermolecular pigment consisting of a complex of anthocyanin, flavone, one ferric iron, one magnesium and two calcium ions. [3]

References

  1. ^ Willstätter R & Everest RW (1913). "{{{title}}}". Justus Liebigs Ann Chem 401: 189–232.
  2. ^ a b Willstätter R & Mallison H (1915). "{{{title}}}". Justus Liebigs Ann Chem 408: 147–162.
  3. ^ Shiono M, Matsugaki N, Takeda K (2005). "Structure of the blue cornflower pigment". Nature 436: 791.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Protocyanin". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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