Identification of chalcones and their contribution to yellow coloration in dahlia (Dahlia variabilis) ray florets

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Abstract

Yellow color in dahlia flowers is conferred from chalcones, butein and isoliquiritigenin. The color intensity of yellow dahlia cultivars is diverse, but a detailed study on this has not yet been performed. In this study, we first identified structures of flavonoids by nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in ray florets of the red-white bicolor ‘Shukuhai’, which contains chalcones, flavones and anthocyanins. Four anthocyanins, four flavone derivatives, five isoliquiritigenin derivatives and five butein derivatives were identified. Among the identified compounds, butein 4'-malonylsophoroside is considered to be the final product for butein derivatives and the presence of chalcone 4'-glucosyltransferase, chalcone 4'-glucoside glucosyltransferase, and chalcone 4'-glucoside malonyltransferase for isoliquiritigenin and butein modification was predicted. Also, the biosynthetic pathway of butein and isoliquiritigenin derivatives in dahlia with butein 4'-malonylsophoroside as the final product was predicted from the identified compounds. Next, we used nine yellow cultivars and lines with different color intensities and analyzed the correlation between the b* value, an indicator of yellow color, and level of chalcones. There was no difference in the presence or absence of major peaks among the cultivars and lines. Peak area per fresh weight measured by HPLC was high in butein 4'-malonylglucoside, butein 4'-sophoroside and isoliquiritigenin 4'-malonylglucoside, suggesting these three compounds were accumulated abundantly. Among the identified chalcones, the highest correlation coefficient was detected between the b* value and butein 4'-malonylglucoside (r = 0.86), butein 4'-sophoroside (r = 0.82) or isoliquiritigenin 4'-malonylglucoside (r = 0.76). These results suggest that these three chalcones confer yellow color in dahlia ray florets. The findings in this study will contribute not only to efforts at breeding new yellow dahlia cultivars, but also to molecular breeding of yellow flowers in other species by introducing the butein biosynthetic pathway.

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Ohno, S., Yokota, M., Yamada, H., Tatsuzawa, F., & Doi, M. (2021). Identification of chalcones and their contribution to yellow coloration in dahlia (Dahlia variabilis) ray florets. Horticulture Journal, 90(4), 450–459. https://doi.org/10.2503/hortj.UTD-305

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