Procyanidins (Condensed Tannins) in Green Cell Suspension Cultures of Douglas Fir Compared with Those in Strawberry and Avocado Leaves by Means of C 18 -Reversed-phase Chromatography

  • Stafford H
  • Lester H
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Abstract

The procyanidins (the most common type of proanthocyanidin or condensed tannin) from cell suspension cultures derived from cotyledons of Douglas Fir have been compared with those isolated from leaves of strawberry and avocado. Seventy per cent methanol (v/v) extracts from 100 milligrams fresh weight samples were analyzed by a combination of C(18)-reversed-phase columns with high-performance liquid chromatography, and normal phase paper chromatography. (-)-Epicatechin and its oligomers were generally retarded longer on C(18) columns than the corresponding units made of (+)-catechin when eluted with solvents made up of 5% acetic acid alone or mixed with methanol up to 15% (v/v). Douglas fir preparations contained the most complex set of procyanidins and consisted of oligomers of catechin and epicatechin, whereas strawberry and avocado contained mainly (+)-catechin and (-)-epicatechin derivatives, respectively.

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APA

Stafford, H. A., & Lester, H. H. (1980). Procyanidins (Condensed Tannins) in Green Cell Suspension Cultures of Douglas Fir Compared with Those in Strawberry and Avocado Leaves by Means of C 18 -Reversed-phase Chromatography. Plant Physiology, 66(6), 1085–1090. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.66.6.1085

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