I'm going to delve a little deeper in this blog about how anthocyanins are formed and why they end up being accumulated in the berry skin. The pathway for the formation of anthocyanins begins with the amino acid phenylalanine:2 In the diagram shown above, phenylalanine can be shunted into two pathways:
- General Phenylpropanoid Metabolic Pathway: Phenylalanine is first converted to 4-coumaroyl-CoA and this compound may be used in the production of lignins, coumarins and stilbenes
- Flavonoid Pathway: Conversion of 4-coumaroyl-CoA results in the production of a range of flavonoid compounds, the most common being aurones, flavones, flavonols, isoflavonoids, proanthocyanidins and anthocyanins.
References:
1. Douglas Adams, VI257, Lesson 8, pg. 23. All structures were drawn by the freely available drawing program from ACD Labs called ACD/ChemSketch Freeware.
2. Boss P, Davies C, Robinson S (1996b), "Expression of anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway genes in red and white grapes", Plant Mol Biol, 32:565 - 569.
3. Lijavetzky et al., 2006, Mol. Genet. Genomics, 2006: 427-435.
4. José Tomás Matus, Felipe Aquea and Patricio Arce-Johnson, BMC Plant Biology, 2008, 8:83.
5. A negative MYB regulator of proanthocyanidin accumulation, identified through expression quantitative locus mapping in the grape berry, New Phytologist, (2014) 201: 795–809 doi: 10.1111/nph.12557.
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