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First published online November 24, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.049312 Plant Physiology 136:4023-4036 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists
Phenolic Profiling of Caffeic Acid O-Methyltransferase-Deficient Poplar Reveals Novel Benzodioxane Oligolignols1Department of Plant Systems Biology, Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology, Ghent University, B9052 Ghent, Belgium (K.M., G.G., W.B., E.M.); United States Dairy Forage Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, and Department of Forestry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 (J.R., F.L.); Laboratorium Medicinale Scheikunde, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, B3000 Leuven, Belgium (R.B., P.H.); and Laboratory for Organic and Bioorganic Synthesis, Department of Organic Chemistry, Ghent University, B9000 Ghent, Belgium (J.L.G., J.V.d.E.)
Caffeic acid O-methyltransferase (COMT) catalyzes preferentially the methylation of 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde to sinapaldehyde in monolignol biosynthesis. Here, we have compared HPLC profiles of the methanol-soluble phenolics fraction of xylem tissue from COMT-deficient and control poplars (Populus spp.), using statistical analysis of the peak heights. COMT down-regulation results in significant concentration differences for 25 of the 91 analyzed peaks. Eight peaks were exclusively detected in COMT-deficient poplar, of which four could be purified for further identification using mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance, and spiking of synthesized reference compounds. These new compounds were derived from 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol or 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde and were characterized by benzodioxane moieties, a structural type that is also increased in the lignins of COMT-deficient plants. One of these four benzodioxanes amounted to the most abundant oligolignol in the HPLC profile. Furthermore, all of the differentially accumulating oligolignols involving sinapyl units were either reduced in abundance or undetectable. The concentration levels of all identified oligolignols were in agreement with the relative supply of monolignols and with their chemical coupling propensities, which supports the random coupling hypothesis. Chiral HPLC analysis of the most abundant benzodioxane dimer revealed the presence of both enantiomers in equal amounts, indicating that they were formed by radical coupling reactions under simple chemical control rather than guided by dirigent proteins.
Lignins are aromatic heteropolymers that are predominantly deposited in the walls of secondary thickened cells. In angiosperms, lignins are principally derived from coniferyl and sinapyl alcohols. When these hydroxycinnamyl alcohols are polymerized into lignin, the resulting units in the polymer are designated guaiacyl and syringyl (G and S), respectively. In addition to these two main monolignols, other monomers, such as p-coumaryl alcohol, hydroxycinnamaldehydes, and hydroxycinnamate esters, may be incorporated into the polymer as well (Boerjan et al., 2003
The biosynthesis of the monolignols starts with the deamination of Phe and proceeds through the general phenylpropanoid pathway (Fig. 1). The first step of the monolignol-specific pathway is the conversion of feruloyl-CoA to coniferaldehyde, which is catalyzed by cinnamoyl-CoA reductase (CCR). For the biosynthesis of coniferyl alcohol, coniferaldehyde is reduced by cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD). The biosynthesis of sinapyl alcohol involves a further hydroxylation of the aromatic C5 position of coniferaldehyde by ferulic acid 5-hydroxylase (F5H, alternatively called coniferaldehyde 5-hydroxylase [Cald5H]; Humphreys et al., 1999
Transgenic plants altered in the expression of monolignol biosynthesis genes have been very instructive in unraveling the monolignol biosynthetic pathway. Most of them have been analyzed for their lignin amount, composition, and structure (Baucher et al., 2003
Previously, we have analyzed the methanol-soluble phenolic fraction of poplar xylem, a tissue that is heavily lignified (Morreel et al., 2004
Here, we analyzed statistically the levels of 91 peaks after HPLC profiling of the methanol-soluble phenolic fraction of COMT-deficient poplar. Previous research has shown that COMT deficiency leads to reduced incorporation of S units and that of 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol into the lignin polymer (Van Doorsselaere et al., 1995
LC-MS/MS Analysis of Hydroxycinnamic Acids and Hydroxycinnamaldehydes
To investigate whether COMT down-regulation affected the concentration of monolignol biosynthesis precursors, the in vivo concentrations of the different hydroxycinnamic acid and hydroxycinnamaldehyde intermediates in phenylpropanoid biosynthesis were compared statistically in COMT-deficient (transgenic lines ASB 2B and ASB 10B) and control poplars. LC-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI)-MS/MS was performed on extracts of the stem xylem from 144 individuals. Concentrations of p-coumaric acid, caffeic acid, 5-hydroxyferulic acid, caffealdehyde, and 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde were below the detection limit (approximately 0.5 pmol mg1 dry weight) in all analyzed plants, whereas that of p-coumaraldehyde was close to it. Ferulic acid, sinapic acid, coniferaldehyde, and sinapaldehyde were detectable in all poplar lines, with concentrations (mean ± SE of the mean) of 147 ± 70, 197 ± 30, 28.4 ± 4, and 89.5 ± 14 pmol mg1 dry weight in the control poplars, and 69.5 ± 14, 182 ± 40, 30.8 ± 6, and 21.4 ± 4 pmol mg1 dry weight in the COMT-deficient lines, respectively. Analysis of this data set by the nested ANOVA Model A (see "Materials and Methods") revealed a significantly lower concentration of sinapaldehyde in the COMT-deficient poplars, in agreement with the predominant role played by COMT in the methylation of 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde to sinapaldehyde (Humphreys et al., 1999
Phenolic Profiling of COMT-Deficient Transgenic Poplars
To investigate whether COMT down-regulation affected the concentration of phenolic metabolites other than the phenylpropanoid intermediates, the individual chromatogram peaks were quantified by standardizing peak height to dry weight. The total amount of soluble phenolics, approximated by the sum of the heights of all peaks in the chromatogram divided by the dry weight, did not significantly differ between wild-type and COMT-deficient poplars based on the analysis of 144 individuals. An overlay of the chromatograms of a representative wild-type and COMT-deficient line is shown in Figure 2. Of a total of 91 peaks analyzed, 8 peaks were specifically associated with the COMT-deficient lines and 4 had disappeared in the COMT-deficient poplars. For the remaining 79 peaks, a weighted nested ANOVA or one-way ANOVA, combined with the appropriate post hoc test (see "Materials and Methods"), showed significantly increased concentrations for three peaks in the COMT-deficient poplars, whereas those of 10 peaks were lower in the transgenic poplars. Thus, 25 of the 91 peaks had a significantly altered concentration, of which six had been identified previously as coupling products of monolignols and their aldehydes (Morreel et al., 2004
The mean concentrations of the oligolignol peaks whose structures could be characterized, including both differential and nondifferential peaks, are presented in Table II. Compounds 1a, 1b, 2, and 3a were found only in the COMT-deficient poplars. The most prominent change was seen for compound 1a, which was at 666 to 683 pmol mg1 dry weight, or at least 260-fold increased in COMT-deficient poplars, taking the detection limit (2.6 pmol mg1) into account for the control group. The concentration of compounds 1b, 2, and 3a were at least 19-, 29-, and 71-fold higher than the detection limit, respectively. G(85)G' (balanophonin) was also present in the control lines, but its level was 6.8-fold higher in COMT-deficient than in wild-type poplar. By contrast, the levels of the oligomers G(t8O4)S(85)G (threo-buddlenol B), G(e8O4)S(85)G (erythro-buddlenol B), G(e8O4)S(85)G' (erythro-buddlenol A), and G(8O4)S(88)S(8O4)G (hedyotisol) were reduced by 60% to 90%, whereas SP(88)S was undetectable in the COMT-deficient poplars. If present at all, the concentration of this product was at least 9-fold lower than that of the control lines based on the detection limit.
Characterization of Compounds 1a, 1b, 2, 3a, and 3b
Compounds 1a and 1b
To authenticate this compound, the proposed structure was synthesized (Fig. 4). Both synthetic isomers eluted at the same time and in the same ratio (10:1, w/w) as the natural compounds 1a (trans-isomer) and 1b (cis-isomer); 1H-NMR spectra matched completely. Both isomers together will be designated compound 1 hereafter: [G(8O4)5H, 4-[3-hydroxymethyl-7-(E)-(3-hydroxypropenyl)-5-methoxy-2,3-dihydro-benzo[1,4] dioxin-2-yl]-2-methoxyphenol (named nocomtol)].
Compound 2 Compound 2 elutes at 19.4 min and has a similar UV/Vis spectrum ( max at 210.1 and 273.5 nm) as (85)-dehydrodiconiferyl alcohol [G(85)G]. The molecular mass of 550 g mol1, indicated by LC-MS/MS (Fig. 3), suggests a trimer of monolignols.
The molecular structure was deduced from the following observations. (1) In the MS/MS spectra, ions at m/z 531 (M-H2O) and 519 (M-CH2O) imply the presence of a CH2OH group. (2) Because the magnitude of the ion abundance at m/z 501 (M-H2O-CH2O) was clearly lower than for both former ions, a conventional
Compounds 3a and 3b
The new compounds in COMT-deficient poplars were all benzodioxanes derived from cross-coupling of a 5-hydroxyconiferyl monomer. All compounds contained asymmetric carbon atoms. If the formation of this structure were to be controlled by dirigent proteins as that of the 88 coupling of coniferyl alcohol in the lignan pinoresinol (Davin et al., 1997
COMT Down-Regulation Reduces the Concentration of Sinapaldehyde But Not That of Sinapic Acid
Down-regulation of COMT in poplar results in a reduced S:G ratio in the noncondensed fraction of the lignin polymer, mainly because of a decrease in S units (Van Doorsselaere et al., 1995
Despite the low 5% residual activity of COMT in the transgenic poplar lines ASB 2B and ASB 10B (Van Doorsselaere et al., 1995
HPLC analysis of the methanol-soluble phenolics present in poplar xylem revealed a significantly different concentration for 25 of the 91 analyzed peaks because of COMT down-regulation. The large number of metabolites in these profiles and the biological variation in their concentration necessitated the use of statistical methods to evaluate whether the concentration of a compound differed significantly in concentration between the control group and the COMT down-regulated plants. Significantly affected unknown peaks that were clearly resolved in the chromatogram and present as at least 1% of the total peak height were subsequently purified for further characterization. The major difference in the metabolite profiles was the strong accumulation of compound 1a (Table II), below the detection limit in the control plants, but one of the most prominent peaks present in the chromatograms of the COMT down-regulated poplars (Fig. 2). By means of LC-MS/MS, NMR, and independent synthesis, this compound was identified as a condensation product of coniferyl alcohol and 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol, formed by radical coupling of 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol at its 4O position with the favored C8 position of coniferyl alcohol. The cyclization (by internal trapping of the quinone methide coupling intermediate by the 5-OH) was established by the diagnostic 3J C,H correlation between H-7 and C-5' in the gradient-selected heteronuclear multiple-bond correlation experiment. The predominance of the trans-ring-isomer (R,R or S,S) was established from the 1H-NMR 3J78 coupling constant. As in synthetic cross-coupling reactions, there is regioselectivity for 4O over 5O coupling of 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol to give the 8O4/7O5 benzodioxane rather than the 8O5/7O4 regioisomer.
The compound 1, G(8O4)5H, which has not been described before, has a 1,4-benzodioxane structure and has been called nocomtol. Compound 1b formed spontaneously from 1a at approximately the 10% level from purified as well as synthesized nocomtol 1. The cis-/trans-conversion of the benzodioxane ring is well documented (She et al., 1998 A trimeric oligolignol, containing a benzodioxane structure and an aliphatic aldehyde, was proposed for compound 2. From the UV spectrum, the compound does not contain a cinnamaldehyde end group, yet the MS/MS-derived molecular weights of the daughter ions require an aldehyde to be present. All data for this compound were consistent with a G(85)G'(8O4)5H structure, as shown in Figure 3.
All of these benzodioxanes resulted from the cross-coupling of coniferyl and 5-hydroxyconiferyl monomers. Analogous benzodioxane structures have been identified at striking levels in the lignin polymer of COMT-deficient alfalfa (Medicago sativa; Marita et al., 2003a
Cross-coupling products between coniferaldehyde and 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde were not detected either, which may be because of their (unknown)cross-coupling propensities that may not favor such products (Kim et al., 2000 No dimers involving a 5-hydroxyconiferyl unit linked via its C8 position to a G, G', S, S', or 5H' unit were detected by HPLC or LC-MS/MS analysis, suggesting that 5-hydroxyconiferyl units are very reactive and preferentially couple via their 4O rather than their C8 position. The seeming lack of dimers involving 5-hydroxyconiferyl units other than compounds G(8O4)5H 1 and G(8O4)5H' 3 suggests that the remaining seven peaks, with increased abundance in COMT down-regulated lines but still unidentified because of their low concentration, are higher-order oligomers containing 5-hydroxyconiferyl units.
Previously elucidated oligolignol structures have shown that hydroxycinnamaldehydes or hydroxybenzaldehydes can be used in oligomerization reactions (Morreel et al., 2004
The remaining 21 of the 25 differentially accumulating peaks had UV/Vis spectra resembling those of oligolignols for all but one. Previously, we have identified six of these peaks (Morreel et al., 2004
Taken together, all oligolignols that were decreased in abundance or reduced to undetectable levels involved an S unit. On the other hand, the levels of at least one of the oligomers (G(85)G' [balanophonin]) that did not involve sinapyl alcohol, and novel oligomers composed of the substrates for COMT, the benzodioxanes, were increased. Similar relative changes were observed in the lignin polymer of COMT-deficient poplar (Lapierre et al., 1999
The detection by thioacidolysis of 5H units in the lignins of COMT down-regulated plants (Atanassova et al., 1995
Some monolignol dehydrodimers, such as (85)-dehydrodiconiferyl alcohol [G(85)G] and pinoresinol [G(88)G], may exist either as nearly racemic mixtures or in optically pure forms. In the latter case, the dimer is considered a lignan (Dixon, 2004 To observe to what extent the new benzodioxane oligolignols were optically pure, chiral HPLC analysis was conducted on natural as well as synthesized nocomtol 1 G(8O4)5H. For the isolated and the synthesized compounds, the two enantiomers were found in approximately equal amounts. This result indicates that the biosynthesis of the benzodioxanes is not under stereoselective control in poplar and that the precursors are simply coupled chemically. Therefore, our data do not support the presence of a specific dirigent protein for benzodioxane formation in poplar xylem. Because benzodioxane dimers are not normally present in the cell wall, the lack of a specific dirigent protein may not be surprising, but, for the same reason, the benzodioxane dimers are the ideal model to demonstrate that a combinatorial chemical coupling can occur in the cell wall.
We have shown that down-regulation of COMT in poplar results in a reduced abundance of sinapaldehyde, and our data further support the finding that COMT does not play a role in sinapic acid synthesis in xylem tissue. The abundance of oligolignols derived from sinapyl alcohol decreases and a new set of oligolignols accumulates that derives from the cross-coupling of 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde and 5-hydroxyconiferyl alcohol with other available units. Because the relative abundance of the oligolignols is in agreement with the relative supply of monolignols and with their chemical coupling propensities, and because, at least for nocomtol G(8O4)5H, both enantiomers were present in equal amounts, our data strongly support the recently challenged (Lewis, 1999
Growth Conditions and Plant Material
Wild-type poplar (Populus tremula x P. alba clone INRA no. 717-1B4), poplar transformed with a PCaMV35S-GUS construct (lines 35S 17B and 35S 21B; Nilsson et al., 1996
For each individual, xylem tissue was harvested from a 10-cm-long, debarked stem cut 15 cm above ground by scraping with a scalpel (approximately 300 mg). After grinding in liquid nitrogen, the tissue was extracted with 15 mL of methanol. The debris was subsequently removed, and the solute freeze-dried and weighed (approximately 70 mg). An aliquot (1.5 mL) of the methanol phase was lyophilized and extracted with cyclohexane/water acidified with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA; 1:1, v/v) as described previously (Meyermans et al., 2000 A SpectraSystem UV6000LP detector (Thermo Separation Products) measured UV/Vis absorption between 200 and 450 nm with a scan rate of 2 Hz. APCI, operated in the negative-ion mode, was used as an ion source to couple HPLC with an LCQ Classic (ThermoQuest, San Jose, CA) MS instrument (vaporizer temperature 450°C, capillary temperature 175°C, source current 5 µA, sheath gas flow set at 27, aux gas flow set at 2). Using selected ion monitoring, a clear MS signal corresponding to the different cinnamic acid (p-coumaric, caffeic, ferulic, 5-hydroxyferulic, and sinapic acids) and cinnamaldehyde (p-coumaraldehyde, caffealdehyde, coniferaldehyde, 5-hydroxyconiferaldehyde, and sinapaldehyde) standards was observed. An unstable MS signal was obtained for p-coumaryl, coniferyl, and sinapyl alcohols because these compounds fragmented during the ionization process. To verify whether the cinnamic acid and cinnamaldehyde standards were chemically stable during the extraction procedure, 20 µL of methanol:water (10:90, v/v) solution containing 0.25 µg mL1 of each of the cinnamic acid and cinnamaldehyde standards was added to a xylem sample. After grinding and cleaning the sample as described above, all standards were detected in the LC-MS chromatogram of the xylem extract in the same concentration range as when the standard solution was immediately analyzed on LC-MS. The phenylpropanoids were quantified with the total ion current signal, obtained by selected ion monitoring scans of the cinnamic acids and cinnamaldehydes, divided by the total ion current signal of the internal standard 3,4,5-trimethoxycinnamic acid.
A 1-mL aliquot of the prepared methanol phase of each sample (see above) was treated and separated on HPLC as described previously (Meyermans et al., 2000
Differences in the mean abundance of soluble phenolics between the poplar lines were analyzed statistically according to the following nested ANOVA:
i is deviation from the overall mean due to the effect of the ith group; j(i) is specific effect of the jth poplar line nested within group i; and ijk is residual deviation of the compound abundance in individual k of the jth poplar line within the ith group. The residual deviations are independent and normally distributed with mean 0 and variance 2. Model A detects differences between groups of similarly affected poplar lines and simultaneously between the poplar lines nested in each group. As such, this model is more powerful to reveal significant differences than the one-way ANOVA Model B, which detects only differences between the different poplar lines. A large set of transgenic poplar lines was included in the statistical analysis to augment the statistical power (see above). Besides the control group (wild type, 35S 17B, and 35S 21B) and the group composed of the COMT-deficient poplar lines (ASB 2B and ASB 10B), five additional groups composed of lines deficient in CCoAOMT, CCR, CAD, and phenylcoumaran benzylic ether reductase, and poplars deficient for both CCR and COMT were included in the nested ANOVA model. Following the overall nested ANOVA analysis, specific differences between the control and the COMT-deficient lines were detected by a LSD multiple comparison test. Whenever necessary, homoscedasticity was obtained by Box-Cox transformations.
If insufficient homoscedasticity could be achieved by transforming the original data to be able to apply Model A, the one-way ANOVA Model B was chosen instead.
j is deviation from the overall mean due to the effect of the jth poplar line; and jk is residual deviation of the compound abundance in individual k of the jth poplar line. The residual deviations are independent and normally distributed with mean 0 and variance 2. In this case, a significant difference between the control lines and transgenic poplar lines down-regulated for the same gene was considered when the two following requirements were met: (1) the LSD post hoc test (type I error = 0.05) was not significant between any of the control poplar lines, and (2) the LSD post hoc test (type I error = 0.05) was significant and the sign of the difference in mean value was the same when each of the transgenic lines down-regulated for the same gene was compared with each of the control poplar lines. Because of the large number of statistical tests, Bonferroni corrections were applied to obtain an experiment-wise significance threshold of 0.05. All statistical analyses were performed by using the software program SPSS 9.0 (SPSS, Chicago). Here, only the results obtained for the down-regulation of COMT are presented.
Sufficient material for spectral identifications was isolated by preparative HPLC on a Luna C18(2) column (250 x 10 mm, 10 µm; Phenomenex) using a flow and temperature of 5 mL min1 and 40°C, respectively, with a gradient from 0.1% aqueous TFA (solvent A, pH 2) to methanol-acetonitrile (25:75, v/v; 0.1% TFA; solvent B) with the same instrument and under the same time and gradient conditions as described for the analytical HPLC analysis of soluble phenolics (Meyermans et al., 2000
1H- and 13C-NMR spectra were recorded on a Unity 500 spectrometer (Varian, Palo Alto, CA), operating at 499.193 MHz for 1H and at 125.534 MHz for 13C, with an inverse 5-mm broad-band probe with LC-MS/MS analysis was performed with a Luna C18(2) column (150 x 2.1 mm, 3 µm; Phenomenex), using a gradient from 100% solvent A (aqueous 1% acetic acid) to 65% solvent B (methanol, 1% acetic acid) in 8 min and to 100% solvent B within the next 12 min at a flow of 0.25 mL min1 and a column temperature of 40°C. The most abundant ion in each full MS scan, in the negative-ion mode, was subsequently fragmented in the next scan using the dependent MS/MS mode. Vaporizer temperature, capillary temperature, and sheath gas flow of the APCI ion source were set at 500°C, 170°C, and 80. Source current and aux gas flow were as mentioned above.
p-Coumaric acid, ferulic acid, and 3,4-dihydroxy-5-methoxy-benzaldehyde were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis), and caffeic acid and sinapic acid from ACROS (Beerse, Belgium). 5-Hydroxyferulic acid was synthesized according to Akabori and Tsuchiya (1990)
The same shorthand naming convention for oligolignols is used as described (Morreel et al., 2004 Compound 1 is G(8O4)5H, 4-[3-hydroxymethyl-7-(E)-(3-hydroxypropenyl)-5-methoxy-2,3-dihydro-benzo[1,4]dioxin-2-yl]-2-methoxyphenol (named nocomtol; see Fig. 3).
In the synthesis, 3,4-dihydroxy-5-methoxy-benzaldehyde was acetylated with acetic anhydride/pyridine to produce 3,4-diacetoxy-5-methoxy-benzaldehyde in essentially quantitative yield. Ethyl 4,5-diacetoxy-5-methoxyferulate was prepared by a Wittig-Horner reaction with triethyl phosphonoacetate (yield 90%) according to Ralph et al. (1992)
Coniferyl alcohol (Fig. 4, compound a; 788 mg, 4.38 mmol) and ethyl 5-hydroxyferulate (Fig. 4, compound b; 870 mg, 3.65 mmol) were dissolved in acetone:benzene (1:2, v/v, 45 mL). Silver carbonate (2.52 g, 9.13 mmol) was added. The mixture was stirred for 14 h. The solid oxidant was removed by filtration through a Celite pad and washed with acetone. The filtrate and acetone washings were combined and evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue was applied to flash silica gel chromatography (1:1 chloroform:ethyl acetate as eluant) resulting in pure 3-[3-(4-hydroxy-4-methoxyphenyl)-2-hydroxymethyl-8-methoxy-2,3-dihydrobenzo[1,4] dioxin-6-yl]-acrylic acid ethyl ester as a pale-yellow oil (Fig. 4, compound c; 800 mg, 53% yield). NMR was
Compound c (10 mmol) was dissolved in toluene (10 mL) at 0°C and added to a stirred solution of diisobutylaluminum hydride (DIBAL-H; Aldrich, Milwaukee, WI) in toluene (5 mL) through a syringe (Fig. 4; 700 mg, 1.68 mmol). The mixture was stirred continuously for 1 h. The excess reducing agent was quenched with ethanol; the mixture was diluted with ethyl acetate (200 mL) and washed with 3% aqueous HCl solution (100 mL x 2) and saturated aqueous NH4Cl (50 mL). The ethyl acetate portion was dried over MgSO4 and evaporated under reduced pressure, resulting in compound 1 as a white foam (Fig. 4; 580 mg, 93% yield). Compound 1 is a mixture of trans- and cis-isomers 1a and 1b, (w/w; 10:1). Upon acid or base catalysis, the cis-isomer 1b is almost exclusively converted to the more thermodynamically stable trans-isomer 1a (She et al., 1998 Compound 3, G(8O4)5H', (2E)-3-[3-(4-hydroxy-3-methoxy-phenyl)-2-(hydroxymethyl)-8-methoxy-2,3-dihydro-1,4-benzodioxin-6-yl]acrylaldehyde (which we have named nocomtal) is for the same reason as compound 1 an equilibrium mixture of 3a and 3b, the trans- and cis-isomers, in a 10:1 (w/w) ratio.
For the synthesis, G(8O4)5H' 3, the cinnamaldehyde analog of 1, was prepared by 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyanobenzoquinone oxidation of G(8O4)5H (compound 1; nocomtol) as described for the synthesis of balanophonin, G(85)G' (Morreel et al., 2004
The synthesized as well as the isolated forms of compounds 1a and 1b, trans- and cis-nocomtol (w/w; 10:1), in amounts of approximately 0.2 and 0.02 µg, respectively, were dissolved in 25 µL ethanol and isocratically separated on a polysaccharide-type chiral column (ChiralcelOD, 10 µm, 250 x 4.6 mm; Daicel Chemical Industries, Osaka) at 35°C, by using a flow of 1 mL min1 of hexane:ethanol (85:15; v/v) by an Agilent 1100 series instrument (type HPLC-diode array detector; Agilent Technologies, Foster City, CA).
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The authors thank Martine De Cock for help in preparing the manuscript and Tsutomu Ishikawa (Chiba University, Chiba, Japan) for providing nitidanin. Received July 7, 2004; returned for revision September 28, 2004; accepted September 28, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders (grant no. G0040.00N), the European Commission program (grant no. QLK5CT200001493 to E.M., P.H., and W.B.), in part by the Department of Energy Biosciences program (grant no. DEAI0200ER15067) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture-National Research Initiatives (grant no. 200102176 to J.R.), and the Instituut voor de aanmoediging van Innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie in Vlaanderen (predoctoral fellowship to K.M.).
2 These authors contributed equally to the paper. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.049312. * Corresponding author; e-mail wout.boerjan{at}psb.ugent.be; fax 3293313809.
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