Delta-viniferin is a resveratrol dehydrodimer, an isomer of epsilon-viniferin. This compound has been reported as a molecule produced in vitro by the oxidative dimerization of resveratrol by plant peroxidases or fungal laccases. It was also recently identified in wines and in grape cell cultures. We have now identified this dimer by NMR, high-performance liquid chromatography-diode array detection (HPLC-DAD), and HPLC-mass spectrometry (MS) in grapevine leaves infected by Plasmopara viticola (downy mildew) or UV-C irradiated. Its concentration was higher than that of epsilon-viniferin and constitutes one of the most important phytoalexins derived from resveratrol.
We report here a facile synthetic and analytical approach that allows us to identify and characterize functionalized polyoxomolybdate clusters that form upon the partial reduction of Mo(VI) salts in the presence of organoarsonate ligands. We demonstrated that electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, in combination with X-ray crystallography, provides an extremely powerful tool, allowing us to exploit slight perturbations of the ligand structures for the preparation of a series of unprecedented cluster compounds. Redox-active transition metals that adopt cubane or related structures are of particular interest because of their resemblance to active sites of enzymes. Our investigations underline the stability of the hybrid compounds in solution, an essential requirement for potential applications as catalysts. Supplemental analyses include measurements of the magnetic properties, NMR, IR, UV/vis, and bond-valence-sum analyses. Our results highlight the possibility of exploring real-time growth reactions of polyoxometales that emerge in solution and transform to produce hybrid organic-inorganic polyoxometalate clusters.
Chemical defense plays a central role for many herbivorous insects in their interactions with predators and host plants. The leaf beetle genus Oreina (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae) includes species able to both sequester pyrrolizidine alkaloids and autogenously produce cardenolides. Sequestered compounds are clearly related to patterns of host-plant use, but variation in de novo synthesized cardenolides is less obviously linked to the environment. In this study, intraspecific variation in cardenolide composition was examined by HPLC-MS analysis in 18 populations of Oreina speciosa spanning Europe from the Massif Central to the Balkans. This revealed the defense secretion to be a complex blend of up to 42 compounds per population. There was considerable geographical variation in the total sample of 50 compounds detected, with only 14 found in all sites. The environmental and genetic influences on defense chemistry were investigated by correlation with distance matrices based on habitat factors, host-plant use, and genetics (sequence data from COI, COII, and 16s rRNA). This demonstrated an influence of both genetics and hostplant use on the overall blend of cardenolides and on the presence of some of the individual compounds. The implications of this result are discussed for the evolution of defense chemistry and for the use of cardenolide compounds as markers of the evolutionary history of the species.
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