Phlorotannins are a type of found in brown algae such as and rockweeds or Sargassaceae species, and in a lower amount also in some red algae. Contrary to hydrolysable or condensed tannins, these compounds are of phloroglucinol (polyphloroglucinols). As they are called tannins, they have the ability to precipitate proteins. It has been noticed that some phlorotannins have the ability to oxidize and form covalent bonds with some proteins. In contrast, under similar experimental conditions three types of terrestrial tannins (procyanidins, profisetinidins, and gallotannins) apparently did not form covalent complexes with proteins.
These natural phenol compounds are integral structural components of cell walls in brown algae, but they also seem to play many other secondary ecological roles such as protection from UV radiation and defense against grazing.
They are found within the cell in small vesicles called physodes, where the soluble, polar fraction is sequestrated, and as part of the cell wall, where they are insoluble and act as a structural component. Their concentration is known to be highly variable among different taxa as well as among geographical area, since they respond plastically to a variety of environmental factors. Brown algaes also exude phlorotannins in surrounding seawater.
It has been proposed that phlorotannins are first sequestered in physodes under their polar, reactive form before being oxidized and complexed to the alginic acid of brown algal cell wall by a peroxidase. To this date (2012), not much is known about phlorotannins synthesis. The formation of physodes, vesicles containing phenolic compounds, have been investigated for many years. These cytoplasmic constituents were thought to be synthesized in the chloroplast or its membrane, but more recent studies suggest that the formation may be related to the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi bodies.
The allocation of phlorotannins among tissues varies along with the species.
The localization of phlorotannins can be investigated by light microscopy after vanillin–HCl staining giving an orange color. The ultrastructural localization of physodes can be examined through transmission electron microscopy in samples primarily fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde and with postfixation with 1% osmium tetroxide. For staining, uranyl acetate and lead citrate can be used.
Usual assays to quantify phlorotannins in samples are the Folin-Denis and Prussian blue assays. A more specific assay makes use of 2,4-dimethoxybenzaldehyde (DMBA), a product that reacts specifically with 1,3-and 1,3,5-substituted phenols (e.g., phlorotannins) to form a colored product.
Phlorotannins are classified following the arrangement of the phloroglucinol monomeres. More than 150 compounds are known, ranging from 126 Da to 650 kDa in molecular weight. Most of them are found between 10 and 100kDa.
They are distributed in six main subgroups: fucols, phlorethols, fucophloretols, fuhalols and eckols, which are only found in the Alariaceae.
According to linkage type, phlorotannins can be classified into four subclasses, i.e., phlorotannins with an ether linkage (fuhalols and phlorethols, fuhalols are constructed of phloroglucinol units that are connected with para- and ortho-arranged ether bridges containing one additional OH-group in every third ring), with a phenyl linkage (fucols), with an ether and a phenyl linkage (fucophlorethols) and with a dibenzodioxin linkage in eckols and carmalols (derivatives of phlorethols containing a dibenzodioxin moiety), most of which have halogenated representatives in brown algae.
Examples of phlorotannins are fucodiphlorethol G from the seaweed Ecklonia cava,Young Min Ham, Jong Seok Baik, Jin Won Hyun and Nam Ho Lee, Bull. 2007. Isolation of a new phlorotannin, fucodiphlorethol G, from a brown alga Ecklonia cava . Korean Chem. Soc. 28(9): 1595. eckol from Ecklonia species or phlorofucofuroeckol-B from Eisenia arborea.
The structural diversity of higher molecular weight molecules can be screened through the use of the 'EDIT' Carbon-13 NMR technique.
Studies shown that phlorotannins seem to act as a protection for brown algaes in a number of ways. Here are some examples.
They may also be involved in Chelation such as divalent metal ions Strontium2+, Magnesium2+, Calcium2+, Beryllium2+, Manganese2+, Cadmium2+, Cobalt2+, Zinc2+, Nickel2+, Lead2+ and Copper2+. If the chelating properties of phlorotannins have been demonstrated in vitro, in situ studies suggest that this characteristic may be species-specific.
Extraction and assays
Structural diversity
Roles
Primary roles
Structural
Reproductive
Secondary roles
Antiherbivory defense
UV and heavy metals screening
Algicidal effect
Therapeutic properties
External links
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Brown algal phlorotannins: Improving and applying chemical methods, Ph. D. Thesis, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
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