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A metal-free blue chromophore derived from plant pigments

Barbara C. Freitas-Dörr, Caroline Oliveira Machado, Amanda Capistrano Pinheiro, Arthur B. Fernandes, Felipe Augusto Dörr, Ernani Pinto, Mônica Lopes‐Ferreira, Mohamed Abdellah, Jacinto Sá, Lilian C. Russo, Fábio Luís Forti, Letícia Christina Pires Gonçalves, E. L. Bastos

2020Science Advances38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Blue natural pigments are rare, especially among plants. However, flowering species that evolved to attract Hymenoptera pollinators are colored by blue anthocyanin-metal complexes. Plants lacking anthocyanins are pigmented by betalains but are unable to produce blue hues. By extending the π-system of betalains, we designed a photostable and metal-free blue dye named BeetBlue that did not show toxicity to human hepatic and retinal pigment epithelial cells and does not affect zebrafish embryonal development. This chiral dye can be conveniently synthesized from betalamic acid obtained from hydrolyzed red beetroot juice or by enzymatic oxidation of l-dopa. BeetBlue is blue in the solid form and in solution of acidified polar molecular solvents, including water. Its capacity to dye natural matrices makes BeetBlue the prototype of a new class of low-cost bioinspired chromophores suitable for a myriad of applications requiring a blue hue.

Topics & Concepts

ChromophorePigmentBiocompatible materialBlue lightBLEUChemistryNanotechnologyMaterials sciencePhotochemistryComputer scienceOrganic chemistryOptoelectronicsArtificial intelligenceBiomedical engineeringEngineeringMachine translationBotanical Research and Applications
A metal-free blue chromophore derived from plant pigments | Litcius