Novel Types of Phyllobilins in a Fern - Molecular Reporters of the Evolution of Chlorophyll Breakdown in the Paleozoic Era.
Theresia ErhartChristian NadeggerStefan VergeinerChristoph KreutzThomas MüllerBernhard KräutlerPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Breakdown of chlorophyll (Chl), as studied in angiosperms, follows the pheophorbide a oxygenase/phyllobilin (PaO/PB) pathway, furnishing linear tetrapyrroles, named phyllobilins (PBs). In an investigation with fern leaves we have discovered iso-phyllobilanones (iPBs) with an intriguingly rearranged and oxidized carbon skeleton. We report here a key second group of iPBs from the fern and on their structure analysis. Previously, these additional Chl-catabolites escaped their characterization, since they exist in aqueous media as mixtures of equilibrating isomers. However, their chemical dehydration furnished stable iPB-derivatives that allowed the delineation of the enigmatic structures and chemistry of the original natural catabolites. The structures of all fern-iPBs reflect the early core steps of a PaO/PB-type pathway and the PB-to-iPB carbon skeleton rearrangement. A striking further degradative chemical ring-cleavage was observed, proposed to consume singlet molecular oxygen ( 1 O 2 ). Hence, Chl-catabolites may play a novel active role in detoxifying cellular 1 O 2 . The critical deviations from the PaO/PB pathway, found in the fern, reflect evolutionary developments of Chl-breakdown in the green plants in the Paleozoic era.