Ferulic acid is bound to the primary cell walls of all gymnosperm families

Biochem Syst Ecol. 2000 Nov 1;28(9):865-879. doi: 10.1016/s0305-1978(00)00009-0.

Abstract

Unlignified primary cell walls containing ester-linked ferulic acid fluoresce blue in ultraviolet radiation which changes to green with increased intensity on treatment with ammonium hydroxide. Using this fluorescence behaviour, we detected ester-linked ferulic acid in the primary cell walls of all 41 species of gymnosperms we examined. These species were in 17 families representing all four extant classes of gymnosperms. In addition, we obtained cell-wall preparations containing >95% primary cell walls from nine gymnosperm species in nine families, representing all four extant classes. These preparations were analysed for ester-linked monomeric phenolic acids. We found ferulic acid (mostly trans) (88-1,561µg/g cell walls) in all of the preparations and p-coumaric acid (mostly trans) (0-106µg/g cell walls) in all except one of them. Ferulic acid ester-linked to primary cell walls has previously been found in angiosperms: in the commelinoid monocotyledons and in the dicotyledon order Caryophyllales, both monophyletic groups. From the present results, we postulate that the extant classes of gymnosperms are monophyletic and no class is sister to the angiosperms.