There's been a recent development regarding kava. Flavokavain-B has been shown to hepatotoxic and is only found in certain varieties of kava (called tudei). Interestingly, all tudei kava gives a reddish color in acetonic extractions, but not in any of the non-tudei kava (which has no FKB) where it gives a yellow color.
Here is my question for the chemists- Flavokavain A, B, and C are all chalconoids and ring closures (I'm pretty sure they're phenyl rings, but not sure) result in flavonoids which are responsible for a wide variety of plant pigmentation (eg. red vs yellow, for example).
Flavonoids are responsible for a significant amount of color in a plant, and so I'm really interested if the reason we are seeing tudeis (which have FKB, unlike nobles) show a red color vs. the "control" of yellow is because of the conjugation of this phenyl ring which would cause it to to become a flavonoid, which in turn possesses specific color properties. Could the acetone/solvent be doing this? Some sort of other mechanism due to the solvent creating soluble solutes that wouldn't 'normally' co-exist? Chalconoids by themselves don't necessarily have color properties, but they serve as the intermediate in the biosynthesis to the flavonoids that do. Could the color be an actual representation of flavonoids formed from FKB?
I've seen seemingly different representations of FKB


Thanks.
Here is my question for the chemists- Flavokavain A, B, and C are all chalconoids and ring closures (I'm pretty sure they're phenyl rings, but not sure) result in flavonoids which are responsible for a wide variety of plant pigmentation (eg. red vs yellow, for example).
Flavonoids are responsible for a significant amount of color in a plant, and so I'm really interested if the reason we are seeing tudeis (which have FKB, unlike nobles) show a red color vs. the "control" of yellow is because of the conjugation of this phenyl ring which would cause it to to become a flavonoid, which in turn possesses specific color properties. Could the acetone/solvent be doing this? Some sort of other mechanism due to the solvent creating soluble solutes that wouldn't 'normally' co-exist? Chalconoids by themselves don't necessarily have color properties, but they serve as the intermediate in the biosynthesis to the flavonoids that do. Could the color be an actual representation of flavonoids formed from FKB?
I've seen seemingly different representations of FKB
Thanks.
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