Abstract
The red pigment uroerythrin, a chromophore known to be adsorbed by the amorphous urate sediments (sedimentum lateritium), has been isolated from human urine and further purified as its trimethyl derivative. Urine was applied to a column of Amberlite XAD-2 resin on which uroerythrin and other pigments were adsorbed. The pigments were eluted with methanol and uroerythrin was further purified by extraction with ether at pH 4.0, repeated chromatography on lipophilic Sephadex LH-20 and thin-layer chromatography on silica gel. For optimal purification uroerythrin was converted into the trimethyl derivative and chromatographed on silical gel thin-layer plates. The structure of the pigment has been studied by chromate degradation followed by identification of the imide products by thin-layer chromatography. From these results and from infrared, mass spectral and nuclear magnetic resonance data a tripyrrole structure for uroerythrin is concluded. The proposed structure for the chromophore is related to that of the bile pigment biliverdin consisting, however, only of the rings A, B and C.
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