Pterobilin
[image:Common Bluebottle Graphium sarpedon UP by Dr. Raju Kasambe DSCN1849 (10).jpg|thumb|right|Graphium sarpedon which contains pterobilin]
Pterobilin also called biliverdin IXγ in the Fischer nomenclature, is a blue bile pigment found in Nessaea spp., Graphium agamemnon, G. antiphates, G. doson, and G. sarpedon. It is one of only a few blue pigments found in any animal species, as most animals use structural coloration to create blue coloration. Other blue pigments of animal origin include phorcabilin, used by other butterflies in Graphium and Papilio, and sarpedobilin, which is used by Graphium sarpedon.
Synthetic pathways
Pterobilin is a chemical precursor to sarpedobilin in the larvae of the fourth instar of G. sarpedon through a double cyclisation of the central vinyl groups of the adjacent nitrogens. In the butterfly species Pieris brassicae, it is produced starting with acetate and then proceeding to glycin, then δ-aminolevulinic acid, then coproporphyrinogen III, to protoporphyrin IX and finally into pterobilin.Pterobilin can be phototransformed into phorcabilin and sarpedobilin in vitro. Pterobilin can also be thermally rearranged in vitro into phorcabilin.