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Plants belonging to the genus Maytenus are routinely used in folk medicine for the treatment of pain diseases. Our previous phytochemical study of the roots of Maytenus imbricata resulted in the isolation and characterization of tingenone, a pentacyclic triterpene. Natural triterpenoids are of
Substances derived from plants play an important role in the development of new analgesic drugs, among them, triterpenoids. The connection between the participation of L-arginine/NO/cGMP pathway and the activation of ATP-sensitive K(+) channels (KATP) has been established on the peripheral
15alpha-Hydroxy-21-keto-pristimerine (1), a new nortriterpene quinone methide was isolated from the root bark of Maytenus catingarum along with other well-known related compounds, including pristimerine (2), tingenone, and 20alpha-hydroxy-tingenone. The structure of 1 was determined by means of 1H
Background: Quinonemethide triterpenoids, known as celastroloids, constitute a relatively small group of biologically active compounds restricted to the Celastraceae family and, therefore, they are chemotaxonomic markers for this family. Among this particular type of metabolite, pristimerin
Chromatographic studies controlled by biological evaluation (Tetrahymena test) showed some colour substances among them tingenone and beta-sitosterol. In order to identify the substances extraction and biologically controlled chromatography was carried out. Two substances were isolated, their
The insecticidal effects of nortriterpene quinone methides (pristimerin, tingenonee, and 20-alpha-hydroxytingenone) are reported for the first time. The natural products were isolated from Maytenus sp. (Celastraceae) and their effects tested on larvae of codling moth (Cydia pomonella, Lepidoptera:
In the high Amazonian basin a plant named chuchuasha, (or chuchuaso) is used in traditional medicine for several purposes in the form of an alcoholic extract. This plant, a Maytenus species, most probably Maytenus laevis, grows in the subandean region of the Amazonian basin (Peru, Ecuador,
Four cytotoxic quinoid triterpenes, tingenone (1), 22 beta-hydroxytingenone (2), pristimerin (3), and celastrol (4), isolated from Maytenus chuchuhuasca, potently inhibit the polymerization of tubulin.
Maytenus wallichiana callus tissue was extracted. The extract was fractionated to achieve maytansine containing residue. In none of the fractions maytansine corresponding substance was found. However evaluation by Tetrahymena test indicated strong cytotoxicity (ID50 1.8 micrograms/cm3).
The new nortriterpene methylene quinones amazoquinone (1) and (7S, 8S)-7-hydroxy-7,8-dihydro-tingenone (2), and the new norphenolic triterpenes 7,8-dihydro-6-oxo-tingenol (3), 23-nor-6-oxo-tingenol (4), and 23-oxo-iso-tingenone (5) were isolated from Maytenus amazonica. Their structures were
BACKGROUND
This aim of this study was to evaluate the antibacterial activity of fractions and isolates of Maytenus guianensis, a plant species used in Amazonian folk medicine.
METHODS
A disk diffusion technique was used to investigate the antibacterial potential.
RESULTS
The hexanic fractions and
The new phenols 6-oxo-tingenol, 3-O-methyl-6-oxo-tingenol and 6-oxo-iguesterol were isolated from the root bark of Maytenus canariensis. Their structures were determined by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopic studies, including HMQC, HMBC, DEPT and ROESY and chemical transformations. The synthesis of
BACKGROUND
Maytenus guianensis is a member of the Celastraceae family that is used in traditional medicine, particularly for its anti-parasitic and anti-cancer effects. To explore the ethnopharmacological potential of this plant, the present study was designed to screen the in vitro antileishmanial