7 結果
Pimelea species (or desert riceflower) are small native plants endemic to the drier inland pastoral regions of Australia, which cause a unique syndrome in grazing cattle characterized by submandibular edema and edema in the brisket area as a result of right-sided heart failure attributed to the
Serial dilutions of mixtures of the closely related diterpenoid orthoesters simplexin and huratoxin were added to cultures of chicken embryo fibroblast cells and bovine erythroid cells; the mixture was lethal at concentrations of 100 micrograms/ml and 1 microgram/ml, respectively. Morphological
Cattle grazing in arid rangelands of Australia suffer periodic extensive and serious poisoning by the plant species Pimelea trichostachya, P. simplex, and P. elongata. Pimelea poisoning (also known as St. George disease and Marree disease) has been attributed to the presence of the diterpenoid
From the methanol extract of Pimelea prostrata, prostratin (I) and 2 autoxidation products have been isolated. They are tigliane derivatives and relatively nonirritant on the mouse ear. The irritant pimelea factor P5 (IIa) also with a tigliane skeleton and related to mancinellin (IIb), as well as
The aerial portion of Pimelea prostrata (Thymelaeaceae) collected in New Zealand was evaluated as a source of substances that inhibit growth of the murine P-388 lymphocytic leukemia (PS). Simplexin (1) and Pimelea factor P2 (2) were found to strongly inhibit growth (ED50 5 X 10(-3) and 8 X 10(-4)
Investigation of Pimelea elongata ("Lakebed Pimelea") afforded 18 tigliane- and daphnane-type diterpenes (1-18). Eight of these were new compounds: four (1-3, 5) tigliane esters and four (7, 8, 10, 11) daphnane orthoesters. The 10 known compounds were 12-O-decanoylphorbol-13-acetate (4), P. simplex
Pimelea poisoning of cattle, historically known as St. George Disease or Marree Disease, is a prevailing issue in arid grazing regions of inland Australia. Ingestion of the toxic native Pimelea species that contain the secondary metabolite simplexin, a diterpene orthoester with potent protein kinase