Pyrrolizidine alkaloids of Ipomoea hederifolia and related species

Phytochemistry
1998.0

Abstract

The common necine base of the novel pyrrolizidine alkaloids (ipangulines) isolated recently from Ipomoea hederifolia is not turneforcidine but its 1 beta-epimer, platynecine. Three novel ipangulines were isolated from the aerial parts of I. hederifolia and identified as 9-O-[2-hydroxy-3-(2-acetoxy)-2-methylbutyryl]-7-O-salicyloylplatynecine (ipanguline B-2), 9-O-[2-hydroxy-3-(2-methylbutyryloxy)-2-methylbutyryl]-platynecine (ipanguline D-10) and 9-O-salicyloylplatynecine (ipanguline D-11). Comprehensive GC-mass spectrometric analysis also revealed a great variety of > 38 platynecine monoesters and diesters. They are classified as ipangulines A (diesters with one phenylacetic acid moiety), ipangulines B (diesters with one salicylic acid moiety), ipangulines C (diesters with two aliphatic moieties) and ipangulines D (either 7- or 9-monoesters). In shoot tips and young leaves, total ipangulines concentrations are up to 0.45% ton dry wt basis). The ipangulines are stored as tertiary alkaloids and not as N-oxides. Seeds of different provenance showed similar alkaloid patterns. Taxonomically related species, such as I. neei and I. x perigrenium, also contain platynecine esters in their vegetative tissues. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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