Nematocidal thiocyanatins from a southern Australian marine sponge Oceanapia sp.


Autoria(s): Capon, R. J.; Skene, C.; Liu, E. H.; Lacey, E.; Gill, J. H.; Heiland, K.; Friedel, T.
Contribuinte(s)

A Douglas Kinghorn

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Investigations of a southern Australian marine sponge, Oceanapia sp., have yielded two new methyl branched bisthiocyanates, thiocyanatins D-1 (3a) and D-2 (3b), along with two new thiocarbamate thiocyanates, thiocyanatins E-l (4a) and E-2 (4b). The new thiocyanatins belong to a rare class of bioactive marine metabolite previously only represented by thiocyanatins A-C (1, 2a/b). Structures were assigned on the basis of detailed spectroscopic analysis, with comparisons to the known bisthiocyanate thiocyanatin A (1) and synthetic model compounds (5-7). The thiocyanatins exhibit potent nematocidal activity, and preliminary structure-activity relationship investigations have confirmed key characteristics of the thiocyanatin pharmacophore.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:73314

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Chemical Society, American Soc of Pharmacognosy

Palavras-Chave #Plant Sciences #Chemistry, Applied #Chemistry, Medicinal #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Stereochemistry #Metabolites #C1 #250399 Organic Chemistry not elsewhere classified #780103 Chemical sciences #030401 Biologically Active Molecules #030502 Natural Products Chemistry
Tipo

Journal Article