Cycloartane Glycosides from <i>Sutherlandia frutescens</i>

Xiang Fu(University of Mississippi), Xing‐Cong Li(University of Missouri), Troy J. Smillie(University of Mississippi), Paulo Carvalho(University of Missouri), Wilfred T. Mabusela(University of the Western Cape), James Syce(University of Missouri), Quinton Johnson(University of Missouri), William R. Folk(University of Mississippi), Mitchell A. Avery(University of Mississippi), Ikhlas A. Khan(University of Missouri)
Journal of Natural Products
September 23, 2008
Cited by 64

Abstract

Four new cycloartane glycosides, sutherlandiosides A–D (1–4), were isolated from the South African folk medicine Sutherlandia frutescens and their structures established by spectroscopic methods and X-ray crystallography as 1S,3R,24S,25-tetrahydroxy-7S,10S-epoxy-9,10-seco-9,19-cyclolanost-9(11)-ene 25-O-β-d-glucopyranoside (1), 3R,7S,24S,25-tetrahydroxycycloartan-1-one 25-O-β-d-glucopyranoside (2), 3R,24S,25-trihydroxycycloartane-1,11-dione 25-O-β-d-glucopyranoside (3), and 7S,24S,25-trihydroxycycloart-2-en-1-one 25-O-β-d-glucoyranoside (4). Compound 1 represents the first secocycloartane skeleton possessing a 7,10-oxygen bridge. Compounds 2–4 are also the first examples of naturally occurring cycloartanes with a C-1 ketone functionality. Biosynthetic considerations and chemical evidence suggest that the presence of the C-1 ketone in 2 may facilitate the ring opening of the strained cyclopropane system.


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