1983
DOI: 10.1002/9780470186954.ch11
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The Bisindole Alkaloids

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In the case of the plant monoterpenoid indole alkaloids, most of the enantiomeric metabolites occur in different species as a single enantiomer and only sometimes as a racemic mixture. Examples include (+)-, (−)-, (±)-vincadifformine; (+)-, (−)-, (±)-vincamine; (+)-, (−)-, (±)-eburnamonine; and (+)-catharanthine and (−)-coronaridine, the latter exemplifying the case of alkaloids that are not strictly enantiomers but belong to opposite antipodal series (enantiomeric congeners or enantiodivergent congeners). One group of the monoterpenoid indole alkaloids characterized by the occurrence of enantiomeric pairs is the eburnane group of alkaloids, where for a number of these alkaloids both enantiomers are known [e.g., (+)- and (−)-eburnamonine, 1 and 9 , respectively] and a single enantiomer is usually found in a particular species [e.g., (−)-eburnamine 2 in Kopsia larutensis , (+)-eburnamine 10 in K. jasminiflora ] and where to date racemic or scalemic mixtures are rarely encountered . In our extensive studies of the Malaysian Kopsia (and Leuconotis ), where a significant number of eburnane alkaloids were isolated, we have observed the occurrence of biosynthetic enantiodivergence and herein report our results.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of the plant monoterpenoid indole alkaloids, most of the enantiomeric metabolites occur in different species as a single enantiomer and only sometimes as a racemic mixture. Examples include (+)-, (−)-, (±)-vincadifformine; (+)-, (−)-, (±)-vincamine; (+)-, (−)-, (±)-eburnamonine; and (+)-catharanthine and (−)-coronaridine, the latter exemplifying the case of alkaloids that are not strictly enantiomers but belong to opposite antipodal series (enantiomeric congeners or enantiodivergent congeners). One group of the monoterpenoid indole alkaloids characterized by the occurrence of enantiomeric pairs is the eburnane group of alkaloids, where for a number of these alkaloids both enantiomers are known [e.g., (+)- and (−)-eburnamonine, 1 and 9 , respectively] and a single enantiomer is usually found in a particular species [e.g., (−)-eburnamine 2 in Kopsia larutensis , (+)-eburnamine 10 in K. jasminiflora ] and where to date racemic or scalemic mixtures are rarely encountered . In our extensive studies of the Malaysian Kopsia (and Leuconotis ), where a significant number of eburnane alkaloids were isolated, we have observed the occurrence of biosynthetic enantiodivergence and herein report our results.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The activity and structures of bisindole alkaloids have been reviewed and the number of isolated bisindole alkaloids are increasing [16,17,18,19]. This review is focused on the partial and total synthesis of bisindoles, as well as some dimeric indole alkaloids wherein at least one of the following monomeric units contains, as its obligate constituent, the sarpagine, macroline, ajmaline, vobasine, or pleiocarpamine systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3), which contain an octahydro-3a,3a′-bispyrrolo[2,3-b]indole subunit (Fig. 3, core structure 24) with vicinal all-carbon quaternary stereogenic centers, exhibit important biological activities [13] and have therefore led to a great demand for enatioselective and efficient synthetic …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%