Summary
From the epigeal part ofAconitum karakolicum growing in the upper reaches of the R. Tyup (KirghizSSR) have been isolated phenyl-β-naphthylamine, aconitine, aconifine, songorine, napelline, and the new base acetylnapelline. On the basis of a study of spectral characteristics and chemical transformations it has been shown that the alkaloid is the C-11-monoacetate of napelline.
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Literature cited
M. N. Sultankhodzhaev, M. S. Yunusov, and S. Yu. Yunusov, Khim. Prirodn. Soedin., 127 (1973).
M. N. Sultankhodzhaev and M. M. Tadzhibaev, Khim. Priodn. Soedin., 406 (1976).
M. N. Sultankhodzhaev, L. V. Beshitaishvili, M. S. Yunusov, and S. Yu. Yunusov, Khim. Prirodn. Soedin., 681 (1976).
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M. N. Sultankhodzhaev, M. S. Yunusov, and S. Yu. Yunusov, Khim. Prirodn. Soedin., 381 (1975).
S. W. Pelletier, L. H. Keith, and P. C. Parthasarathy, J. Am. Chem. Soc.,89, 4146 (1967).
Additional information
Institute of the Chemistry of Plant Substances, Academy of Sciences of the Uzbek SSR, Tashkent. Translated from Khimiya Prirodnykh Soedinenii, No. 4, pp. 479–482, July–August, 1978.
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Sultankhodzhaev, M.N., Beshitaishvili, L.V., Yunusov, M.S. et al. Alkaloids ofAconitum karakolicum. Structure of acetylnapelline. Chem Nat Compd 14, 407–409 (1978). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00565246
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00565246