| Literature DB >> 15332841 |
Robert J Capon1, Colin Skene, Edward Hsiang-Te Liu, Ernest Lacey, Jennifer H Gill, Kirstin Heiland, Thomas Friedel.
Abstract
Investigations of a southern Australian marine sponge, Oceanapia sp., have yielded two new beta methyl branched bisthiocyanates, thiocyanatins D1 (3a) and D(2) (3b), along with two new thiocarbamate thiocyanates, thiocyanatins E1 (4a) and E2 (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.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15332841 DOI: 10.1021/np049977y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nat Prod ISSN: 0163-3864 Impact factor: 4.050