1028591-36-7Relevant articles and documents
Conformations of 3-carboxylic esters essential for neurotoxicity in veratrum alkaloids are loosely restricted and fluctuate
Niitsu, Ai,Harada, Masanori,Yamagaki, Tohru,Tachibana, Kazuo
, p. 3025 - 3031 (2008)
The lipid-soluble veratrum alkaloids, veratridine and cevadine, are plant neurotoxins that are agonists of voltage-gated sodium channel. Their conformations in a hydrophobic environment were analyzed by NMR spectroscopy in solution phase chloroform at low temperatures. The conformations around the 3-carboxylic esters which is essential for their neurotoxicity, was completely different from the previously reported X-ray crystallographic structure. The carbonyl oxygen atom (O28) of the carboxylic ester forms a weak intramolecular hydrogen bond with the OH proton at C4 (4-OH) that loosely restricts the conformation of the 3-veratroyl ester in veratridine and the 3-angeloyl ester in cevadine. Methylation at C4 hydroxyl group of veratridine had much reduced its neurotoxic activity relating to voltage-gated sodium channel. The results suggested that the loose conformational restrictions of the carboxylic esters are important for neurotoxicity of the veratrum alkaloids.