Litcius/Paper detail

Geranylated Coumarins From Thai Medicinal Plant Mammea siamensis With Testosterone 5α-Reductase Inhibitory Activity

Toshio Morikawa, Fenglin Luo, Yoshiaki Manse, Hidemi Sugita, Shunsuke Saeki, Saowanee Chaipech, Yutana Pongpiriyadacha, Osamu Muraoka, Kiyofumi Ninomiya

2020Frontiers in Chemistry21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Geranylated coumarin constituents, kayeassamin I (1) and mammeasins E (2) and F (3) were newly isolated from the methanol extract of the flowers of Mammea siamensis (Calophyllaceae) originating in Thailand, along with five known isolates such as mammea E/BC (23), deacetylmammea E/AA cyclo D (31), deacetylmammea E/BB cyclo D (32), mammea A/AA cyclo F (34), and mammea A/AC cyclo F (35). These compounds (1–3) were obtained as an inseparable mixture (ca. 1:1 ratio) of the 3''R and 3''S forms, respectively. Among the isolated coumarins from the extract, mammeasins E (2, 22.6 μM), A (4, 19.0 μM), and B (5, 24.0 μM), kayeassamins E (9, 33.8 μM), F (10, 15.9 μM), and G (11, 17.7 μM), surangin C (13, 5.9 μM), and mammeas A/AA (17, 19.5 μM), E/BB (22, 16.8 μM), and A/AA cyclo F (34, 23.6 μM), were found to inhibit testosterone 5α-reductase.

Topics & Concepts

CoumarinStereochemistryChemistryReductaseEnzymeBiochemistryOrganic chemistryPlant-derived Lignans Synthesis and BioactivityTraditional and Medicinal Uses of AnnonaceaeSynthesis and Biological Activity