Abstract
Afroside, C29H42O9,
is a new cardiac glycoside which has been obtained from Gomphocarpus fruticosus
R.Br. It contains a carbonyl (aldehyde) group at C10, and a
secondary hydroxyl group in the nucleus, which has been placed provisionally at
position C11. On the basis of the available evidence, afroside
appears to consist of a mixture of the isomeric free aldehyde and the 19-11
cyclic hemiacetal forms. Of these substances, the cyclic hemiacetal form is the
only one which has been isolated in pure condition (afroside B). Acetylation of
afroside produced a triacetate, C35H46O12.H2O,
which is identical with that obtained by the acetylation of afroside B.
Reduction of afroside with sodium borohydride produces afrosidol, C29H44O9,
which shows no evidence for a carbonyl group at C10. Hydrolysis of
afroside produces α-anhydroafrogenin, C23H28-30O5.H2O,
which forms a monoacetate, C25H32O7.H2O.
The infra-red spectra of these compounds show the presence of a saturated γ-lactone
ring in the structure of the nucleus, besides the normal Δα-β-γ-lactone
ring at C17 (1786, 1755, 1633 cm-1). Acetyl-α-anhydroafrogenin
also shows an intense absorption band of simple structure at 1238 cm-1,
which indicates an equatorially orientated acetyl group at C3. As
all the naturally occurring cardiac aglycones of known structure have a β-orientated
hydroxyl group at C3, for the substituent in this position to be
equatorial, the A/B ring junction is probably trans.
Hydrolysis of afrosidol produces α-anhydroafrogenol,
C23H32O5.H2O, which forms a
diacetate, C27H36O7.H2O. The
infra-red spectrum of α-anhydroafrogenol shows no evidence of the
saturated y-lactone ring which is present in the structure of α-anhydroafrogenin.
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