|
yanuthone K |
|
CHEBI:133035 |
|
A class I yanuthone that is 5,6-epoxy-cyclohex-2-en-1-one which is substituted at positions 3, 4, and 6 by methyl, acetoxy, and trans,trans-farnesyl groups, respectively (the R,R,R stereoisomer). Isolated from the filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger, it shows antifungal activity towards the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans (IC50 = 17.5 ±3.9 μM). |
|
This entity has been manually annotated by the ChEBI Team.
|
|
Julian Brandl
|
|
|
|
Molfile
XML
SDF
|
|
|
|
Aspergillus metabolite
Any fungal metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in the mould, Aspergillus .
antifungal agent
An antimicrobial agent that destroys fungi by suppressing their ability to grow or reproduce.
metabolite
Any intermediate or product resulting from metabolism. The term 'metabolite' subsumes the classes commonly known as primary and secondary metabolites.
(via meroterpenoid )
|
|
yanuthone K is a Functional Parent of
|
yanuthone M
Mass :
404.541
Formula :
C24H36O5
|
yanuthone L
Mass :
402.525
Formula :
C24H34O5
|
|
yanuthone K is a Structural Derivative of
|
oxirane
Mass :
44.05256
Formula :
C2H4O
alicyclic compound
Definition :
An aliphatic compound having a carbocyclic ring structure which may be saturated or unsaturated, but may not be a benzenoid or other aromatic system.
terpenoid
Definition :
Any isoprenoid that is a natural product or related compound formally derived from isoprene units. Terpenoids may contain oxygen in various functional groups. This class is subdivided according to the number of carbon atoms in the parent terpene. The skeleton of terpenoids may differ from strict additivity of isoprene units by the loss or shift of a fragment, generally a methyl group.
polyketide
Definition :
Natural and synthetic compounds containing alternating carbonyl and methylene groups ('beta-polyketones'), biogenetically derived from repeated condensation of acetyl coenzyme A (via malonyl coenzyme A), and usually the compounds derived from them by further condensations, etc. Considered by many to be synonymous with the less frequently used terms acetogenins and ketides.
|
|
|