InChI=1S/C33H40N2O9/c1- 38- 19- 7- 8- 20- 21- 9- 10- 35- 16- 18- 13- 27(44- 32(36) 17- 11- 25(39- 2) 30(41- 4) 26(12- 17) 40- 3) 31(42- 5) 28(33(37) 43- 6) 22(18) 15- 24(35) 29(21) 34- 23(20) 14- 19/h7- 8,11- 12,14,18,22,24,27- 28,31,34H,9- 10,13,15- 16H2,1- 6H3/t18- ,22+,24- ,27- ,28+,31+/m1/s1 |
QEVHRUUCFGRFIF-MDEJGZGSSA-N |
[H] [C@] 12C[C@@H] (OC(=O) c3cc(OC) c(OC) c(OC) c3) [C@H] (OC) [C@@H] (C(=O) OC) [C@@] 1([H] ) C[C@@] 1([H] ) N(CCc3c1[nH] c1cc(OC) ccc31) C2 |
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Rauvolfia vomitoria
(NCBI:txid403115)
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See:
DOI
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environmental contaminant
Any minor or unwanted substance introduced into the environment that can have undesired effects.
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EC 3.4.21.26 (prolyl oligopeptidase) inhibitor
Any EC 3.4.21.* (serine endopeptidase) inhibitor that interferes with the action of prolyl oligopeptidase (EC 3.4.21.26).
adrenergic uptake inhibitor
Adrenergic uptake inhibitors are drugs that block the transport of adrenergic transmitters into axon terminals or into storage vesicles within terminals. The tricyclic antidepressants and amphetamines are among the therapeutically important drugs that may act via inhibition of adrenergic transport. Many of these drugs also block transport of serotonin.
plant metabolite
Any eukaryotic metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in plants, the kingdom that include flowering plants, conifers and other gymnosperms.
xenobiotic
A xenobiotic (Greek, xenos "foreign"; bios "life") is a compound that is foreign to a living organism. Principal xenobiotics include: drugs, carcinogens and various compounds that have been introduced into the environment by artificial means.
metabolite
Any intermediate or product resulting from metabolism. The term 'metabolite' subsumes the classes commonly known as primary and secondary metabolites.
(via alkaloid )
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first generation antipsychotic
Antipsychotic drugs which can have different modes of action but which tend to be more likely than second generation antipsychotics to cause extrapyramidal motor control disabilities such as body rigidity or Parkinson's disease-type movements; such body movements can become permanent even after treatment has ceased.
adrenergic uptake inhibitor
Adrenergic uptake inhibitors are drugs that block the transport of adrenergic transmitters into axon terminals or into storage vesicles within terminals. The tricyclic antidepressants and amphetamines are among the therapeutically important drugs that may act via inhibition of adrenergic transport. Many of these drugs also block transport of serotonin.
antihypertensive agent
Any drug used in the treatment of acute or chronic vascular hypertension regardless of pharmacological mechanism.
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View more via ChEBI Ontology
methyl (3β,16β,17α,18β,20α)- 11,17- dimethoxy- 18- [(3,4,5- trimethoxybenzoyl)oxy]yohimban- 16- carboxylate
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(−)-reserpine
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ChemIDplus
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(3β,16β,17α,18β,20α)- 11,17- dimethoxy- 18- [(3,4,5- trimethoxybenzoyl)oxy]yohimban- 16- carboxylic acid methyl ester
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NIST Chemistry WebBook
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3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoyl methyl reserpate
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ChemIDplus
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Apoplon
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ChemIDplus
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Reserpin
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NIST Chemistry WebBook
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Reserpine
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KEGG COMPOUND
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Serpalan
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NIST Chemistry WebBook
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102014
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Reaxys Registry Number
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Reaxys
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50-55-5
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CAS Registry Number
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KEGG COMPOUND
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50-55-5
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CAS Registry Number
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NIST Chemistry WebBook
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50-55-5
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CAS Registry Number
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ChemIDplus
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5326088
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Beilstein Registry Number
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Beilstein
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20701244
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PubMed citation
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Europe PMC
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20825390
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PubMed citation
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Europe PMC
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24603678
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PubMed citation
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Europe PMC
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