Chemical examination of the root of Ipomoea orizabensis / by Frederick B. Power and Harold Rogerson.
- Frederick Belding Power
- Date:
- 1912
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Chemical examination of the root of Ipomoea orizabensis / by Frederick B. Power and Harold Rogerson. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
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![Summary. The material employed for this investigation consisted of the roots of Ipomoea orizabensis, Ledanois (Nat. Ord. Convolvulaceae), which are commonly known as “ Mexican Scammony Root. The root was found to contain 14'55 per cent, of resin, 71 per cent, of which was soluble in ether. After treatment with animal charcoal the resin was obtained nearly colourless. It then melted at 125—130°, and had [a]D —23 0°. For a complete examination of the root, 48’76 kilograms of the ground material were extracted with hot alcohol. A portion of the concentrated extract was employed for determining the presence of sucrose, and a small amount of the latter was isolated. Another portion of the extract was distilled in a current of steam, when a very small amount of a pale yellow essential oil was obtained. From the portion of the extract which was soluble in water, the following compounds were isolated: (i) scopoletin, C10H8O4 (m. p. 203—204°), a small proportion of which appeared to be present in the form of a glucoside; (ii) 3:4-dihydroxycinnamic acid, C9H804 (m. p. 223—225°), from which the methyl ester (m. p. 158—160°) was prepared. The aqueous liquid contained, furthermore, a quantity of sugar, which yielded d-plienylglucosazone (m. p. 205—206°). The portion of the alcoholic extract which was insoluble in water consisted of a resin which possessed the above-mentioned characters. The resin was first successively extracted with various solvents, and the resulting extracts were then further examined. I. Petroleum Extract of the llesin.—From this extract the following substances were obtained: (i) hentriacontane, CgjH^; (ii) a phytosterol, C27H460; (iii) cetyl alcohol, C16H340; (iv) a mixture of fatty acids, consisting of palmitic, stearic, oleic, and linolenic acids. II. Ethereal Extract of the Resin.—The optical rotatory power of this extract was [a]D — 20'5°. After hydrolysis with barium hydroxide it yielded: (i) ipuranol, C23H3802(0H)2; (ii) (7-a-methyl- butyric acid; (iii) tiglic acid; and a product which on acid hydro- lysis gave (iv) jalapinolic acid, C15H30(OH)*CO2H (m. p. 67—68°; [a]D +0'79°), together with a little methyl jalapinolate, and (v) a mixture of sugars, consisting of dextrose and a methylpentose. The latter yielded an osazone melting at 180—182°, and a tetra-acetyl derivative, C6H805(C0'CH3)4, which apparently is a new compound. This derivative crystallises in handsome, prismatic needles, melting at 142—143°, and has [aJD +21'64°. The ethyl acetate extract of the product resulting from the alkaline hydrolysis of the ethereal extract of the resin gave on oxidation with nitric acid a mixture](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22439250_0029.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)