aporphinoid

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

aporphine +‎ -oid

Adjective[edit]

aporphinoid (not comparable)

  1. Related to aporphine.
    • 1950, Richard Helmuth Fred Manske, Henry Lavergne Holmes, The Alkaloids: Chemistry and Physiology, page 319:
      Following the erroneous assignment of an aporphinoid structure to argemonine (15), various structures were considered based on degradative and spectral evidence (16,17).
    • 1989, The Alkaloids: Chemistry and Pharmacology, page 64:
      The first hypothesis seems to be preferable if the aporphinoid or shikimate–glutamate routes are considered.
    • 1998, K. W. Bentley, Isoquinoline Alkaloids, page 131:
      The aporphinoid alkaloids are widely distributed in plants and although most commonly found in the Papaveraceae they have also been isolated from the Araceae, Lauraceae and Monimiaceae.

Noun[edit]

aporphinoid (plural aporphinoids)

  1. An aporphinoid alkaloid; any of a group of related alkaloids that have aporphine as a core chemical substructure.
    • 1999, Chemistry and Biology, page 74:
    • (Can we date this quote?), (Please provide the book title or journal name):
      In recent years, the pharmacological activity of aporphinoids has been the subject of a great deal of research in the field of natural products.
    • 2012, T.I. Atta-ur-Rahman, Philip W. Le Quesne, Natural Products Chemistry III, page 238:
      At this point in our research we decided to investigate whether the need to devise ad hoc solutions for each separate aporphinoid might be done away with by developing a new method of aporphinoid synthesis that combined generality, convergence, simplicity and efficiency.
    • 2015, Reinhard Jetter, The Formation, Structure and Activity of Phytochemicals, page 51:
      Both agonistic and antagonistic activities have been described, depending on the particular aporphinoid.