Fumiquinazoline
Fumiquinazolines are bio-active isolates of Aspergillus.[1][2]
References
- Buckingham, John; Baggaley, Keith H.; Roberts, Andrew D.; Szabo, Laszlo F. (2010). Dictionary of Alkaloids, Second Edition with CD-ROM. CRC Press. ISBN 9781420077704.
- Walsh, Christopher T.; Tang, Yi (2017). Natural Product Biosynthesis: Chemical Logic and Enzymatic Machinery. Royal Society of Chemistry. ISBN 9781788010764.
Further reading
- Cheng, Zhongbin; Lou, Lanlan; Liu, Dong; Li, Xiaodan; Proksch, Peter; Yin, Sheng; Lin, Wenhan (10 November 2016). "Versiquinazolines A–K, Fumiquinazoline-Type Alkaloids from the Gorgonian-Derived Fungus Aspergillus versicolor LZD-14-1". Journal of Natural Products. 79 (11): 2941–2952. doi:10.1021/acs.jnatprod.6b00801. PMID 27933898.
- Ames, BD; Haynes, SW; Gao, X; Evans, BS; Kelleher, NL; Tang, Y; Walsh, CT (11 October 2011). "Complexity generation in fungal peptidyl alkaloid biosynthesis: oxidation of fumiquinazoline A to the heptacyclic hemiaminal fumiquinazoline C by the flavoenzyme Af12070 from Aspergillus fumigatus". Biochemistry. 50 (40): 8756–69. doi:10.1021/bi201302w. PMC 3194008. PMID 21899262.
- Magotra, A; Kumar, M; Kushwaha, M; Awasthi, P; Raina, C; Gupta, AP; Shah, BA; Gandhi, SG; Chaubey, A (December 2017). "Epigenetic modifier induced enhancement of fumiquinazoline C production in Aspergillus fumigatus (GA-L7): an endophytic fungus from Grewia asiatica L". AMB Express. 7 (1): 43. doi:10.1186/s13568-017-0343-z. PMC 5315648. PMID 28213885.
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