Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin
Online ISSN : 1347-5223
Print ISSN : 0009-2363
ISSN-L : 0009-2363
Current Topics: Review
Spiromeroterpenoids from the Higher Plants
Yohei Saito Tomoya NishidaKyoko Nakagawa-Goto
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2025 Volume 73 Issue 3 Pages 138-155

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Abstract

Meroterpenoids are a distinctive class of natural products found in various organisms, including animals, plants, bacteria, algae, and particularly fungi. Among them, spiromeroterpenoids, which have a spiro-ring connecting a terpenoid and a non-terpenoid moiety, are markedly unique. Currently, only a limited number of plants from the families Myrtaceae, Hypericaceae, Annonaceae, Asteraceae, and Lauraceae are known to biosynthesize spiromeroterpenoids. The non-terpene moiety of plant-derived spiromeroterpenoids is generally a polyketide, mainly a functionalized phloroglucinol derivative such as syncarpic acid and tasmanone. However, a flavanone, as found in the syzygioblanes isolated from Syzygium oblanceolatum (Myrtaceae), is another rare non-terpene component. The terpene moieties are restricted to monoterpenes or sesquiterpenes. The spiro-ring is generally formed by [m + n] cyclization or, in some cases, by radical or ionic cyclization.

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Published by The Pharmaceutical Society of Japan

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