46: J Agric Food Chem. 2005
New alkamides from maca (Lepidium meyenii).
Zhao J, Muhammad I, Dunbar DC, Mustafa J, Khan IA. University of
Mississippi
Maca (Lepidium meyenii) has been used as a food in Peru for thousands of years. More
recently a wide array of commercial maca products have gained popularity as dietary supplements, with claims of anabolic and aphrodisiac
effects, although the biologically active principles are not fully known. In an earlier chemical
investigation, two new alkamides and a novel fatty acid, as well as the N-hydroxypyridine derivative, macaridine, were isolated from L.
meyenii. Further examination has led to the isolation of five additional new alkamides, namely, N-benzyl-9-oxo-12Z-octadecenamide (1),
N-benzyl-9-oxo-12Z,15Z-octadecadienamide (2), N-benzyl-13-oxo-9E,11E-octadecadienamide (3), N-benzyl-15Z-tetracosenamide (4), and
N-(m-methoxybenzyl)hexadecanamide (5). Their structures were established by spectrometric and spectroscopic methods including ESI-HRMS,
EIMS, (1)H, (13)C, and 2D NMR, as well as (1)H-(15)N 2D HMBC experiments. In addition, the identity of N-benzyl-15Z-tetracosenamide (4) was
confirmed by synthesis. These compounds have been found from only L. meyenii and could be used
as markers for authentication and standardization.
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