NCBI Taxonomy: 1445621
Aconitum henryi (ncbi_taxid: 1445621)
found 2 associated metabolites at species taxonomy rank level.
Ancestor: Aconitum
Child Taxonomies: none taxonomy data.
Aconitine
D049990 - Membrane Transport Modulators > D062687 - Sodium Channel Agonists > D061585 - Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel Agonists D007155 - Immunologic Factors Aconitine is a diterpenoid that is 20-ethyl-3alpha,13,15alpha-trihydroxy-1alpha,6alpha,16beta-trimethoxy-4-(methoxymethyl)aconitane-8,14alpha-diol having acetate and benzoate groups at the 8- and 14-positions respectively. It is functionally related to an aconitane. Aconitine is a natural product found in Aconitum anthora, Aconitum napellus, and other organisms with data available. Aconitine is a plant toxin found in species of wolfsbane (Aconitum genus). It is a neurotoxin previously used as an antipyretic and analgesic, and still has some limited application in herbal medicine. (L1235). The toxic effects of Aconitine have been tested in a variety of different test animals, including mammals (dog, cat, guinea pig, mouse, rat and rabbit), frogs and pigeons. Depending on the route of exposure, the observed toxic effects were: local anesthetic effect, diarrhea, convulsions, arrhythmias or death. According to a review of different reports of aconite poisoning in humans the following clinical features were observed: Neurological, Cardiovascular, Ventricular arrhythmias, Gastrointestinal. A C19 norditerpenoid alkaloid (DITERPENES) from the root of ACONITUM; DELPHINIUM and larkspurs. It activates VOLTAGE-GATED SODIUM CHANNELS. It has been used to induce ARRHYTHMIAS in experimental animals and it has anti-inflammatory and anti-neuralgic properties. See also: Aconitum coreanum root (part of). Origin: Plant; SubCategory_DNP: Terpenoid alkaloids, Diterpene alkaloid, Aconitum alkaloid Annotation level-1 CONFIDENCE Reference Standard (Level 1); INTERNAL_ID 2309