NCBI Taxonomy: 52825
Ceropegia (ncbi_taxid: 52825)
found 35 associated metabolites at genus taxonomy rank level.
Ancestor: Stapeliinae
Child Taxonomies: Ceropegia lawii, Ceropegia media, Ceropegia fusca, Ceropegia huberi, Ceropegia jainii, Ceropegia rollae, Ceropegia lucida, Ceropegia bhatii, Ceropegia botrys, Ceropegia leroyi, Ceropegia meyeri, Ceropegia juncea, Ceropegia citrina, Ceropegia arabica, Ceropegia anantii, Ceropegia foliosa, Ceropegia elegans, Ceropegia evansii, Ceropegia hirsuta, Ceropegia occulta, Ceropegia oculata, Ceropegia odorata, Ceropegia striata, Ceropegia carnosa, Ceropegia affinis, Ceropegia bulbosa, Ceropegia barbata, Ceropegia bowkeri, Ceropegia ciliata, Ceropegia dinteri, Ceropegia pusilla, Ceropegia gilgiana, Ceropegia konasita, Ceropegia linearis, Ceropegia tihamana, Ceropegia racemosa, Ceropegia rupicola, Ceropegia simoneae, Ceropegia gardneri, Ceropegia maculata, Ceropegia dimorpha, Ceropegia ampliata, Ceropegia arenaria, Ceropegia euryacme, Ceropegia ballyana, Ceropegia radicans, Ceropegia speciosa, Ceropegia spiralis, Ceropegia africana, Ceropegia nilotica, Ceropegia albisepta, Ceropegia dichotoma, Ceropegia attenuata, Ceropegia humbertii, Ceropegia maccannii, Ceropegia meleagris, Ceropegia mahabalei, Ceropegia santapaui, Ceropegia imbricata, Ceropegia monticola, Ceropegia pubescens, Ceropegia variegata, Ceropegia aridicola, Ceropegia ensifolia, Ceropegia manoharii, Ceropegia saxatilis, Ceropegia wallichii, Ceropegia filifolia, Ceropegia distincta, Ceropegia barbigera, Ceropegia claviloba, Ceropegia fimbriata, Ceropegia lugardiae, Ceropegia stenantha, Ceropegia stenoloba, Ceropegia turricula, Ceropegia rendallii, Ceropegia murlensis, Ceropegia abyssinica, Ceropegia cufodontii, Ceropegia cumingiana, Ceropegia filiformis, Ceropegia anjanerica, Ceropegia intermedia, Ceropegia longifolia, Ceropegia fantastica, Ceropegia mohanramii, Ceropegia sahyadrica, Ceropegia vincifolia, Ceropegia yemenensis, Ceropegia pullaiahii, Ceropegia haygarthii, Ceropegia cycniflora, Ceropegia fusiformis, Ceropegia macmasteri, Ceropegia somalensis, Ceropegia succulenta, Ceropegia thwaitesii, Ceropegia multiflora, Ceropegia ahmarensis, Ceropegia sunhangiana, Ceropegia crassifolia, Ceropegia denticulata, Ceropegia salicifolia, Ceropegia candelabrum, Ceropegia decaisneana, Ceropegia kituloensis, Ceropegia leptophylla, Ceropegia namaquensis, Ceropegia namuliensis, Ceropegia pachystelma, Ceropegia rhynchantha, Ceropegia sandersonii, Ceropegia verruculosa, Ceropegia fimbriifera, Ceropegia cimiciodora, Ceropegia foetidiflora, unclassified Ceropegia, Ceropegia noorjahaniae, Ceropegia sankuruensis, Ceropegia purpurascens, Ceropegia mizoramensis, Ceropegia occidentalis, Ceropegia ambovombensis, Ceropegia ravikumariana, Ceropegia dolichophylla, Ceropegia panchganiensis, Ceropegia stapeliiformis, Ceropegia meyeri-johannis, Ceropegia maharashtrensis, Ceropegia aristolochioides
Hordenine
Hordenine is a potent phenylethylamine alkaloid with antibacterial and antibiotic properties produced in nature by several varieties of plants in the family Cactacea. The major source of hordenine in humans is beer brewed from barley. Hordenine in urine interferes with tests for morphine, heroin and other opioid drugs. Hordenine is a biomarker for the consumption of beer Hordenine is a phenethylamine alkaloid. It has a role as a human metabolite and a mouse metabolite. Hordenine is a natural product found in Cereus peruvianus, Mus musculus, and other organisms with data available. See also: Selenicereus grandiflorus stem (part of). Alkaloid from Hordeum vulgare (barley) CONFIDENCE Reference Standard (Level 1); INTERNAL_ID 2289 Hordenine, an alkaloid found in plants, inhibits melanogenesis by suppression of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) production[1]. Hordenine. CAS Common Chemistry. CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, n.d. https://commonchemistry.cas.org/detail?cas_rn=539-15-1 (retrieved 2024-10-24) (CAS RN: 539-15-1). Licensed under the Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
Hordenine
Annotation level-1 Hordenine, an alkaloid found in plants, inhibits melanogenesis by suppression of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) production[1]. Hordenine, an alkaloid found in plants, inhibits melanogenesis by suppression of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) production[1].