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Search for "sulfur-containing natural products" in Full Text gives 2 result(s) in Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry.

β-Hydroxy sulfides and their syntheses

  • Mokgethwa B. Marakalala,
  • Edwin M. Mmutlane and
  • Henok H. Kinfe

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2018, 14, 1668–1692, doi:10.3762/bjoc.14.143

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  • Mokgethwa B. Marakalala Edwin M. Mmutlane Henok H. Kinfe Department of Chemistry, University of Johannesburg, PO Box 524, Auckland Park 2006, South Africa 10.3762/bjoc.14.143 Abstract Sulfur-containing natural products are ubiquitous in nature, their most abundant source being marine organisms
  • ; epoxide thiolysis; β-hydroxy sulfides; sulfur-containing natural products; Review 1. Introduction Organosulfur compounds are widely distributed in nature, with marine organisms being the richest sources of these, since sulfur, as the sulfate ion, is the second most abundant anion in sea water after
  • , sulfide (acyclic or heterocyclic), disulfide, sulfoxide, sulfonate, thioaminal, hemithioacetal, various thioesters, thiocarbamate and isothiocyanate [3]. The three simplest sulfur-containing natural products are perhaps, (E)-2-butene-1-thiol (1), the principal ingredient of the repulsively malodorous
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Published 05 Jul 2018

Recent highlights in biosynthesis research using stable isotopes

  • Jan Rinkel and
  • Jeroen S. Dickschat

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2015, 11, 2493–2508, doi:10.3762/bjoc.11.271

Graphical Abstract
  • experiments are rare, but can provide interesting insights into the biosynthesis of sulfur containing natural products. Besides the recently presented synthetic developments towards 36S-labeled SAM and methionine [77], also [34S]cysteine has been made accessible by synthesis from elemental 34S8 and used to
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Published 09 Dec 2015
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