We have investigated the roots of Chenopodium ambrosioides L., collected in 1969 in the Moscow oblast [Introduction Laboratory of the All-Union Scientific-Research Institute for Medicinal Plants (VILR)]. The combined saponins isolated by the extraction of the roots with methanol and subsequent twice-repeated reprecipitation in acetone consisted, according to thin-layer chromatography, of two glycosides which we have called in order of increasing polarity chenopodiosides A and B. When the combined triterpene glycosides were chromatographed on a column of KSK silica gel, chenopodioside B was isolated, with the composition C52H82022 ,mp 213-216°C [~]~-50 ° (c 0.5; ethanol), tool. wt, 1071 (spectrophotometrically) [1]. The complete acid hydrolysis of chenopodioside B gave us echinocystic acid with mp 304-306°C (methanol), [~]~+47.6 ° (c 0.3; ethanol). Literature data: mp 305-306°C, [~]~+33 ° (c 1.5; chloroform) [2]. The acetate of this echinocystic acid, with mp 260-264°C (methanol), had physicochemical constants which agreed with those of an authentic sample kindly given to us by V. Ya. Chirva (Kishinev). According to paper chromatography, the carbohydrate part of chenopodioside B contains glucuronic acid, rhamnose, xylose, and arabinose. The alkaline hydrolysis of chenopodioside B formed a less polar glycoside with mp 285-287°C (methanol) giving on acid hydrolysis glucuronic acid and rhamnose, while xylose and arabinose were found inthe aqueous fraction from the alkaline hydrolyzate. The stepwise acid hydrolysis of chenopodioside B gave a glucuronide of echinocystic acid with mp 182-185°C (methanol), [~]~-34.3 ° (c 0.5; ethanol). Thus, in the glycoside studied glucuronic acid and rhamnose are attached to the hydroxy group of echinocystic acid and xylose and arabinose to the carboxy group. LITERATURE CITED
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