“…In the 13 C-NMR spectrum, the signals of C(7) and C(11) were shifted downfield from d(C) 55.7 and 74.5 in [13] to d(C) 170.4 and 126.1 in 1, which suggested that there is a C¼C bond in 1 instead of single bond. The signal of C(13) was shifted downfield from d(C) 21.6 in [13] to d(C) 53.7 in 1, meanwhile it was transformed into a CH 2 group from a Me group, which suggested that there is a CH 2 OH group in 1 instead of a Me group. This was further confirmed by the HMBCs CH 2 (2)/C(1), C(3), C(4), and C(5), HÀC(4)/C(1), C(2), C(5), C(6), and C(15), HÀC(5)/C(1), C(4), C(6), C(7), and C(15), CH 2 (14)/C(1) and C(9), CH 3 (15)/C(3), C(4) and C(5), and CH 2 (13)/C(7), C(1l), and C(12), and the 1 H, 1 H-COSY data confirmed the connectivity of C(1) to C(2) and C(5), of C(3) to C(2) and C(4), of C(5) to C(4) and C(6), and of C(8) to C(7) and C(9) (Fig.…”