Product Name: Quinine
Synonyms: (R)-(6-Methoxyquinolin-4-yl)((1R,2R,4R,5S)-5-vinylquinuclidin-2-yl)Methanol;(1R)-(6-Methoxyquinolin-4-yl)(5-vinylquinuclidin-2-yl)Methanol;(-)-QUININE FOR RESOLUTION OF RACEMATES;(R)-[(2S,4S,5R)-1-Aza-5-vinylbicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-yl](6-methoxyquinolin-4-yl)methanol;Quinine, (R)-[(2S,4S,5R)-1-Aza-5-ethenylbicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-yl](6-methoxyquinolin-4-yl)methanol;Quinine Anhydrous, for Fluorescene;(8R,9S)-Quinidine-d3;(9S)-6'-Methoxycinchonan-9-ol-d3
CAS: 130-95-0
MF: C20H24N2O2
MW: 324.42
EINECS: 205-003-2
Product Categories: Alkaloids;Biochemistry;for Resolution of Acids;Optical Resolution;Quinoline Alkaloids;Synthetic Organic Chemistry;chiral;Chiral Reagents;Intermediates & Fine Chemicals;Pharmaceuticals;AlkaloidAsymmetric Synthesis;Chiral Resolving ReagentsChiral Catalysts, Ligands, and Reagents;Cinchona AlkaloidsVoltage-gated Ion Channels;Biochemicals Found in Plants;Chiral Resolution Reagents;Monovalent Ion Channels;Nutrition Research;Potassium Channel Modulators;Privileged Ligands and Complexes;Heterocycles;QUALAQUIN;Inhibitors;Fluorescent;Quinoline;130-95-0
Quinine, was the first known antimalarial. It is a 4-quinolinemethanol derivative bearing a substituted quinuclidine ring. The use of quinine in Europe began in the seventeenth century, after the Incas of Peru informed the Spanish Jesuits about the antimalarial properties of the bark of an evergreen mountain tree they called quinquina (later called cinchona, after Dona Franciscoa Henriquez de Ribera [1576–1639], Countess of Chinchon and wife of the Peruvian Viceroy).