Home

meederin

Meederin is a fictional organic compound used in educational contexts to illustrate principles of natural product chemistry and pharmacology. In teaching materials, meederin is described as a hypothetical secondary metabolite with moderate lipophilicity and a pattern of oxygen-containing functional groups, such as a lactone and one or more hydroxyl groups. The exact structure can vary in examples, but representations commonly feature a small polycyclic framework with a molecular weight in the approximate range of 240 to 320 g/mol.

The name meederin serves as a pedagogical label and does not correspond to a substance cataloged in

In fictional biosynthetic narratives, meederin is said to be produced by a hypothetical plant species Meederia

Applications and limitations: meederin is employed to demonstrate solvent extraction, chromatographic separation, and interpretation of NMR

See also: natural product, secondary metabolite, hypothetical compound, structure elucidation.

established
chemical
databases.
It
is
often
introduced
in
courses
on
extraction,
purification,
and
spectroscopic
analysis
to
provide
a
consistent,
controllable
template
for
practice.
ficta
via
a
simplified
polyketide
or
terpene
pathway.
These
narratives
are
used
to
discuss
concepts
of
biosynthesis,
gene
clusters,
and
enzymatic
steps
in
a
classroom
setting
without
implying
real-world
occurrence.
and
mass
spectrometry
data,
as
well
as
basic
in
vitro
bioactivity
screening
in
teaching
laboratories.
Because
it
is
not
a
real
compound,
there
are
no
genuine
toxicological
profiles
or
regulatory
considerations.