Description
Studies in Natural Products Chemistry
Studies in Natural Products Chemistry Series
Coordinator: Rahman Atta-ur
Language: EnglishSubjects for Studies in Natural Products Chemistry:
Support: Print on demand
Description
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Studies in Natural Products Chemistry, Volume 53, covers the synthesis, testing, and recording of the medicinal properties of natural products, providing cutting-edge accounts of the fascinating developments in the isolation, structure elucidation, synthesis, biosynthesis, and pharmacology of a diverse array of bioactive natural products.
Natural products in the plant and animal kingdom offer a huge diversity of chemical structures that are the result of biosynthetic processes that have been modulated over the millennia through genetic effects. With the rapid developments in spectroscopic techniques and accompanying advances in high-throughput screening techniques, it has become possible to isolate and then determine the structures and biological activity of natural products rapidly, thus opening up exciting opportunities in the field of new drug development to the pharmaceutical industry that are discussed and highlighted in this series.
2. Recent Developments on the Synthesis and Applications of Betulin and Betulinic Acid Derivatives as Therapeutic Agents
3. Synthetic Approaches to the Naturally Occurring Anticancer Amaryllidaceae Alkaloids trans-dihydrolycoricidine and trans-dihydronarciclasine
4. Total Synthesis of Schisandra Nortriterpenoids: History, Progress, and Perspective
5. Chemical Synthesis of Meridianins and Related Derivatives
6. Biologically Active Isothiocyanates: Protecting Plants and Healing Humans
7. Curcumin, a Multitarget Phytochemical: Challenges and Perspectives
8. Bioactive Coumarins and Xanthones From Calophyllum Genus and Analysis of Their Druglikeness and Toxicological Properties
9. Structure and Biological Functions of d-Glucans and Their Applications
10. Chemistry, Bioactivity, and the Structure-Activity Relationship of Cephalotaxine-Type Alkaloids From Cephalotaxus sp.
11. Analysis of the Protein Binding Sites for Thiamin and Its Derivatives to Elucidate the Molecular Mechanisms of the Noncoenzyme Action of Thiamin (Vitamin B1)
Natural product chemists, medicinal chemists, pharmacologists as well as academic and industry researchers
- Focuses on the chemistry of bioactive natural products
- Contains contributions by leading authorities in the field
- Presents sources of new pharmacophores