000 02665 a2200313 4500
003 OSt
005 20241127161102.0
008 241127b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9783031595660
040 _cIIT Kanpur
041 _aeng
082 _a547
_bP943 v.124
245 _aProgress in the chemistry of organic natural products 124 [V.124]
_cedited by A. Douglas Kinghorn ... [et al.]
260 _bSpringer
_c2024
_aSwitzerland
300 _avii, 233p
440 _aProgress in the chemistry of organic natural products
490 _a/ edited by A. Douglas Kinghorn ... [et al.]
_v; v.124
520 _a This volume presents three chapters discussing a range of topics. Chapter 1 deals with the development of efficient methods for compound dereplication that have been critical in the re-emergence of research on natural products as a source of new drug leads. It describes the main methods of dereplication, which rely on the combined use of large natural product databases and spectral libraries, alongside the information obtained from chromatographic, UV-Vis, MS, and NMR spectroscopic analyses of the samples of interest. Chapter 2 describes 989 plant natural products and their ecological functions in plant-herbivore, plant-microorganism, and plant-plant interactions. These compounds include alkaloids, phenols, terpenoids, and other structural types. The information presented should provide the basis for in-depth research on these plant natural products and their natural functions, and also for their further development and utilization. Chapter 3 focuses on lichens, with each constituting a symbiotic association composed of a primary mycobiont and one or more photobionts living mutualistically. Covered are lichens and their bionts, taxonomic identification, and their chemical constituents as exemplified by what is found in lichen biomes, especially those endemic to North America. Extraction and isolation procedures, as well as updates on dereplication methods using mass spectrometric GNPS and NMR spectroscopic spin network fingerprint procedures, and marker-based techniques to identify lichens are discussed. The isolation and structure elucidation of secondary metabolites of an endolichenic Penicillium species that produces bioactive compounds is described in detail.
650 _aChemistry, organic
650 _aNatural products
650 _aorganic chemistry
700 _aKinghorn, A. Douglas [ed.]
700 _aFalk, Heinz [ed.]
700 _aGibbons, Simon [ed.]
700 _aAsakawa, Yoshinori [ed.]
700 _aLiu, Ji-Kai [ed.]
700 _aDirsch, Verena M. [ed.]
942 _cBK
999 _c567356
_d567356