Journal article
The importance of hyphenated techniques in the discovery of new lead compounds from nature.
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Wolfender JL
Laboratory of Pharmacognosy and Pytochemistry, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Geneva, Univerity of Lausanne, 30 quai Ernest-Ansermet, CH-1211, Geneva, Switzerland; † jean-luc.wolfender@pharm.unige.ch.
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Queiroz EF
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Hostettmann K
Published in:
- Expert opinion on drug discovery. - 2006
English
Nature represents an extraordinary reservoir of novel molecules and there is currently a resurgence of interest in natural products as a possible source of new lead compounds for introduction into therapeutical screening programmes. To discover new bioactive natural products, the dereplication of crude extracts performed prior to isolation work is of crucial importance for avoiding the tedious isolation of known constituents. In this respect, chemical screening strategies based on hyphenated techniques such as liquid chromatography-ultraviolet photodiode array detection, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, liquid chromatography tandom mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography-nuclear magnetic resonance (LC-NMR) are more and more extensively used. In the laboratory of Hostettmann's group, these analytical methods have been fully integrated into the isolation process and are used for the chemical screening of crude plant extracts, in complement with online or at-line bioassays, for rapid localisation and identification of new bioactive compounds. In this paper, possibilities and limitations of hyphenated techniques for de novo online natural product identification are discussed. As LC-NMR is playing a key role in this respect, the main part of the paper is dedicated to this technique. In particular, various ways of integrating NMR in the dereplication process are illustrated and strategies involving either direct or indirect hyphenation are presented.
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Language
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Open access status
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closed
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Identifiers
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Persistent URL
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https://sonar.rero.ch/global/documents/221293
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