Antimalarial Use of Malagasy Plants Is Poorly Correlated with Performance in Antimalarial Bioassays
Bioassay screening of plant extracts can identify unique lead compounds for drug development, but the "hit rate" from random screening is very low. Targeted screening of medicinal plants has been repeatedly reported to increase the percentage of samples displaying bioactivity. Contrarily,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Economic botany 2017-03, Vol.71 (1), p.75-82 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Bioassay screening of plant extracts can identify unique lead compounds for drug development, but the "hit rate" from random screening is very low. Targeted screening of medicinal plants has been repeatedly reported to increase the percentage of samples displaying bioactivity. Contrarily, Maranz (2012) suggested that African antimalarial plants were unsuitable sources of antimalarial drugs because high prevalence of malaria would result in rapid evolution of resistance to active compounds that directly targeted the parasite. As malaria is highly prevalent in much of Madagascar, it was of interest to determine whether Malagasy antimalarial plants would outperform randomly selected plants in conventional antimalarial assays being conducted as part of a discovery program. Of 1294 plant samples screened for antimalarial activity, 39.6% had an IC₅₀ |
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ISSN: | 0013-0001 1874-9364 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12231-017-9373-3 |