Natural Product Drug Discovery in the Next Millennium
Nature has been a source of medicinal agents for thousands of years, and an impressive number of modern drugs have been isolated from natural sources, many based on their use in traditional medicine. In the past century, however, an increasing role has been played by microorganisms in the production...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pharmaceutical biology 2001, Vol.39 (s1), p.8-17 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nature has been a source of medicinal agents for thousands
of years, and an impressive number of modern drugs have
been isolated from natural sources, many based on their use
in traditional medicine. In the past century, however, an
increasing role has been played by microorganisms in
the production of antibiotics and other drugs for the
treatment of some serious diseases. Advances in the description
of the human genome, as well as the genomes of
pathogenic microbes and parasites, is permitting the determination
of the structures of many proteins associated
with disease processes. With the development of new
molecular targets based on these proteins, there is an increasing
demand for novel molecular diversity for screening.
Natural products will play a crucial role in meeting this
demand through the continued investigation of world's biodiversity,
much of which remains unexplored. With less than
1% of the microbial world currently known, advances in procedures
for microbial cultivation and the extraction of
nucleic acids from environmental samples from soil and
marine habitats, will provide access to a vast untapped reservoir
of genetic and metabolic diversity. The same holds true
for nucleic acids isolated from symbiotic and endophytic
microbes associated with terrestrial and marine macroorganisms.
By use of combinatorial chemical and biosynthetic
technology, novel natural product leads will be
optimized on the basis of their biological activities to yield
effective chemotherapeutic and other bioactive agents. The
investigation of these resources requires multi-disciplinary,
national, and international collaboration in the discovery and
development process. |
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ISSN: | 1388-0209 1744-5116 |
DOI: | 10.1076/phbi.39.s1.8.0009 |