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Plant Products as the Source of New Drugs

Despite all the contributions that microorganisms have made to the development of new drugs and all the promise held by marine organisms for such purposes, many researchers still count primarily on plants as the most likely source for the discovery of new drugs. [Pg.33]

In some areas, that hope has already heen realized. In 2002, authorities estimated that anywhere between one third and one-half of the hest-selling prescription drugs used around the world were derived from natural products. [Pg.34]

In recent years, however, some of the greatest emphasis has been placed on the search for anticancer and antiviral agents derived from natural products. Success in that area has not heen as great as that achieved in other helds. Since 1960, only seven plant-derived drugs have heen approved by the FDA for use as anticancer agents. Four of those drugs, vinblastine, vincristine, etoposide, and teniposide, were discovered in the 1950s. The last three—Taxol , topotecan, and irinotecan—were discovered and approved much more recently. [Pg.34]

The discovery of vinblastine and vincristine is one of the most intriguing examples of serendipity in scientihc research in recent years. In 1952, the Canadian medical researcher Robert Laing Noble (1910-90) received a package from his brother. Dr. Clark Noble, containing 25 leaves from the Madagascar periwinkle plant. Vinca rosea. Clark had received the leaves from one of his patients in Jamaica, who said that natives on the island often used the plant to control their diabetes when insulin was not available. Clark, who was retired, suggested that his brother study the plant for possible use as a drug for the treatment of diabetes. [Pg.34]

When Robert Noble carried out his studies on the periwinkle leaves, he found that they had no effect on blood sugar levels. However, they did appear to signihcantly reduce a subject s white blood cell count. Perhaps, Dr. Noble reasoned, the product could be used to treat diseases characterized by abnormally high white blood cell counts, such as leukemia. He was successful in isolating two chemicals from the periwinkle leaves, which he named vinblastine and vincristine, that markedly decreased white blood cell counts in patients with certain forms of cancer. The two chemicals were the first anticancer agents derived from natural sources to be approved for use with human patients. [Pg.34]


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Drugs sources

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New drug products

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New products

New sources

Plant products

Plant sources

Plants as a source of drugs

Plants plant sources

Plants, production

Production sourcing

Productivity plant

Sources of drugs

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