• Media type: E-Book; Special Print
  • Title: Pharmacoinformatic investigation of medicinal plants from East Africa
  • Contributor: Simoben, Conrad V. [Author]; Qaseem, Ammar [Author]; Moumbock, Aurélien F. A. [Author]; Telukunta, Kiran [Author]; Günther, Stefan [Author]; Sippl, Wolfgang [Author]; Ntie-Kang, Fidele [Author]
  • Published: Weinheim: Wiley, 2020
  • Published in: Molecular informatics ; 39, 11 (2020), 2000163
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (15 Seiten); Diagramme; Supporting information (1 ZIP-Datei: 2 TIF-Dateien, 1 .xlsx-Datei, 3 .xlsx-CSV-Dateien)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1002/minf.202000163
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Datenbank
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Abstract: Medicinal plants have widely been used in the traditional treatment of ailments and have been proven effective. Their contribution still holds an important place in modern drug discovery due to their chemical, and biological diversities. However, the poor documentation of traditional medicine, in developing African countries for instance, can lead to the loss of knowledge related to such practices. In this study, we present the Eastern Africa Natural Products Database (EANPDB) containing the structural and bioactivity information of 1870 unique molecules isolated from about 300 source species from the Eastern African region. This represents the largest collection of natural products (NPs) from this geographical region, covering literature data of the period from 1962 to 2019. The computed physicochemical properties and toxicity profiles of each compound have been included. A comparative analysis of some physico‐chemical properties like molecular weight, H‐bond donor/acceptor, logPo/w, etc. as well scaffold diversity analysis has been carried out with other published NP databases. EANPDB was combined with the previously published Northern African Natural Products Database (NANPDB), to form a merger African Natural Products Database (ANPDB), containing ∼6500 unique molecules isolated from about 1000 source species (freely available at http://african‐compounds.org). As a case study, latrunculins A and B isolated from the sponge Negombata magnifica (Podospongiidae) with previously reported antitumour activities, were identified via substructure searching as molecules to be explored as putative binders of histone deacetylases (HDACs)
  • Access State: Open Access