%0 Journal Article %T The value of central-African traditional medicine for lead finding: Some case studies. %A Vlietinck AJ %A Pieters L %A Apers S %A Cimanga K %A Mesia K %A Tona L %J J Ethnopharmacol %V 174 %N 0 %D Nov 2015 4 %M 26079563 %F 5.195 %R 10.1016/j.jep.2015.06.004 %X Ethnoparmaological relevance: One of the possible methodologies for the discovery of novel drugs is the screening of selected plant extracts for a broad array of pharmacological activities.
METHODS: The selection based on enthnomedicinal uses, combined with a follow-up of existing literature on the plants' chemotaxonomic properties, would seem to be the most cost-effective strategy for finding active plant extracts. A bioassay-guided fractionation of the active extracts should subsequently lead to the isolation and identification of the active lead constituent(s).
CONCLUSIONS: Taking into account the enormous number and the amazing structural diversity of the currently known plant constituents, one might hope that promising model compounds with new structures and/or novel mechanisms of action might be found. In order, however, to optimize such a natural product drug discovery methodology, dereplication and selectivity of activity should be included in the screening system. Dereplication by which known compounds can rapidly be identified from a partially purified mixture prevents a research group from wasting resources by rediscovering known compounds. The use of single-target specific bioassays such as tests on isolated enzymes or on receptor-binding, or multiple target functional bioassays on isolated organs or intact cells must allow at an early stage to isolate compounds with specific pharmacological properties.
CONCLUSIONS: In this publication, several examples of bioassay-guided isolation and identification of pharmacologically active lead compounds from plants used in Central-African traditional medicine by our research group will be presented and discussed.