General Information
We investigate how plants make special chemicals called natural
products. These chemicals frequently are used as medicines, either
as pure compounds by pharmaceutical industry, or as mixtures in
traditional medicines. We use a wide range of biochemical and
molecular genetic techniques to understand how selected medicinal
plant species make bioactive natural products. A better
understanding of the enzymes and underlying genes of plant natural
biosynthesis will facilitate the development of improved sources of
medicines through metabolic engineering of medicinal plants and
heterologous hosts such as yeast and bacteria. Selected natural
products are currently being investigated in the laboratory in
mature plants and in tissue and cell culture. Ongoing research
investigates naphthoquinone biosynthesis in
Plumbago indica and
Drosophyllum lusitanicum, emetine formation in
Psychotria
ipecacuanha and morphine biosynthesis in
Papaver somniferum and in
mammals.
One of our main focuses is on a class of natural products called
alkaloids. Alkaloids are pharmacologically active,
nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds originally believed to be
only of plant origin. Since the isolation of the first alkaloid
morphine, more than 14,000 structures have been defined. Each
species accumulates alkaloids in a unique and defined pattern. Many
alkaloid-containing plants are used today as a source of
prescription drugs.
For much of human history, plant extracts have been used as
ingredients in potions and poisons. In the eastern Mediterranean,
use of opium poppy latex (Papaver somniferum) can be traced back at
least to 1400 to 1200 B.C. Ancient folks used medicinal plant
extracts as purgatives, antitussives, sedatives and treatments for a
wide range of ailments from snakebites to fever. Use of medicinal
plants then spread westward across Europe. Over the centuries, one
of the most important medicinals was opium. Analysis of the
individual components of opium led to the identification of
morphine. The isolation of morphine in 1806 by the German pharmacist
Friedrich Sertuerner gave rise to the study of alkaloids. Alkaloids
were originally defined as pharmacologically active,
nitrogen-containing basic compounds of plant origin.
Alkaloid-containing plants were mankind's original
materia medica.
Many alkaloids are still in use today as prescription drugs; one of
the best known and widely used is the antitussive codeine from the
opium poppy. After more than 200 years of alkaloid research, this
class of natural products still finds significance in the medical
field in the treatment of diseases ranging from cancer potentially
through to malaria.