Cancer wars: Natural products strike back
Natural products have historically been a mainstay source of anticancer drugs, but in the 90’s they fell out of favor in pharmaceutical companies with the emergence of targeted therapies, which rely on antibodies or small synthetic molecules identified by high throughput screening. Although targeted...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Frontiers Media S.A.
2014-05-01
|
Series: | Frontiers in Chemistry |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fchem.2014.00020/full |
id |
doaj-a07277cc6f3141f19bd09cbf87d749d7 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-a07277cc6f3141f19bd09cbf87d749d72020-11-24T23:16:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Chemistry2296-26462014-05-01210.3389/fchem.2014.0002089194Cancer wars: Natural products strike backChristine eBasmadjian0Qian eZhao1Amel eDjehal2Embarek eBentouhami3Canan G Nebigil4Canan G Nebigil5Roger A Johnson6Maria eSerova7Armand eDe Gramont8Sandrine eFaivre9Eric eRaymond10Laurent G. Désaubry11CNRS and University of StrasbourgCNRS and University of StrasbourgUniversity Ferhat Abbas, Sétif-1University Ferhat Abbas, Sétif-1CNRS and University of StrasbourgCNRS and University of StrasbourgSUNY at Stony BrookAAREC Filia ResearchAAREC Filia ResearchBeaujon University HospitalBeaujon University HospitalCNRS and University of StrasbourgNatural products have historically been a mainstay source of anticancer drugs, but in the 90’s they fell out of favor in pharmaceutical companies with the emergence of targeted therapies, which rely on antibodies or small synthetic molecules identified by high throughput screening. Although targeted therapies greatly improved the treatment of a few cancers, the benefit has remained disappointing for many sol¬¬id tumors, which revitalized the interest in natural products. With the approval of rapamycin in 2007, twelve novel natural product derivatives have been brought to market. The present review describes the discovery and development of these new anticancer drugs and highlights the peculiarities of natural product and new trends in this exciting field of drug discovery.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fchem.2014.00020/fullDrug DiscoveryPharmacognosyCancerNatural Productsmolecular targetsprivileged structures |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Christine eBasmadjian Qian eZhao Amel eDjehal Embarek eBentouhami Canan G Nebigil Canan G Nebigil Roger A Johnson Maria eSerova Armand eDe Gramont Sandrine eFaivre Eric eRaymond Laurent G. Désaubry |
spellingShingle |
Christine eBasmadjian Qian eZhao Amel eDjehal Embarek eBentouhami Canan G Nebigil Canan G Nebigil Roger A Johnson Maria eSerova Armand eDe Gramont Sandrine eFaivre Eric eRaymond Laurent G. Désaubry Cancer wars: Natural products strike back Frontiers in Chemistry Drug Discovery Pharmacognosy Cancer Natural Products molecular targets privileged structures |
author_facet |
Christine eBasmadjian Qian eZhao Amel eDjehal Embarek eBentouhami Canan G Nebigil Canan G Nebigil Roger A Johnson Maria eSerova Armand eDe Gramont Sandrine eFaivre Eric eRaymond Laurent G. Désaubry |
author_sort |
Christine eBasmadjian |
title |
Cancer wars: Natural products strike back |
title_short |
Cancer wars: Natural products strike back |
title_full |
Cancer wars: Natural products strike back |
title_fullStr |
Cancer wars: Natural products strike back |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cancer wars: Natural products strike back |
title_sort |
cancer wars: natural products strike back |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Chemistry |
issn |
2296-2646 |
publishDate |
2014-05-01 |
description |
Natural products have historically been a mainstay source of anticancer drugs, but in the 90’s they fell out of favor in pharmaceutical companies with the emergence of targeted therapies, which rely on antibodies or small synthetic molecules identified by high throughput screening. Although targeted therapies greatly improved the treatment of a few cancers, the benefit has remained disappointing for many sol¬¬id tumors, which revitalized the interest in natural products. With the approval of rapamycin in 2007, twelve novel natural product derivatives have been brought to market. The present review describes the discovery and development of these new anticancer drugs and highlights the peculiarities of natural product and new trends in this exciting field of drug discovery. |
topic |
Drug Discovery Pharmacognosy Cancer Natural Products molecular targets privileged structures |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fchem.2014.00020/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT christineebasmadjian cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT qianezhao cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT ameledjehal cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT embarekebentouhami cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT canangnebigil cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT canangnebigil cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT rogerajohnson cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT mariaeserova cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT armandedegramont cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT sandrineefaivre cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT ericeraymond cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback AT laurentgdesaubry cancerwarsnaturalproductsstrikeback |
_version_ |
1725586688372113408 |