1. Academic Validation
  2. Tropane alkaloids as medicinally useful natural products and their synthetic derivatives as new drugs

Tropane alkaloids as medicinally useful natural products and their synthetic derivatives as new drugs

  • Pharmacol Rep. 2008 Jul-Aug;60(4):439-63.
Grzegorz Grynkiewicz 1 Maria Gadzikowska
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Pharmaceutical Research Institute, Rydygiera 8, PL 10-793 Warszawa, Poland. g.grynkiewicz@ifarm.waw.pl
PMID: 18799813
Abstract

Secondary metabolites of Solanaceae plants, sharing tropane skeleton as a common structural feature, are sharply divided into two classes: tropine and ecgonine derivatives. The first group, represented by well known alkaloids: atropine and scopolamine, which are considered to be model anticholinergic drugs, continues to provide inspiration in the search for more selective muscarinic receptor antagonists. The second class accommodates one of the principal drugs of abuse, cocaine. Synthesis of much needed cocaine antagonists, despite extensive research, has not been particularly successful. Therefore, new concepts of cocaine abuse treatment resort to immunotherapy and biotechnology. Contemporary pharmaceutical industry manufactures over 20 active pharmaceutical substances containing tropane moiety in their structure, which are applied as mydriatics, antiemetics, antispasmodics, anesthetics and bronchodilators. There are two sources of raw Materials for this industrial activity: Natural Products isolated from cultivated transgenic Plants (mainly scopolamine and atropine from Australian Duboisia) and chemical synthesis based on common intermediate: tropinone, which can be further transformed by synthetic means to the following classes of compounds: tropine and its esters (tropeines), scopine and nortropine derivatives, and tropane quaternary ammonium salts. This survey focuses on new developments in chemistry and pharmacology of tropane derivatives, particularly in view of their prospective industrial applications as therapeutics.

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