Review of Procedures Used for the Extraction of Anti-Cancer Compounds from Tropical Plants
- Authors: Pandey S.1, Shaw P.1, Hewavitharana A.1
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Affiliations:
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- Issue: Vol 15, No 3 (2015)
- Pages: 314-326
- Section: Oncology
- URL: https://genescells.com/1871-5206/article/view/695208
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.2174/1871520614666141114202104
- ID: 695208
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Abstract
Tropical plants are important sources of anti-cancer lead molecules. According to the US National Cancer Institute, out of the 3000 plants identified as active against cancer using in vitro studies, 70% are of tropical origin. The extraction of bioactive compounds from the plant materials is a fundamental step whose efficiency is critical for the success of drug discovery efforts. There has been no review published of the extraction procedures of anti-cancer compounds from tropical plants and hence the following is a critical evaluation of such procedures undertaken prior to the use of these compounds in cancer cell line studies, during the last five years. It presents a comprehensive analysis of all approaches taken to extract anti-cancer compounds from various tropical plants. (Databases searched were PubMed, SciFinder, Web of Knowledge, Scopus, Embase and Google Scholar).
Keywords
About the authors
Saurabh Pandey
,
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Paul Shaw
,
Email: info@benthamscience.net
Amitha Hewavitharana
,
Email: info@benthamscience.net
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