Article (Scientific journals)
Les strychnos africains et leurs alcaloïdes
Delaude, Clément; Delaude, Lionel
1997In Bulletin de la Société Royale des Sciences de Liège, 66 (4), p. 183-286
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Keywords :
Strychnos; Loganiaceae; Alkaloids
Abstract :
[en] In the Greek Antiquity, the term strychnos was first coined to describe various toxic Solanacae. Nowadays, the genus Strychnos created by Linnaeus in 1753 is the numerically most important genus from the Loganiaceae family and comprises 196 species growing in the warm regions of Asia (58 species), America (64) and Africa (75). Species on the three continents are almost totally segregated. Only Strychnos potatorum is common to Asia and Africa. The toxicity of Strychnos was empirically well-known from time immemorial. Inhabitants of South-Eastern Asia and India had an ancestral knowledge of Strychnos nux vomica, whose deadly poisonous seeds were later imported and marketed in Europe to kill rodents and small predators. Concentrated extracts from Amazonian Strychnos, known as curares, are also remarkable hunting poisons, used by South American Indians. Accordingly, modern scientific investigations of Strychnos and their alkaloids started with Asian or American species used as traditionnal poisons. Strychnine was the first alkaloid found in Strychnos. It was isolated from Asian S. nux vomica in 1818, but its structure was fully elucidated only in the 1950s. Meanwhile, various curarizing alkaloids from American Strychnos were identified. Based on these early results, Strychnos alkaloids were initially classified according to their geographical origin. Asian Strychnos were assumed to contain strychnine and related compounds, whereas curarizing ammonium salts were associated with American Strychnos. African species were assimilated to their Asian counterparts and deemed of less interest. During the last three decades, however, systematic screening of African Strychnos has revealed the presence of numerous, varied alkaloids in these plants and demonstrated that the correlation between geographical distribution and alkaloid content was erroneous. Presently, 47 African species have been investigated and their alkaloids analyzed, significantly more than Asian and American materials (about 10 and 20 species, respectively). In this review, we present the alkaloids isolated so far from African Strychnos. 309 structures are listed and sorted according to their molecular weight, the most useful index key in modern research based on mass spectrometry.
Disciplines :
Chemistry
Author, co-author :
Delaude, Clément ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Services généraux (Faculté des sciences) > Relations académiques et scientifiques (Sciences)
Delaude, Lionel  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de chimie (sciences) > Chimie macromoléculaire et catalyse organique
Language :
French
Title :
Les strychnos africains et leurs alcaloïdes
Alternative titles :
[en] African strychnos alkaloids
Publication date :
1997
Journal title :
Bulletin de la Société Royale des Sciences de Liège
ISSN :
0037-9565
eISSN :
1783-5720
Publisher :
Société Royale des Sciences de Liège, Liège, Belgium
Volume :
66
Issue :
4
Pages :
183-286
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
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