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Alkaloids from Plants with Antimalarial Activity: A Review of Recent Studies

Philip F. Uzor

2020Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine161 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Malaria is one of the major health problems in developing countries. The disease kills a large number of people every year and also affects financial status of many countries. Resistance of the plasmodium parasite, the causative agent, to the existing drugs, including chloroquine, mefloquine, and artemisinin based combination therapy (ACT), is a serious global issue in malaria treatment and control. This warrants an urgent quest for novel compounds, particularly from natural sources such as medicinal plants. Alkaloids have over the years been recognized as important phytoconstituents with interesting biological properties. In fact, the first successful antimalarial drug was quinine, an alkaloid, which was extracted from Cinchona tree. In the present review work, the alkaloids isolated and reported recently (2013 till 2019) to possess antimalarial activity are presented. Several classes of alkaloids, including terpenoidal, indole, bisindole, quinolone, and isoquinoline alkaloids, were identified with a promising antimalarial activity. It is hoped that the reports of the review work will spur further research into the structural modification and/or development of the interesting compounds as novel antimalarial drugs.

Topics & Concepts

MalariaMefloquineArtemisininPlasmodium falciparumAntimalarial AgentQuinineChloroquineTraditional medicinePharmacologyDrugIsoquinolineMedicineBiologyChemistryStereochemistryImmunologyComputational Drug Discovery MethodsSynthesis and bioactivity of alkaloidsMalaria Research and Control