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We have entered a new era where some concepts of the complex community of microorganisms (microbiota comprising bacteria, fungi, viruses, bacteriophages and helminths) are being re-discovered and re-visited. Microbiota and human interaction is not new; they have shared a long history of co-existence. Nevertheless, the opportunities to understand the role of these microorganisms in human diseases and to design a potential treatment were limited. At present, thanks to development of innovative and cutting-edge molecular biological and microbiological technologies as well as clinical informatics and bioinformatics skills, microbiome application is moving into clinics. Approaches to therapy based on prebiotics, probiotics and lately on fecal microbiota transplantation has revolutionized medicine. Microbiota outnumbers our genes and is now regarded as another organ of the body. The gastrointestinal tract and gut microbiota display a well-documented symbiotic relationship. Disruption of intestinal microbiota homeostasis—called dysbiosis—has been associated with several diseases. Whether dysbiosis is a cause or consequence of disease initiation and progression still needs to be investigated in more depth. The aim of this book is to highlight recent advances in the field of microbiome research, which are now shaping medicine, and current approaches to microbiome-oriented therapy for gastrointestinal diseases. Dr. Rinaldo Pellicano Dr. Sharmila Fagoonee Guest Editors
Public health & preventive medicine --- Bacteroides ovatus --- Bifidobacterium adolescentis --- Dysbiosis --- Faecalibacterium prausnitzii --- Ruminococcus gnavus --- type 1 diabetes --- microbiota --- microbiome --- auto-immunity --- gut permeability --- gut --- IBS --- celiac disease --- enteropathy --- gluten --- therapy --- gut microbiota --- precision medicine --- Clostridium difficile --- inflammatory bowel disease --- ulcerative colitis --- irritable bowel disease --- metabolic syndrome --- gastric microbiota --- transient --- persistent --- culture --- sequencing --- Helicobacter pylori --- fecal microbiota transplantation --- feces donor --- fecal microbiota --- flow cytometry --- viability of bacteria --- next-generation sequencing --- culturing of fecal microbiota --- Alzheimer’s disease --- microbiota–gut–brain axis --- neurodegenerative disease --- intestinal flora --- necrotizing enterocolitis --- intestinal microbiology --- infant gut --- metabolomics --- IL-6 --- IL-8 --- IL-12p70 --- intestinal permeability --- zonulin --- gut virome --- steatosis --- cirrhosis --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- gastrointestinal --- technology --- high-throughput --- crohn’s disease --- mononuclear cells --- transient receptor potential channel --- pancreatic diseases --- acute pancreatitis --- chronic pancreatitis --- diabetes mellitus --- pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma --- pancreatic cystic neoplasms
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We have entered a new era where some concepts of the complex community of microorganisms (microbiota comprising bacteria, fungi, viruses, bacteriophages and helminths) are being re-discovered and re-visited. Microbiota and human interaction is not new; they have shared a long history of co-existence. Nevertheless, the opportunities to understand the role of these microorganisms in human diseases and to design a potential treatment were limited. At present, thanks to development of innovative and cutting-edge molecular biological and microbiological technologies as well as clinical informatics and bioinformatics skills, microbiome application is moving into clinics. Approaches to therapy based on prebiotics, probiotics and lately on fecal microbiota transplantation has revolutionized medicine. Microbiota outnumbers our genes and is now regarded as another organ of the body. The gastrointestinal tract and gut microbiota display a well-documented symbiotic relationship. Disruption of intestinal microbiota homeostasis—called dysbiosis—has been associated with several diseases. Whether dysbiosis is a cause or consequence of disease initiation and progression still needs to be investigated in more depth. The aim of this book is to highlight recent advances in the field of microbiome research, which are now shaping medicine, and current approaches to microbiome-oriented therapy for gastrointestinal diseases. Dr. Rinaldo Pellicano Dr. Sharmila Fagoonee Guest Editors
Bacteroides ovatus --- Bifidobacterium adolescentis --- Dysbiosis --- Faecalibacterium prausnitzii --- Ruminococcus gnavus --- type 1 diabetes --- microbiota --- microbiome --- auto-immunity --- gut permeability --- gut --- IBS --- celiac disease --- enteropathy --- gluten --- therapy --- gut microbiota --- precision medicine --- Clostridium difficile --- inflammatory bowel disease --- ulcerative colitis --- irritable bowel disease --- metabolic syndrome --- gastric microbiota --- transient --- persistent --- culture --- sequencing --- Helicobacter pylori --- fecal microbiota transplantation --- feces donor --- fecal microbiota --- flow cytometry --- viability of bacteria --- next-generation sequencing --- culturing of fecal microbiota --- Alzheimer’s disease --- microbiota–gut–brain axis --- neurodegenerative disease --- intestinal flora --- necrotizing enterocolitis --- intestinal microbiology --- infant gut --- metabolomics --- IL-6 --- IL-8 --- IL-12p70 --- intestinal permeability --- zonulin --- gut virome --- steatosis --- cirrhosis --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- gastrointestinal --- technology --- high-throughput --- crohn’s disease --- mononuclear cells --- transient receptor potential channel --- pancreatic diseases --- acute pancreatitis --- chronic pancreatitis --- diabetes mellitus --- pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma --- pancreatic cystic neoplasms
Choose an application
We have entered a new era where some concepts of the complex community of microorganisms (microbiota comprising bacteria, fungi, viruses, bacteriophages and helminths) are being re-discovered and re-visited. Microbiota and human interaction is not new; they have shared a long history of co-existence. Nevertheless, the opportunities to understand the role of these microorganisms in human diseases and to design a potential treatment were limited. At present, thanks to development of innovative and cutting-edge molecular biological and microbiological technologies as well as clinical informatics and bioinformatics skills, microbiome application is moving into clinics. Approaches to therapy based on prebiotics, probiotics and lately on fecal microbiota transplantation has revolutionized medicine. Microbiota outnumbers our genes and is now regarded as another organ of the body. The gastrointestinal tract and gut microbiota display a well-documented symbiotic relationship. Disruption of intestinal microbiota homeostasis—called dysbiosis—has been associated with several diseases. Whether dysbiosis is a cause or consequence of disease initiation and progression still needs to be investigated in more depth. The aim of this book is to highlight recent advances in the field of microbiome research, which are now shaping medicine, and current approaches to microbiome-oriented therapy for gastrointestinal diseases. Dr. Rinaldo Pellicano Dr. Sharmila Fagoonee Guest Editors
Public health & preventive medicine --- Bacteroides ovatus --- Bifidobacterium adolescentis --- Dysbiosis --- Faecalibacterium prausnitzii --- Ruminococcus gnavus --- type 1 diabetes --- microbiota --- microbiome --- auto-immunity --- gut permeability --- gut --- IBS --- celiac disease --- enteropathy --- gluten --- therapy --- gut microbiota --- precision medicine --- Clostridium difficile --- inflammatory bowel disease --- ulcerative colitis --- irritable bowel disease --- metabolic syndrome --- gastric microbiota --- transient --- persistent --- culture --- sequencing --- Helicobacter pylori --- fecal microbiota transplantation --- feces donor --- fecal microbiota --- flow cytometry --- viability of bacteria --- next-generation sequencing --- culturing of fecal microbiota --- Alzheimer’s disease --- microbiota–gut–brain axis --- neurodegenerative disease --- intestinal flora --- necrotizing enterocolitis --- intestinal microbiology --- infant gut --- metabolomics --- IL-6 --- IL-8 --- IL-12p70 --- intestinal permeability --- zonulin --- gut virome --- steatosis --- cirrhosis --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- gastrointestinal --- technology --- high-throughput --- crohn’s disease --- mononuclear cells --- transient receptor potential channel --- pancreatic diseases --- acute pancreatitis --- chronic pancreatitis --- diabetes mellitus --- pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma --- pancreatic cystic neoplasms
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Coumarins are widely distributed in nature and can be found in a large number of naturally occurring and synthetic bioactive molecules. The unique and versatile oxygen-containing heterocyclic structure makes them a privileged scaffold in Medicinal Chemistry. Many coumarin derivatives have been extracted from natural sources, designed, synthetized, and evaluated on different pharmacological targets. In addition, coumarin-based ion receptors, fluorescent probes, and biological stains are growing quickly and have extensive applications to monitor timely enzyme activity, complex biological events, as well as accurate pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties in living cells. The extraction, synthesis, and biological evaluation of coumarins have become extremely attractive and rapidly developing topics. A large number of research and review papers have compiled information on this important family of compounds in 2020. Research articles, reviews, communications, and concept papers focused on the multidisciplinary profile of coumarins, highlighting natural sources, most recent synthetic pathways, along with the main biological applications and theoretical studies, were the main focus of this book. The huge and growing range of applications of coumarins described in this book is a demonstration of the potential of this family of compounds in Organic Chemistry, Medicinal Chemistry, and different sciences related to the study of natural products. This book includes 23 articles: 17 original papers and six review papers.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- coumarin --- hydroxyl-modified coumarin --- photophysical --- thermal and structural characterization --- Glycyrrhiza uralensis --- glycyrol --- liquiritigenin --- cholinesterases --- human monoamine oxidases --- kinetics --- docking simulation --- chalcone --- neurodegenerative diseases --- adenosine receptors --- binding affinity --- docking --- 4-hydroxy-7-methoxycoumarin --- macrophage --- inflammation --- NF-κB --- MAPK --- calanolides --- pseudocalanolides --- calanolide A --- Calophyllum --- Calophyllaceae --- anti-HIV --- reverse transcriptase --- non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) --- osthole --- umbelliferone --- esculin --- 4-hydroxycoumarin --- sorafenib --- apoptosis --- autophagy --- Yin Chen Hao --- constitutive androstane receptor --- scoparone --- coumarins --- quorum sensing --- QS inhibitors --- plant-derived molecules --- Chromobacterium violaceum --- immunoproteasome --- psoralen core --- non-peptidic --- electrophilic compounds --- warhead scan --- inflammatory bowel disease --- isocoumarin --- Crohn’s disease --- ulcerative colitis --- glutathione --- oxidative stress --- complementary therapies --- intestinal inflammation --- benzopyrones --- five-membered aromatic heterocycles --- furan --- pyrrole --- thiophene --- selenophen --- dihydrocoumarin-fused dihydropyranones --- 3-aroylcoumarines --- benzyl 2,3-butadienoate --- 6’-(4-biphenyl)-β-iso-cinchonine --- biological applications --- drug discovery --- fluorescent probes --- warfarin --- acenocoumarol --- mechanical valve --- time in therapeutic range --- anticoagulation --- Ruta chalepensis --- Rutaceae --- chalepin --- chalepensin --- bioactivity --- biosynthesis --- coumarin3-carboxamides --- pyranocoumarins --- anticancer activity --- antibacterial activity --- free radical polymerization --- LED --- photocomposites --- direct laser write --- analytical methods --- model plant --- natural genetic variation --- natural products --- simple coumarins --- chalcocoumarin --- MAO-B --- molecular dynamics --- in silico studies --- dye-sensitized solar cells --- coumarin dyes --- thieno [3,2-b] thiophene --- charge transfer --- ethynylaryl --- esculetin --- antiplatelet activity --- impedance aggregometry --- COX --- polyphenols --- pyrazole --- imidazole --- thiazole --- oxazole --- triazole --- thiadiazole --- curcumin --- curcumin–coumarin hybrids --- neuroprotection --- monoamine oxidase inhibition --- cholinesterase inhibition --- scavenging activity --- Escherichia coli --- biotransformation --- ferulenol --- structural annotation --- in silico tools --- n/a --- Crohn's disease --- 6'-(4-biphenyl)-β-iso-cinchonine --- curcumin-coumarin hybrids
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Coumarins are widely distributed in nature and can be found in a large number of naturally occurring and synthetic bioactive molecules. The unique and versatile oxygen-containing heterocyclic structure makes them a privileged scaffold in Medicinal Chemistry. Many coumarin derivatives have been extracted from natural sources, designed, synthetized, and evaluated on different pharmacological targets. In addition, coumarin-based ion receptors, fluorescent probes, and biological stains are growing quickly and have extensive applications to monitor timely enzyme activity, complex biological events, as well as accurate pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties in living cells. The extraction, synthesis, and biological evaluation of coumarins have become extremely attractive and rapidly developing topics. A large number of research and review papers have compiled information on this important family of compounds in 2020. Research articles, reviews, communications, and concept papers focused on the multidisciplinary profile of coumarins, highlighting natural sources, most recent synthetic pathways, along with the main biological applications and theoretical studies, were the main focus of this book. The huge and growing range of applications of coumarins described in this book is a demonstration of the potential of this family of compounds in Organic Chemistry, Medicinal Chemistry, and different sciences related to the study of natural products. This book includes 23 articles: 17 original papers and six review papers.
coumarin --- hydroxyl-modified coumarin --- photophysical --- thermal and structural characterization --- Glycyrrhiza uralensis --- glycyrol --- liquiritigenin --- cholinesterases --- human monoamine oxidases --- kinetics --- docking simulation --- chalcone --- neurodegenerative diseases --- adenosine receptors --- binding affinity --- docking --- 4-hydroxy-7-methoxycoumarin --- macrophage --- inflammation --- NF-κB --- MAPK --- calanolides --- pseudocalanolides --- calanolide A --- Calophyllum --- Calophyllaceae --- anti-HIV --- reverse transcriptase --- non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) --- osthole --- umbelliferone --- esculin --- 4-hydroxycoumarin --- sorafenib --- apoptosis --- autophagy --- Yin Chen Hao --- constitutive androstane receptor --- scoparone --- coumarins --- quorum sensing --- QS inhibitors --- plant-derived molecules --- Chromobacterium violaceum --- immunoproteasome --- psoralen core --- non-peptidic --- electrophilic compounds --- warhead scan --- inflammatory bowel disease --- isocoumarin --- Crohn’s disease --- ulcerative colitis --- glutathione --- oxidative stress --- complementary therapies --- intestinal inflammation --- benzopyrones --- five-membered aromatic heterocycles --- furan --- pyrrole --- thiophene --- selenophen --- dihydrocoumarin-fused dihydropyranones --- 3-aroylcoumarines --- benzyl 2,3-butadienoate --- 6’-(4-biphenyl)-β-iso-cinchonine --- biological applications --- drug discovery --- fluorescent probes --- warfarin --- acenocoumarol --- mechanical valve --- time in therapeutic range --- anticoagulation --- Ruta chalepensis --- Rutaceae --- chalepin --- chalepensin --- bioactivity --- biosynthesis --- coumarin3-carboxamides --- pyranocoumarins --- anticancer activity --- antibacterial activity --- free radical polymerization --- LED --- photocomposites --- direct laser write --- analytical methods --- model plant --- natural genetic variation --- natural products --- simple coumarins --- chalcocoumarin --- MAO-B --- molecular dynamics --- in silico studies --- dye-sensitized solar cells --- coumarin dyes --- thieno [3,2-b] thiophene --- charge transfer --- ethynylaryl --- esculetin --- antiplatelet activity --- impedance aggregometry --- COX --- polyphenols --- pyrazole --- imidazole --- thiazole --- oxazole --- triazole --- thiadiazole --- curcumin --- curcumin–coumarin hybrids --- neuroprotection --- monoamine oxidase inhibition --- cholinesterase inhibition --- scavenging activity --- Escherichia coli --- biotransformation --- ferulenol --- structural annotation --- in silico tools --- n/a --- Crohn's disease --- 6'-(4-biphenyl)-β-iso-cinchonine --- curcumin-coumarin hybrids
Choose an application
Coumarins are widely distributed in nature and can be found in a large number of naturally occurring and synthetic bioactive molecules. The unique and versatile oxygen-containing heterocyclic structure makes them a privileged scaffold in Medicinal Chemistry. Many coumarin derivatives have been extracted from natural sources, designed, synthetized, and evaluated on different pharmacological targets. In addition, coumarin-based ion receptors, fluorescent probes, and biological stains are growing quickly and have extensive applications to monitor timely enzyme activity, complex biological events, as well as accurate pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties in living cells. The extraction, synthesis, and biological evaluation of coumarins have become extremely attractive and rapidly developing topics. A large number of research and review papers have compiled information on this important family of compounds in 2020. Research articles, reviews, communications, and concept papers focused on the multidisciplinary profile of coumarins, highlighting natural sources, most recent synthetic pathways, along with the main biological applications and theoretical studies, were the main focus of this book. The huge and growing range of applications of coumarins described in this book is a demonstration of the potential of this family of compounds in Organic Chemistry, Medicinal Chemistry, and different sciences related to the study of natural products. This book includes 23 articles: 17 original papers and six review papers.
Research & information: general --- Biology, life sciences --- coumarin --- hydroxyl-modified coumarin --- photophysical --- thermal and structural characterization --- Glycyrrhiza uralensis --- glycyrol --- liquiritigenin --- cholinesterases --- human monoamine oxidases --- kinetics --- docking simulation --- chalcone --- neurodegenerative diseases --- adenosine receptors --- binding affinity --- docking --- 4-hydroxy-7-methoxycoumarin --- macrophage --- inflammation --- NF-κB --- MAPK --- calanolides --- pseudocalanolides --- calanolide A --- Calophyllum --- Calophyllaceae --- anti-HIV --- reverse transcriptase --- non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) --- osthole --- umbelliferone --- esculin --- 4-hydroxycoumarin --- sorafenib --- apoptosis --- autophagy --- Yin Chen Hao --- constitutive androstane receptor --- scoparone --- coumarins --- quorum sensing --- QS inhibitors --- plant-derived molecules --- Chromobacterium violaceum --- immunoproteasome --- psoralen core --- non-peptidic --- electrophilic compounds --- warhead scan --- inflammatory bowel disease --- isocoumarin --- Crohn's disease --- ulcerative colitis --- glutathione --- oxidative stress --- complementary therapies --- intestinal inflammation --- benzopyrones --- five-membered aromatic heterocycles --- furan --- pyrrole --- thiophene --- selenophen --- dihydrocoumarin-fused dihydropyranones --- 3-aroylcoumarines --- benzyl 2,3-butadienoate --- 6'-(4-biphenyl)-β-iso-cinchonine --- biological applications --- drug discovery --- fluorescent probes --- warfarin --- acenocoumarol --- mechanical valve --- time in therapeutic range --- anticoagulation --- Ruta chalepensis --- Rutaceae --- chalepin --- chalepensin --- bioactivity --- biosynthesis --- coumarin3-carboxamides --- pyranocoumarins --- anticancer activity --- antibacterial activity --- free radical polymerization --- LED --- photocomposites --- direct laser write --- analytical methods --- model plant --- natural genetic variation --- natural products --- simple coumarins --- chalcocoumarin --- MAO-B --- molecular dynamics --- in silico studies --- dye-sensitized solar cells --- coumarin dyes --- thieno [3,2-b] thiophene --- charge transfer --- ethynylaryl --- esculetin --- antiplatelet activity --- impedance aggregometry --- COX --- polyphenols --- pyrazole --- imidazole --- thiazole --- oxazole --- triazole --- thiadiazole --- curcumin --- curcumin-coumarin hybrids --- neuroprotection --- monoamine oxidase inhibition --- cholinesterase inhibition --- scavenging activity --- Escherichia coli --- biotransformation --- ferulenol --- structural annotation --- in silico tools
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