4.6 Article

Comment on Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids and Terpenes from Senecio (Asteraceae): Chemistry and Research Gaps in Africa

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27248868

Keywords

pyrrolizidine; alkaloid; cacalol; eremophilane; contamination; adulteration; toxin; poison

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The genus Senecio, one of the largest in Asteraceae, has thousands of species worldwide. These species are best known for their toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids, but also contain other chemical classes of compounds. The chemistry of these species generally overlaps with the confirmed species in Africa, but there may be unexplored chemical groups.
The genus Senecio is one of the largest in Asteraceae. There are thousands of species across the globe, either confirmed or awaiting taxonomic delimitation. While the species are best known for the toxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids that contaminate honeys (as bees select pollen from the species) and teas via lateral transfer and accumulation from adjacent roots of Senecio in the rhizosphere, they are also associated with more serious cases leading to fatality of grazing ruminants or people by contamination or accidental harvesting for medicine. Surprisingly, there are significantly more sesquiterpenoid than pyrrolizidine alkaloid-containing species. The main chemical classes, aside from alkaloids, are flavonoids, cacalols, eremophilanes, and bisabolols, often in the form of furan derivatives or free acids. The chemistry of the species across the globe generally overlaps with the 469 confirmed species of Africa. A small number of species express multiple classes of compounds, meaning the presence of sesquiterpenes does not exclude alkaloids. It is possible that there are many species that express the pyrrolizidine alkaloids, in addition to the cacalols, eremophilanes, and bisabolols. The aim of the current communication is, thus, to identify the research gaps related to the chemistry of African species of Senecio and reveal the possible chemical groups in unexplored taxa by way of example, thereby creating a summary of references that could be used to guide chemical assignment in future studies.

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