4.8 Review

Ethnobotany and the Role of Plant Natural Products in Antibiotic Drug Discovery

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 121, Issue 6, Pages 3495-3560

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00922

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease [R21 AI136563]
  2. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health [R21 AT011105]
  3. Emory University development funds
  4. Jones Center at Ichuaway

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The crisis of antibiotic resistance highlights the importance of exploring plant natural products as a potential source of antibacterial compounds. This review systematically examines the antibacterial activity of 459 plant-derived compounds, with a focus on 183 compounds that show promising potential as antibiotics. The rich chemodiversity and clinical effectiveness of plant NPs make them a valuable resource for future antibiotic discovery and development efforts.
The crisis of antibiotic resistance necessitates creative and innovative approaches, from chemical identification and analysis to the assessment of bioactivity. Plant natural products (NPs) represent a promising source of antibacterial lead compounds that could help fill the drug discovery pipeline in response to the growing antibiotic resistance crisis. The major strength of plant NPs lies in their rich and unique chemodiversity, their worldwide distribution and ease of access, their various antibacterial modes of action, and the proven clinical effectiveness of plant extracts from which they are isolated. While many studies have tried to summarize NPs with antibacterial activities, a comprehensive review with rigorous selection criteria has never been performed. In this work, the literature from 2012 to 2019 was systematically reviewed to highlight plant-derived compounds with antibacterial activity by focusing on their growth inhibitory activity. A total of 459 compounds are included in this Review, of which 50.8% are phenolic derivatives, 26.6% are terpenoids, 5.7% are alkaloids, and 17% are classified as other metabolites. A selection of 183 compounds is further discussed regarding their antibacterial activity, biosynthesis, structure-activity relationship, mechanism of action, and potential as antibiotics. Emerging trends in the field of antibacterial drug discovery from plants are also discussed. This Review brings to the forefront key findings on the antibacterial potential of plant NPs for consideration in future antibiotic discovery and development efforts.

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