PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Healing plants inspire new compounds for psychiatric drugs

Scientists look to healers in Nigeria to develop better therapies for mental disorders

2015-05-11
(Press-News.org) EVANSTON, Ill. -- Treatments used by traditional healers in Nigeria have inspired scientists at Northwestern University to synthesize four new chemical compounds that could one day lead to better therapies for people with psychiatric disorders.

In a paper published online in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition, the scientists detail how they created these natural compounds by completing the first total syntheses of two indole alkaloids -- alstonine and serpentine. These alkaloids, found in various plant species used by healers in Nigeria to treat people with conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, have antipsychotic properties that have potential to improve mental disorder treatments.

The current drugs used for schizophrenia effectively treat delusions and hallucinations but are only partially effective for cognitive impairment. Early experimental research of these new compounds in animal models shows promise in improving cognitive impairment, the Northwestern scientists said.

"After billions of years of evolution, nature has given us a great starting point for generating new types of molecules that could end up being used as innovative drugs," said Karl Scheidt, lead author of the paper. "We've learned how to make these natural products in the lab and can now evaluate what are the most effective parts of these natural products for potential therapies."

Scheidt is a professor of chemistry at Northwestern University's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and professor of pharmacology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. He collaborated on this study with Dr. Herbert Meltzer, professor in psychiatry and behavioral sciences, pharmacology and physiology at Feinberg. They are both members of Northwestern's Chemistry of Life Processes Institute (CLP), which helps foster collaboration between schools and lowers the barriers to scientific discovery.

Meltzer, who has spent much of his career researching drug therapies now in use for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, approached Scheidt about the possibility of creating these compounds. Meltzer's longtime research goal is to improve treatment outcomes and develop knowledge of brain mechanisms in mental disorders. Scheidt's expertise is in designing novel methods and strategies for the construction of complex natural products with important biological attributes.

"The synthesis of these alkaloids, which we have now just achieved, was exceedingly difficult," said Meltzer, second author of the paper and an attending physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. "Karl Scheidt's expertise in the synthesis of natural products was crucial to the success of this project and is the first step in getting a new drug ready for clinical trials."

Traditional healers boil these special plants and produce an extract that they administer to people with symptoms of mental illness. However, this extract isn't pure, and it contains other compounds and materials that may not be beneficial to people with mental disorders.

"Nature did not intend this plant to produce an antipsychotic drug on its own," Meltzer said.

The collaborative work to create the compounds took place in the Center for Molecular Innovation and Drug Discovery (CMIDD) at Northwestern, using high-level purification resources and state-of-the-art research instrumentation and equipment. Scheidt is the director of CMIDD.

Through an efficient and stereo-selective synthesis, Scheidt and his team created four separate but related natural products. Now a template exists to continue making these compounds as needed for future studies and ultimately for use in clinical drug trials.

"We can make multi-gram quantities of any of the compounds we want," Scheidt said. "We built the assembly line and are now uniquely positioned to explore their potential."

Meltzer is already using these compounds in animal studies in his lab to better understand how they affect brain biology and chemistry in the schizophrenia disease model. Early results from his lab show that the compounds may increase the ability of other antipsychotic drugs to improve cognitive impairment.

INFORMATION:

Other study authors are Dr. Ashkaan Younai and Bi-Shun Zeng of Northwestern University.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

80 percent of cervical cancers found to be preventable with latest 9-valent HPV vaccine

2015-05-11
LOS ANGELES (May 11, 2015) - The new 9-valent human papillomavirus vaccine, can potentially prevent 80 percent of cervical cancers in the United States, if given to all 11- or 12-year-old children before they are exposed to the virus. In addition to protecting against 80 percent of cervical cancers, the new 9-Valent human papillomavirus vaccine, which includes seven cancer causing HPV-types - 16,18,31,33,45,52 and 58 - has the potential to protect against nearly 19,000 other cancers diagnosed in the United States, including anal, oropharyngeal and penile cancers. This ...

Research aims to restore riparian corridors and an iconic tree

2015-05-11
HECTOR, N.Y. (May 11, 2015): Research by the U.S. Forest Service at the Finger Lakes National Forest (FLNF) is exploring whether native trees can restore a degraded stream corridor and whether degraded stream corridors can help one of those native trees -- the American elm -- stage a comeback. "Forest Service research is a vital part of keeping our rural and urban forests healthy, sustainable and more resilient to disturbances now and for future generations," said Michael T. Rains, Director of the Forest Service's Northern Research Station and the Forest Products Laboratory. ...

Carbon emissions from peatlands may be less than expected

2015-05-11
DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke University scientists have discovered a previously unknown dual mechanism that slows peat decay and may help reduce carbon dioxide emissions from peatlands during times of drought. "This discovery could hold the key to helping us find a way to significantly reduce the risk that increased drought and global warming will change Earth's peatlands from carbon sinks into carbon sources, as many scientists have feared," said Curtis J. Richardson, director of the Duke University Wetland Center and professor of resource ecology at Duke's Nicholas School ...

For the first time, scientists tag a loggerhead sea turtle off US West Coast

For the first time, scientists tag a loggerhead sea turtle off US West Coast
2015-05-11
Fifty miles out to sea from San Diego, in the middle of April, under a perfectly clear blue sky, NOAA Fisheries scientists Tomo Eguchi and Jeff Seminoff leaned over the side of a rubber inflatable boat and lowered a juvenile loggerhead sea turtle into the water. That turtle was a trailblazer -- the first of its kind ever released off the West Coast of the United States with a satellite transmitter attached. Once he was in the water, the little guy -- "he's about the size of a dinner plate," Seminoff said -- paddled away to begin a long journey. He's been beaming back ...

For children with autism, trips to the dentist just got easier

2015-05-11
Going to the dentist might have just gotten a little less scary for the estimated 1 in 68 U.S. children with autism spectrum disorder as well as children with dental anxiety, thanks to new research from USC. In an article published on May 1 by the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, researchers from USC and Children's Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) examined the feasibility of adapting dental environments to be more calming for children with autism spectrum disorder. "The regular dental environment can be quite frightening for children with autism who, not knowing ...

Computer simulation accurately replicated real-life trauma outcomes, says Pitt team

2015-05-11
PITTSBURGH, May 11, 2015 - A computer simulation, or "in silico" model, of the body's inflammatory response to traumatic injury accurately replicated known individual outcomes and predicted population results counter to expectations, according to a study recently published in Science Translational Medicine by a University of Pittsburgh research team. Traumatic injury is a major health care problem worldwide. Trauma induces acute inflammation in the body with the recruitment of many kinds of cells and molecular factors that are crucial for tissue survival, explained senior ...

Long-term study on ticks reveals shifting migration patterns, disease risks

Long-term study on ticks reveals shifting migration patterns, disease risks
2015-05-11
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Over nearly 15 years spent studying ticks, Indiana University's Keith Clay has found southern Indiana to be an oasis free from Lyme disease, the condition most associated with these arachnids that are the second most common parasitic disease vector on Earth. He has also seen signs that this low-risk environment is changing, both in Indiana and in other regions of the U.S. A Distinguished Professor in the IU Bloomington College of Arts and Sciences' Department of Biology, Clay has received support for his research on ticks from over $2.7 million ...

Solving corrosive ocean mystery reveals future climate

2015-05-11
Around 55 million years ago, an abrupt global warming event triggered a highly corrosive deep-water current through the North Atlantic Ocean. The current's origin puzzled scientists for a decade, but an international team of researchers has now discovered how it formed and the findings may have implications for the carbon dioxide emission sensitivity of today's climate. The researchers explored the acidification of the ocean that occurred during a period known as the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), when the Earth warmed 9 degree Fahrenheit in response to a ...

Noul makes landfall in Philippines, thousands flee

Noul makes landfall in Philippines, thousands flee
2015-05-11
On Sunday, May 10, 2015, Super Typhoon Noul (designated Dodong in the Philippines) made landfall in Santa Ana, a coastal town in Cagayan on the northeastern tip of the Philippine Islands. Close to 2,500 residents evacuated as the storm crossed over, and as of today no major damage or injuries have been reported. Trees were downed by the high winds and power outages occurred during the storm. Noul is expected to weaken now that it has made land, and to move faster as it rides strong surrounding winds. It is forecast to completely leave the Philippines by Tuesday morning ...

Ana makes landfall in South Carolina on Mother's Day

Ana makes landfall in South Carolina on Mothers Day
2015-05-11
This was no Mother's Day gift to South Carolina as Ana made landfall on Sunday. Just before 6 am, Ana made landfall north of Myrtle Beach, SC with sustained winds of 45 mph, lower than the 50 mph winds it was packing as a tropical storm over the Atlantic. After making landfall, Ana transitioned to a tropical depression and is currently moving northward through North Carolina and will continue its trek northward. Heavy rain and storm surges are expected in the storm's wake. Storms of this size will create dangerous rip currents so beachgoers should be wary of Ana as ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sweeping study shows similar genetic factors underlie multiple psychiatric disorders

How extreme weather events affect agricultural trade between US states

Smallholder farms maintain strong pollinator diversity – even when far from forests

Price of a bot army revealed across hundreds of online platforms worldwide – from TikTok to Amazon

Warblers borrow color-related genes from evolutionary neighbors, study finds

Heat signaling from plants is an ancient pollinator signal

New index reveals the economics underlying the online manipulation economy

High-resolution satellite observations reveal facility-level methane emissions worldwide

Researchers discover how Ebola and Marburg disrupt the gastrointestinal tract

Feeling the heat

Eastward earthquake rupture progression along the Main Marmara Fault towards Istanbul

Scientists uncover how Earth’s mantle locked away vast water in early magma ocean

Scientists uncover key driver of treatment-resistant cancer

Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet

Music: Popular song lyrics have become more negative since 1973

Marine ecology: Killer whales tail dolphins to hunt salmon

ADHD prescriptions on the rise, study finds

How to build a genome

Sharp rise in ADHD stimulant prescriptions in Ontario, research finds

Trends and prevalence of the metabolic syndrome among US adults

Population-level trends in ADHD medication prescribing

Missing piece of myelin disturbs the brain’s rhythm

Insilico Medicine and Taigen achieves license agreement to develop and commercialize AI-driven PHD inhibitor for anemia of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Exploring dominant endophytic Pleosporales in grasses: New taxonomic insights in the suborder Massarineae

Comparative transcriptomic analysis of human maxillary and mandibular tooth germs reveals discrepancies in gene expression patterns

Scientists detect atmosphere on molten rocky exoplanet - study

Chip-scale magnetometer uses light for high-precision magnetic sensing

Illinois Tech biomedical engineering professor Philip R. Troyk elected as Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

The National Academy of Inventors welcomes 2025 Class of Fellows

Multi-scale modelling framework predicts mechanical responses of Fe–Cr–Al alloys across composition and processing conditions

[Press-News.org] Healing plants inspire new compounds for psychiatric drugs
Scientists look to healers in Nigeria to develop better therapies for mental disorders