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Natural Bioactive Compounds. Technological Advancements

  • Book

  • October 2020
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5130588

Natural Bioactive Compounds: Technological Advancements deals with the latest breakthroughs in the field of screening, characterization and novel applications of natural bioactive compounds from diverse group of organisms ranging from bacteria, viruses, cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, bryophytes, higher plants, sponges, corals and fishes. Written by some of the most reputed scientists in the field, this book introduces the reader to strategies and methods in the search for bioactive natural products. It is an essential read for researchers and students interested in bioactive natural products, their biological and pharmacological properties, their possible use as chemopreventive or chemotherapeutic agents, and other future potential applications.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Bioactive compounds from bacteria and viruses
3. Advances in phycobiliproteins research: Innovations and commercialization
4. Cyanobacterial photoprotective compounds: Characterization and utilization in human welfare
5. Bionanotechnology of cyanobacterial bioactive compounds
6. Bioactive molecules from microalgae and constraints in commercialization
7. Strategies of overproduction of lipids and fine chemicals from commercially important microalgae
8. Biotechnological Exploitation of Macroalgae
9. Algal compounds to fight human diseases such as Alzheimer's dementia and cancer
10. Bioactive compounds and their future therapeutic applications
11. Novel Biotechnological Substances from Bryophytes
12. Biotechnological Substances in Lichens
13. Bioactive Compounds in Fungi
14. Novel Biotechnological Substances in Higher Plants
15. New perspectives of the Artemisia annua bioactive compounds as an affordable cure in treatment of malaria and cancer
16. Pesticidal efficacy of plant bioactive compounds: An overview
17. Marine Sponges: Source of Novel Biotechnological Substances
18. Biotechnological Compounds from Corals
19. Bioactive Compounds from Fish
20. Advances in extraction technologies-Isolation and purification of bioactive compounds from biological materials

Authors

Rajeshwar P. Sinha Professor of Molecular Biology, Centre of Advanced Study in Botany, Banaras Hindu University (BHU), Varanasi, India. Prof. Dr. Rajeshwar P. Sinha, DAAD Fellowship Awardee and Fellow, Society for Applied Biotechnology, India, is a professor of molecular biology, Centre of Advanced Study in Botany, Banaras Hindu University (BHU), Varanasi, India, where he received his PhD in Biotechnology. He is working on UV radiation effects on aquatic ecosystems (DNA damage and repair, phycobiliproteins, mycosporine-like amino acids, and scytonemin). He is a life member and editorial board member of various national/international scientific societies and journals, respectively. He has published more than 300 research papers/reviews/book chapters and edited/authored seven books. h.c. Donat-P. H�der Director, Botanical Institute and Chair of Ecophysiology of Plants, Friedrich-Alexander University, Erlangen-Nurnberg, Germany. Before his retirement, Prof. em. Dr. Dr. h.c. D-P. H�der has been a director of the Botanical Institute and held the chair of Ecophysiology of Plants at the Friedrich-Alexander University, Erlangen-N�rnberg, Germany, and was the director of the Botanical Garden. He is the author of more than 720 scientific publications, has produced 29 books, and holds 7 national and international patents. He is or has been editor of several international journals and is currently section editor of Environmental Toxicology in Frontiers in Environmental Sciences. His research interests are ecophysiology and ecotoxicology of aquatic ecosystems and is appointed member of the Environmental Effects Panel of the United Nations on the effects of ozone depletion and climate change.