Alkaloids
Alkaloids
Alkaloids
Introduction
The function of alkaloids in plants is not yet understood. It has been suggested that they
are simply waste products of plants’ metabolic processes, but evidence suggests that
they may serve specific biological functions. In some plants, the concentration of
alkaloids increases just prior to seed formation and then drops off when the seed is ripe,
suggesting that alkaloids may play a role in this process. Alkaloids may also protect
some plants from destruction by certain insect species.
Interest in the alkaloids stems from the wide variety of physiological effects (both
wanted and unwanted) they produce in humans and other animals. Their use dates back
to ancient civilizations, but scientific study of the chemicals had to await the growth of
organic chemistry, for not until simple organic bases were understood could the intricate
structure of the alkaloids be unraveled. The first alkaloid to be isolated and crystallized
was the potent active constituent of the opium poppy, morphine, in about 1804.
Functions of Alkaloids
Although their biogenesis and metabolism have been studied in many cases, function of
alkaloids is still vague and not really understood by the chemist. There are some
proposed roles of alkaloids in plant metabolism, plant catabolism or plant physiology as
listed below:-
Alkaloid Classification
Beside plants, alkaloids are found in certain types of fungi, such as psilocybin in the
fungus of the genus Psilocybe, and in animals, such as bufotenin in the skin of some
toads and a number of insects, markedly ants. Many marine organisms also contain
alkaloids. Some amines, such as adrenaline and serotonin, which play an important role
in higher animals, are similar to alkaloids in their structure and biosynthesis and are
sometimes called alkaloids.
The role of alkaloids for living organisms that produce them is still unclear. It was
initially assumed that the alkaloids are the final products of nitrogen metabolism in
plants, as urea in mammals. It was later shown that alkaloid concentrations varies over
time, and this hypothesis was refuted. Most of the known functions of alkaloids are
related to protection. However, some animals are adapted to alkaloids and even use them
in their own metabolism. Such alkaloid-related substances as serotonin, dopamine and
histamine are important neurotransmitters in animals. Alkaloids are also known to
regulate plant growth. Another example of an organism that uses alkaloids for protection
is the Utetheisa ornatrix, more commonly known as the ornate moth. Pyrrolizidine
alkaloids render these larvae and adult moths unpalatable to many of their natural
enemies like coccinelid beetles, green lacewings, insectivorous hemiptera and
insectivorous bats.
Medical use of alkaloid-containing plants has a long history, and, thus, when the first
alkaloids were isolated in the 19th century, they immediately found application in
clinical practice. Many alkaloids are still used in medicine, usually in the form of salts,
including the following:
Alkaloid Action
Ajmaline antiarrhythmic
Atropine, scopolamine, hyoscyamine anticholinergic
Caffeine stimulant, adenosine receptor antagonist
Codeine cough medicine, analgesic
Colchicine remedy for gout
Emetine antiprotozoal agent
Ergot alkaloids sympathomimetic, vasodilator,
antihypertensive
Morphine analgesic
Nicotine stimulant, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
agonist
Physostigmine inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase
Quinidine antiarrhythmic
Quinine antipyretics, antimalarial
Reserpine antihypertensive
Tubocurarine muscle relaxant
Vinblastine vincristine antitumor
Vincamine vasodilating, antihypertensive
Yohimbine stimulant, aphrodisiac
Many synthetic and semisynthetic drugs are structural modifications of the alkaloids,
which were designed to enhance or change the primary effect of the drug and reduce
unwanted side-effects. For example, naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, is a
derivative of the baine that is present in opium.
Conclusion
Alkaloids are very important compounds for human beings. For ages their extracts were
used as a cure to rescue people from pain like morphine and some illnesses like quinine
in malaria and colchicine in gout. Thanks to alkaloids during ages, people can cure the
diseases and improve their life. Alkaloids showed quite diverse medicinal properties.
Many of them possess local anesthetic properties, but their practical use is limited for
clinical purpose.
References
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chromatography‐mass spectrometry analysis of protoberberine alkaloids in medicine
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6-Hesse, M., 2002. Alkaloids: nature's curse or blessing?. John Wiley & Sons.
7-Manske, R.H.F. and Holmes, H.L. eds., 2014. The alkaloids: chemistry and
physiology. Elsevier.