Reprint

A Theme Issue Honoring Professor Peter Proksch's 70th Birthday: Bioactive Compounds from the Ocean

Edited by
August 2024
220 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1777-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1778-8 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue A Theme Issue Honoring Professor Peter Proksch's 70th Birthday: Bioactive Compounds from the Ocean that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Medicine & Pharmacology
Summary

The following commemorative Special Issue on bioactive compounds from the ocean is in honor of Prof. Dr. Peter Proksch on his 70th birthday. Prof. Dr. Proksch is an internationally recognized scientist in research on both terrestrial and marine natural products. Prof. Dr. Proksch worked with terrestrial plants in the early stage of his career and started to work on marine natural products some thirty years ago. He once said, “When I started to work on marine natural products, I was attracted to this fascinating field of science by the exotic environment, the colorful shapes of (mostly) marine invertebrates, and their complex ecological interactions”. In parallel to marine macroorganisms, he soon embarked on studying natural products from marine-derived microorganisms, discovering a huge amount of biodiversity and highly unusual and complex microbial natural products. The topics of this Special Issue include but are not limited to the following: The isolation, structural elucidation, and bioactivity of new molecules from marine organisms; The characterization of proteins, enzymes, and saccharides from marine organisms; The biosynthesis of bioactive compounds from marine organisms; The design, synthesis, modification, and structure–activity relationship of bioactive compounds from marine organisms; The pharmacological mechanisms of bioactive compounds from marine organisms.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
marine fungus; Penicillium copticola; copteremophilanes A–J; structure elucidation; antitumor activity; neuroprotection; soft coral; Sarcophyton trocheliophorum; capnosane; cembrane; absolute configuration; anti-tumor activity; marine-derived fungus; Penicillium sclerotiorum; azaphilones; structure elucidation; anti-inflammatory activity; antitumor activity; marine fungus; Aspergillus insulicola; phenolic compounds; ECD calculations; α-glucosidase inhibition; Aspergillus chevalieri; deep-sea cold seep; indole diketopiperazine; antibacterial activity; marine-derived fungus; Aspergillus sclerotiorum; secondary metabolite; alkaloid; sclerotioloids; mangrove sediment-derived fungi; polyketide; stachylines; biological activity; Hamigera avellanea; Aspergillaceae; marine sponge-associated fungus; pentaketides; dihydrochromone; 5-p-hydroxy-2-pyridone; anti-plant pathogenic fungal activity; Trichoderma; lipid; antifungal activity; antimicroalgal activity; fusarin derivatives; Penicillium steckii; marine algicolous fungus; deep-sea; fungus; Penicillium citrinum; polyketides; anti-osteoporosis; anti-inflammation; Aspergillus; pyridazinone-N-oxide hybrid; sterigmatocystin; antitumor; cell cycle arrest; mangrove endophytic fungus; Phomopsis sp.; cytosporone; anti-inflammatory; Aspergillus chevalieri; indole diketopiperazine alkaloids; prenylation; genome sequencing; X-ray diffraction; pancreatic cancer; pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; mangrove endophytic fungi; Phomopsis asparagi; Phomopsis sp.; co-culture; metabolomics; molecular network; xanthone dimers