A chemoinformatic analysis on natural glycosides with respect to biological origin and structural class

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-04-18
DOI 10.1039/D2NP00089J
Impact Factor 13.423
Authors

Yinliang Chen, Yi Liu, Nianhang Chen, Yuting Jin, Ruofei Yang, Hucheng Yao, De-Xin Kong



Abstract

Covering: up to 2022 16.19% of reported natural products (NPs) in the Dictionary of Natural Products (DNP) are glycosides. As one of the most important NPs' structural modifications, glycosylation can change the NPs' polarity, making the aglycones more amphipathic. However, until now, little is known about the general distribution profile of the natural glycosides in different biological sources or structural types. The reason, structural or species preferences of the natural glycosylation remain unclear. In this highlight, chemoinformatic methods were employed to analyze the natural glycosides from DNP, the most comprehensively annotated NP database. We found that the glycosylation ratios of NPs from plants, bacteria, animals and fungi decrease successively, which are 24.99%, 20.84%, 8.40% and 4.48%, respectively. Echinoderm-derived NPs (56.11%) are the most frequently glycosylated, while those produced by molluscs (1.55%), vertebrates (2.19%) and Rhodophyta (3.00%) are the opposite. Among the diverse structural types, a large proportion of steroids (45.19%), tannins (44.78%) and flavonoids (39.21%) are glycosides, yet aminoacids and peptides (5.16%), alkaloids (5.66%) are comparatively less glycosylated. Even within the same biological source or structural type, their glycosylation rates fluctuate drastically between sub- or cross-categories. The substitute patterns of flavonoid and terpenoid glycosides and the most frequently glycosylated scaffolds were identified. NPs with different glycosylation levels occupy different chemical spaces of physicochemical property and scaffold. These findings could help us to interpret the preference of NPs' glycosylation and investigate how NP glycosylation could aid NP-based drug discovery.

Source Journal

Natural Product Reports

Natural Product Reports
CiteScore: 21.2
Self-citation Rate: 3.9%
Articles per Year: 64

Natural Product Reports (NPR) is a critical review journal that stimulates progress in all areas of natural products research, including isolation, structural and stereochemical determination, biosynthesis, biological activity and synthesis. The scope of the journal is very broad, and many reviews discuss the role of natural products in the wider bioinorganic, bioorganic and chemical biology communities. Areas covered include the following: Enzymology Nucleic acids Genetics Chemical ecology Carbohydrates Primary and secondary metabolism Analytical techniques NPR articles are designed to give an interesting insight into the topic, focusing on the key developments that have shaped a field. Authors are encouraged to include their own perspective on developments, trends and future directions. Articles providing a very comprehensive overview or exhaustive list of previous literature and lacking critical insight are generally not suitable for publication in NPR. Meta-analyses of previously published data using existing tools can be included, however NPR articles should not include any new methods or data.

Recommended Suppliers

ChinaDongguan Hui Xin Innovative Material Technology Co., Ltd.
ChinaNanjing Dingda Pharmaceutical Technology Co., Ltd.
ChinaJiangsu Shuangma Chemical Group
ChinaZhu Hai Meitong Chemistry Pre-dispersed Pigment Color Sheet Company
United StatesAJAY NORTH AMERICA, L.L.C.
ChinaKunshan Lide Precision Machinery Co., Ltd.
SwitzerlandKIMESSA AG
GermanyQUANCOM Informationssysteme GmbH
ChinaShouguang Source Beauty Food Technology Co., Ltd.
Switzerlandanag technologies sa
Disclaimer
This page provides academic journal information for reference and research purposes only. We are not affiliated with any journal publishers and do not handle publication submissions. For publication-related inquiries, please contact the respective journal publishers directly.
If you notice any inaccuracies in the information displayed, please contact us at [email protected]. We will promptly review and address your concerns.