About this Research Topic
Additionally, natural metabolites are commonly present in food, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries because of their high acceptability among consumers owing to their relative safety, multipurpose beneficial effect relative to synthetic agent. In this special issue, we aim to address the role and effectiveness of various natural product based drugs that are used to control obesity and other disorders that provoke inflammation. This ultimately leads to the discovery of new drug entities that may act as leads for pharmaceutical industries combating this problem. Short communications, research articles as well as review articles are welcomed. Only studies which address chemically defined compounds are accepted in order to avoid submission on extracts, and undefined mixtures of essential oils and natural products.
Potential topics include the following:
• Isolation and structural elucidation of secondary metabolites from plants /or marine organisms to control obesity and additional inflammation triggering agents.
• Metabolic profiling of phytoconstituents in plant extracts that showed a significant combating to control obesity and other disorders that trigger and provoke inflammation.
• Essential oils counteracting obesity and other inflammation provoking agents.
• Mechanistic interpretation of the anti-obesity activity of some natural product based drugs through interpretation of their biochemical pathways and their effect in prevention of inflammation.
• Studies dealing with molecular modelling supported by in vitro and/ or in vivo studies for anti-obesity potential of medicinal plants and their metabolites are also welcomed
However, performing experiments on plant extract or essential oils without their phytochemical characterization via LC/MS profiling or structural elucidation of isolated phytoconstituents for the former or doing GC analyses for the latter, will not be within the scope of the topic.
Keywords: nautral products, obesity, inflammation, essential oils, marine organisms
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.