Natural Products & Traditional Medicine

Natural Products Chemistry
Natural Product Chemistry emphasizes on isolating and elucidating the structure of emerging natural products, natural product scientific characterization using various approaches, biological functions of natural products comprising pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, in vitro and in vivo, biosynthesis analysis of natural products, and so on. All of this is expected to provide an overview of the advancement and ongoing advances in wider areas of the field of natural products chemistry, its position and related economic and science implications, contemporary priorities, future opportunities as well as impending targets.
Natural compounds are the largest source of biologically active substances, while the drug of today, is derived directly from a natural source or produced from a primary compound initially derived from a natural source. Natural compounds and their derivatives were used as a medium of pharmaceutical agents. For thousands of years, natural compounds, often from plants, have become the staples of traditional medicine. Isolation and purification of molecules from natural products is the most vital step for the detection of molecular structures, the bioactivity test, the regulation of volumes of natural products and further industrial development.
The natural cosmetics have grown to be a fantastic trend in recent years, and the cosmetic industry's future emerging trend will be more environmentally conscious. Most cosmetic products have certain natural products in their formulation which serve a particular biological function. Latest research indicates that the beneficial effects of natural cosmetics greatly outweigh the advantages of chemical-based products. Innovations in the cosmetics industry are considered very significant and highly probable to develop over time too.
Submit manuscript at https://www.longdom.org/submissions/natural-products-chemistry-research.html or send as an e-mail attachment to the Editorial office at naturalprod@scholarlypub.com
Best Regards
Arne Dietrich
Editor-in-chief | Natural Products Chemistry & Research