Cover page
Title page
Certification
Dedication
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Organization of the work
Table of Contents
Chapter ONE
1.1 Introduction - - - - - - - - 1
1.2 Occurrence - - - - - - - - 1
1.3 Plant Source - - - - - - - - 3
1.4 Alkaloid Classification - - - - - - 3
1.5 Physiochemical Properties - - - - - 6
1.6 Presence of Nitrogen in their molecule- - - 7
1.7 Presence of Monoacid as a Biosynthetic material - 7
1.8 Alkalinity of Alkaloids - - - - - - 8
1.9 Solubility of Alkaloids - - - - - - 10
1.10 Kola Nut - - - - - - - - - 12
1.11 Pharmacological effects of kola nuts - - - 14
1.12 Chemical composition of kola Nuts - - - 15
Chapter TWO
2.0 Literature Review - - - - - - - 16
Chapter THREE
3.0 Materials and Methods - - - - - - 24
3.1 Materials - - - - - - - - 24
3.2 Reagents - - - - - - - - 24
3.3 Reagents preparation - - - - - - 24
3.4 Sample Collection
3.5 Sample preparation - - - - - - 26
3.6 Extraction of Alkaloid - - - - - - 27
3.7 Qualitative test of Alkaloid - - - - - 28
Chapter FOUR
4.0 Results and Discussion - - - - - - 29
4.1 Results - - - - - - - - - - 29
4.2 Discussion - - - - - - - - 32
4.3 conclusion - - - - - - - - 35
4.4 Recommendation for further study - - - 37
References - - - - - - - - 38
APPENDIX - - - - - - -
Thesis Overview
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Alkaloids are a class of organic compounds that typically contain
nitrogen and have complex ring structures. They occur naturally in seed
bearing plants and are found in berries, bark, fruits, roots and leaves.
That is, they are derived from plants. Often, they are bases that have
some physiological effects.
Many of the earliest isolated pure compounds with biological
activity. This was due to the ease of isolation. The nitrogen generally
makes the compound basic and the compound exists in the plant as a salt.
This, alkaloids are often extracted with water or mild acid and then
recovered as crystalline material by treatment with base. Prior to
approximately 300 years ago malaria was the scourage of Europe, likely
having been introduced though the middle East. Malaria is caused by
protozoa of the genus plasmodium, contained as spores in the gut of the
anopheles mosquitoes, which then spread the spores to humans when they
bites. As the Spanish and Portuguese explores began to colonize. South
America they discovered a cure for Malaria known to the native Indians.
This was the bark of the cinchona tress. The use of cinchona bark to
treat Malaria was first reported in Europe in 1633, and the first bark
reached Rome about 12 years later teas made from the bark cures people
suffering from Malaria, one of the major scourges in Europe at the time
and the bark became known as Jesuits bark. Because of the philosophical
differences between protestants and catholic, many protestants refused
to be treated with the bark. One of the most prominent protestants of
the time, Olive
Isolate originally from cinchona Succirubra, quinine is one of 31
alkaloids with related structure, and the principal ant malaria
compound, in the plant. Alkaloids have been defined in various ways, but
one definition come fairly close to actuality. An alkaloid is plant -
derived compounds that is toxic or physiologically active, contain
nitrogen in a heterocyclic ring, and is basic, has a complex structure,
and is of limited distribution in the plant kingdom,. Malaria is still a
major problem throughout the world, and although synthetic antimalaria
drugs largely supplanted quinine as the treatment for malaria during
world warII, quinine is often once again the drug of choice as strain of
malarial have become resistant to the synthetic drugs. However, the
search for other antimalaria drugs from natural sources has also
continued.
One of the most promising new drugs is qinghaosu, isolated from Artemisia annua.
Among the most famous of the alkaloids are the slanaceae or tropane
alkaloids. Plants containing these alkaloids have been used throughout
recorded history as poisons, but many of the alkaloids do have valuable
pharmaceutical properties. Atropine, the racimic form of hyoscyamine,
comes from Atropa belladonna (deadly nightshade) and is used to dilate
the pupils of the eye. Atropine is also a central Nervous system (CNS)
stimulant and is used as a treatment for nerve gas poisoning.
Scopolamine, another member of this class is used as treatment for
motion sickness. Cocaine from Erythroxylum coca, is closely related in
structure, is also a CNS stimulant, and has been used as a topical
anesthetic in ophthalmology. It is also drug abuse. Cocaine was found in
very small amounts in the original coca - cola formula, but was not the
main concern of the USDA at the time. Caffeine was considered to be the
major problem with the, drink. Datura stramonium (Jimsonweed), a plant
found in Virginia contains similar compounds.
The ergot alkaloids come from a fungus, claviceps purpurea, which is a
parasite on rye and wheat. The ergot alkaloids are responsible for
ergotism, resulting in loss of limbs, or convulsive erogotism, resulting
in hallucinations. In both cases, death usually follows and out breaks
of ergotism caused 11,000 deaths in Russia as late as 1926. Today the
problem is recognized and controlled. Some of the ergot alkaloids have
been used to trial migraine headaches and sexual disorders in clinical
applications. The most famous of these alkaloids is lysergic acid
diethylamide, LSD, a powerful hallucinogen that is a synthetic
derivative of the natural products. Similar alkaloids, particularly
ergine, are also found in Mexican morning glories, such as iponeoa
tricolore3.
The morphine alkaloids, derived from the opium poppy, papaver
somniferum, are powerful pain relievers and narcotics. The narcotic
activity of P. somniferum was noted on Sumerian tablets in 3500 B.C.
Making it one of the oldest drugs known. Opium is the dried latex of
the seed head of p.somniferum and has been used as an analgesic
(eliminates or relieves pain) and narcotic (induces sleep or
drowsiness) in preparation such as laudanum and paregoric. Morphine is
the principal alkaloid and was first isolated between 1803 and 1806. it
was widely used for pain relied beginning in the 1830’s but was also
recognized as being addictive. In an attempt to make morphine less
addictive, Bayer chemist acetylated the hydroxyl groups to produce
diacetylmorphine. This was marketed as a non- addictive pain reliever
under the trade name heroin for about two years in the early 1900’s,
until it was recognized to be more addictive than morphine have been
developed and found use as opiate antagonist or as animal
tranquilizers3.
Vincristine, one of the most potent antileukemic drugs in use today,
was isolated in a search for diabetes treatment from vinca rosea (now
Catharanthus roseus) in the 1950’s along with vinblastine, a homologue
in which the N- methyl group is oxidized to an aldehyde moiety. This is
such a complex structure that is still isolated from the plant (the
Madagascan periwinkle) today rather than prepared by synthesis.
Vincristine (leurocristine, VCR) is most effective in treating
childhood leukemia’s and non - Hodgkin’s lymphomas, while vinvlasbtine
(vincaleukoblastine, VLB) is used to treat Hodgkin’s disease4.
Thin layer Chromatography (TLC) techniques are frequently used for
evaluating medicinal plant materials and their preparations (world
health organisation 1998). The ascending technique was used.
1.2 OCCURRENCE
Alkaloids are found in every habitat in which vascular plants grow.
They are not widely distributed in the vegetable kingdom. They are
derived mainly from the angiosperms, the seed bearing or flowering
plants. They occur mainly in the dicotyledons (two seed leaves). They
are rarely found in non-seed bearing plants. Generally, they occur in
plant tissues at points of intense cell activity (leaves, roots, barks
and seeds) and they are generally found in living cells rather than in
dead tissues.
Alkaloids may be found in solution in cell sap, and especially in the
parenchymatous tissues in the other bark and may be stored in the solid
state usually in the form of salts. Alkaloids from plants of closely
related family are similar in structure and are not localized, but
appear to be characteristics of the organs.
However, not all organs of any one species must have alkaloids. For
example, the seed of tobacco does not contain alkaloids. The periods of
maximum accumulation of alkaloids appear only in early flowering stage.
Some alkaloids are virtually absent in a young plant, but increase to
insoluble amounts as the plant approaches maturity. As a rule alkaloids
are not found free in plants, but are combined with some acids in form
of salts. The acids most encountered are malic, citric, tannic,
succinic, oxalic, sulphric, phosphoric and hydrochloric acid.
1.3 Plant source;
Alkaloids occur in many different species in numerous genera and
families of vascular plants as well as in certain species of fungi. It
has been estimated that some fifteen percent or more of all vascular
plants contain alkaloids. A number of amines produced by animals possess
physical and chemical properties rather similar to those of alkaloids.
By traditions and conventions, these animals amines are generally not
considered as alkaloids. The occurrence of alkaloids in different plant
organs and tissues and their relationship to aspects of the physiology
of the plants are interesting part of alkaloids.
1.4 Alkaloid Classification
Alkaloids are usually classified by their common molecular heat,
based on the metabolic pathway used to construct the molecule. When not
much was known about the biosynthesis of alkaloids, they were grouped
under the names of known compounds, even some non - nitrogenous ones
(since those molecular structures appear in the finished product, the
opium alkaloids are sometimes called phenanthrenes, for example) or by
the plant or animal they were isolated from. When more is learnt about a
certain alkaloid, the grouping is changed to reflect the new knowledge,
usually taking the name of a biologically important amine that stands
out in the synthetic process.
Pyridine group includes piperine, conine, trigonelline, arecaidine,
guvacine, pilocarpine, cytosine, nicotine, sparteine, pelletierine.
Pyrolidine group is made up of hygrine, cuscohygrine, nicotine.
Tropane group: atropine, cocaine, ecgonine, scopolamine, catuabine.
Quinoline group: quinine, guanidine, dihydroquinine, strychinine, brucine, veratine, cevadine.
Isoquinoline group: the opium alkaloids (morphine, codeine, thebaine,
isopapa - dimethoxy - aniline, papaverine, narcotine, sanguinarrine,
narceine, hydrstine berberine), emetine.
Phenethylamine group: mescaline, ephedrine, dopamine, amphetamine.
Indole group: Tryptamines: DMT, N - Methyltryptamine psilocybin, and
serotonin. Ergolines, the ergot alkaloids. Ergine, ergitamine, lysergic
acid etc).
Beta - carbolines, haemine, harmaline, yolimbine, reserpine.
Rauwolfia alkaloids; Reserpine.
Purine group: Xanthines, Caffeine, the theobromine, theophylline.
Terpenoid group: Aconite alkaloids, aconitine, steroids, solanine,
samandaris (quaternary) ammonium compound muscarine, choline, neurine.
Vinca alkaloids: vinblastine, vincristine, they are antineoplastic and
bind free tublin dimmers thereby distrupting balance between microdubule
polymerization and delpolmerization resulting in arrest of cells in
metaphase.
1.5 physiochemical properties
Alkaloids are colourless, crystalline, non - violatile solids that
are insoluble in water but soluble in organic solvents such as ether,
chloroform e.t.c. They have the molecular weights ranging from 100 to
900.
Some alkaloids contain oxygen atoms while the others do not.
Those without oxygen atoms in the structure are usually liquid at ordinary temperature (e.g) nicotine, sparteine and coniine)
Those with oxygen atoms are crystalline (e.g berberine yellow). Most
are optically active (usually leavorotatory) but not those from the
group.
1.6 Presence of Nitrogen in their molecule
Alkaloids contain one or more nitrogen atoms in their molecules. A
large number of alkaloids contain at least one nitrogen atoms in a
heterocyclic ring. But in a number of alkaloidal amines (e.g. ephedrine,
mescaline, colchineds) which are generally considered as alkaloids, the
nitrogen atom in the molecule is not in the ring.
1.7 Presence Amino acid as a Biosynthetic materials;
Certain alpha amino acids have been experimentally shown to serve as
precursor in the nitrogen containing portion of the alkaloid molecules
but in some cases also with respect to the non-nitrogenous portion as
well. Among the amino acids which have been either experimentally
established or postulated on the basis of theoretical chemical
considered as common ones are;
phenylnine, tyrosine, lysine, omthine, histidine, tryptophan and
anthracilic acid. However, some alkaloids are, in their biogenesis,
more directly derived from isoprene or other precursor compounds of
carbohydrate metabolism.
1.8 Alkalinity of Alkaloids
Alkaloids are basic (alkaline) in reaction, due to the presence of
nitrogen atom in their molecule.The term alkaloids mean alkali like.
Therefore they form salts with various acids. Most of the alkaloid bases
are crystalline solids, a few are liquid (eg nicotine, pilocarpine).
The alkaloid salts are crystalline and the microscopic examination of
their crystalline structure serves as an aid to their identification.The
alkaloid salts in solution release the free alkaloid bases when the
solution is made alkaline, most commonly with ammonia, sodium carbonate
or calcium hydroxide. All alkaloids do not have the same degree of
alkalinity. Apart from the influence exerted on the electronic
disposition of the nitrogen atom in the molecule by side chains and
various substitution, one important factor contributing to the different
degree of alkalinity among alkaloids is whether a given alkaloid
contains primary, secondary, tertiary or quaternary nitrogen atom or
atoms. Such differences in the degree of alkalinity arise from the
various structural characters and one reflected in the different
alkaline values for the different alkaloids. The weaker bases (those
with low alkaline value) would require a more acidic medium to form
salts with the acid than would the strongly basic alkaloids, having
higher alkaline value.
1.9 Solubility of Alkaloids
Most alkaloid bases are practically water - insoluble. They are
fairly soluble in a number of organic solvents such as Chloroform,
Ether and lower alcohols. There are of course, exceptions. For instance,
Morphine and Colchicines are practically insoluble in ether. Also many
alkaloids which contain phenolic hydroxyl group in their molecules are
soluble in aqueous solutions of caustic alkali.
On the other hand, the alkaloid salts are generally soluble in water
and in alcohol, and mostly nearly insoluble in the immiscible organic
solvents.
A few alkaloid bases are rather soluble in water, but there are exceptions. Some examples of water - soluble alkaloids are:
Ephedine, Colchicines, Ergonovine and the Clavinet - type of ergot alkaloid. It should be noted however that