Chapter 1 Introduction ....................................................... 1
Gordon M. Cragg, David G.I. Kingston, and David J. Newman
Chapter 2 Camptothecin and Its Analogs ....................................... 5
Nicolas J. Rahier, Craig J. Thomas, and Sidney M. Hecht
Chapter 3 The Discovery and Development of the Combretastatins .............. 23
Kevin G. Pinney, Christopher Jelinek, Klaus Edvardsen, David J. Chaplin,
and George R. Pettit
Chapter 4 Homoharringtonine and Related Compounds ........................... 47
Hideji Itokawa, Xihong Wang, and Kuo-Hsiung Lee
Chapter 5 Podophyllotoxins and Analogs ...................................... 71
Kuo-Hsiung Lee and Zhiyan Xiao
Chapter 6 Taxol and Its Analogs ............................................. 89
David G.I. Kingston
Chapter 7 The Vinca Alkaloids .............................................. 123
Francoise Gueritte and Jacques Fahy
Chapter 8 The Bryostatins .................................................. 137
David J. Newman
Chapter 9 The Isolation, Characterization, and Development of a Novel
Class of Potent Antimitotic Macrocyclic Depsipeptides:
The Cryptophycins ................................................ 151
Rima S. Al-awar and Chuan Shih
Chapter 10 Chemistry and Biology of the Discodermolides, Potent Mitotic
Spindle Poisons ................................................. 171
Sarath P. Gunasekera and Amy E. Wright
Chapter 11 The Dolastatins: Novel Antitumor Agents from Dolabella
auricularia ..................................................... 191
Erik Flahive and Jayaram Srirangam
Chapter 12 Ecteinascidin 743 (ET-743; YondelisTM), Aplidin, and
Kahalalide F .................................................... 215
Ruben Henriquez, Glynn Faircloth, and Carmen Cuevas
Chapter 13 Discovery of E7389, a Fully Synthetic Macrocyclic Ketone
Analog of Halichondrin B ........................................ 241
Melvin J. Yu, Yoshito Kishi, and Bruce A. Littlefield
Chapter 14 HTI-286, A Synthetic Analog of the Antimitotic Natural Product
Hemiasterlin .................................................... 267
Raymond J. Andersen and Michel Roberge
Chapter 15 The Actinomycins ................................................ 281
Anthony B. Mauger and Helmut Lackner
Chapter 16 Anthracyclines .................................................. 299
Federico Maria Arcamone
Chapter 17 Ansamitocins (Maytansinoids) .................................... 321
Tin-Wein Yu and Heinz G. Floss
Chapter 18 Benzoquinone Ansamycins ......................................... 339
Kenneth M. Snader
Chapter 19 Bleomycin Group Antitumor Agents ................................ 357
Sidney M. Hecht
Chapter 20 Biochemical and Biological Evaluation of (+)-CC-1065 Analogs
and Conjugates with Polyamides .................................. 383
Rohtash Kumar and J.William Lown
Chapter 21 Epothilone, a Myxobacterial Metabolite with Promising
Antitumor Activity .............................................. 413
Gerhard Hofle and Hans Reichenbach
Chapter 22 Enediynes ....................................................... 451
Philip R. Hamann, Janis Upeslacis, and Donald B. Borders
Chapter 23 The Mitomycins .................................................. 475
William A. Remers
Chapter 24 Staurosporines and Structurally Related Indolocarbazoles as
Antitumor Agents ................................................ 499
Michelle Prudhomme
Chapter 25 Combinatorial Biosynthesis of Anticancer Natural Products ....... 519
Michael G. Thomas, Kathryn A. Bixby, and Ben Shen
Chapter 26 Developments and Future Trends in Anticancer Natural Products
Drug Discovery .................................................. 553
David J. Newman and Gordon M. Cragg
Index ...................................................................... 573
|