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Burgeoning research into marine natural products during the past
two decades has in no small measure been due to an heightened and
world-wide interest in the ocean, to the development of new
sophisticated computer-driven instrumentation, and to major
advances in separation science. Organic chemists have been fully
aware that processes in living systems occur in an aqueous medium.
Nevertheless, the chemists who have specialized in the study of
small molecules have found it expedient to use organic rather than
aqueous solvents for the isolation and manipulation of secondary
metabolites. The emergence of new chromatographic techniques, the
promise of rewarding results, not to mention the relevance of polar
molecules to life itself, have contributed to a new awareness of
the importance of organic chemistry in an aqueous medium. The first
chapter in Volume 2 of Bioorganic Marine Chemistry reflects the
growing interest and concern with water-soluble com pounds. Quinn,
who pioneered the separation of such molecules, has contributed a
review which closely links techniques with results and is based on
practical experience. The second chapter, by Stonik and Elyakov,
examines the vast chemical literature of the phylum Echinodermata -
over one fourth of it in difficulty accessible Russian language
publications. The Soviet authors evaluate the data for their
suitability as chemotaxonomic markers."
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