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67 th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA) in cooperation with the French Society of Pharmacognosy AFERP Innsbruck, Austria September 1-5, 2019 www.ga2019.at Wir bauen Brücken. Seit 1669 FINAL PROGRAM

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Page 1: 67 International Congress and Annual Meeting of the ...Dear Participants of the 67th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product

67th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA) in cooperation with the French Society of Pharmacognosy AFERP

Innsbruck, AustriaSeptember 1-5, 2019

www.ga2019.at

Wir bauen Brücken. Seit 1669

FINAL PROGRAM

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CONTENTS

WELCOME NOTES 4

- LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE 4

- GA PRESIDENT 5

- AFERP PRESIDENT 6

CONTACT & COMMITTEES 7

PLENARY SPEAKERS 10

PROGRAM OVERVIEW 16

INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS 18

- POSTER PRESENTERS 18

- SPEAKERS 19

- PRE-CONGRESS PRESENTERS 19

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM 21

- PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA, SUNDAY, SEP 1 21

- MONDAY, SEP 2 31

- TUESDAY, SEP 3 38

- WEDNESDAY, SEP 4 44

- EXCURSIONS AND POST CONGRESS ACTIVITIES 49

- LIST OF POSTERS 51

GENERAL INFORMATION 91

- VENUES 91

- REGISTRATION INFORMATION 93

- INFORMATION A-Z 97

- TRAVEL TO INNSBRUCK 101

- CITY MAP 102

- FLOOR PLANS 104

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS 106

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GA PRESIDENT

Respectable Honorary Members of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA), Honorable Insti-tutional Authorities, Distinguished Spea-kers and Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen,on behalf of GA it is my pleasure and privi-lege to welcome you all to this distinctive meeting, the 67th International Congress and Annual Meeting. My sincerest and heartfelt welcome to all the participants! I am very grateful to Prof. Hermann Stup-pner and the other colleagues of the Local Organizing Committee for kindly hosting the event. GA was founded in 1953 in Camberg (Germany) and currently counts more than 1,500 active members from more than 70 countries all over the world. GA has reached an outstanding reputation and presently GA is one of the world’s leading societies in the field of natural product research. The 67th GA congress aims to promote a crosstalk between re-searchers of different areas with the goal of contributing to fundamental problems which are important for health, food, en-vironment and general wellness. I am convinced that this congress can repre-sent a virtuous platform for discussion and spreading novel knowledge in the field of medicinal plants and natural pro-ducts in a critical interdisciplinary vision. The implementation of effective multi- disciplinarity is a huge challenge and re-presents the vocation and a fundamental character of GA.GA has significantly invested in science dissemination organizing scientific con-ferences, webinars, and workshops, do-

nating every year numerous awards and travel grants, endorsing two official scien-tific journals (Planta Medica and Planta Medica International Open), a Facebook page, research networking groups (“Afri-can Research” and “Medicinal Plants and Natural Products in Animal Healthcare and Veterinary Medicine”), ratifying the foundation “Plants for Health”, and as a partner of European Projects. Through millennia plants and natural products have played a critical role in the development of human cultures around the world and continue to represent an important source of nutrition and thera-peutic value. The role of natural products as leads for new medications is still, to a great extent, unexplored. In this context GA has the role of promoting the creation of novel and efficient channels of com-munication and transfer of knowledge. There is no distinction between basic and applied science; there should only be good science, projected to its maximal extent. The aim of this International Conference is to bring together researchers from different areas to interact and it forms an ultimate new collaborations for the improvement of medicinal plant and natural product research in the world. The conference also offers an opportu-nity to strengthen existing collaborations gaining tangible research outputs.It is with great pleasure that I declare the 67th Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research officially opened!

Prof. Dr. Anna Rita BiliaGA President

LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Dear Participants of the 67th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research!

On behalf of the Organizing and the Scientific Committees, it is my pleasure to welcome you to the GA meeting 2019 in Innsbruck. This symposium is hosted by the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA) in cooper-ation with the French Society of Pharmacognosy (AFERP).

The aim of this congress is to bring people together interested in scientific and practical aspects of natural product research and to provide a platform for ex-change of knowledge and experience. The congress will start with four pre-con-gress events at the Center for Chemistry and Biomedicine of the University of Innsbruck: the Young Researchers Workshop, a pre-congress symposium on Veterinary Phytotherapy, the Young Researchers Workshop, and a workshop en-titled Economic Adulteration of Botanical Ingredients. The Main Conference will be located at the Innsbruck Congress Center. In total, 492 posters, 11 plenary, 2 keynote lectures and 45 contributed short lectures will be presented during the three days of the congress and cover different aspects of natural products chemistry, biological and pharmacological activities, analytical methods for quality control of herbal medicinal products, metabolomics and molecular net-working, ethnobotany and ethnopharmacology, biodiversity and chemical ecol-ogy, regulatory affairs, animal healthcare and veterinary medicine. The poster sessions at central time frames within the congress will provide an opportunity for lively scientific discussions.

I would like to thank everyone who has made this GA meeting possible, in par-ticular members of the Organizing and Scientific Committees, as well as the representatives of the PCO Tyrol Congress. I am also grateful to the University of Innsbruck for providing the meeting place and infrastructure for the pre-sym-posia and the get together event, as well as the sponsors for their financial sup-port. We hope that the programme of this congress will meet your expectations and that you will enjoy your stay in Innsbruck.

Hermann StuppnerChair of Local Organizing Committee

WELCOME WELCOME

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AFERP PRESIDENT

Dear friends and colleagues,

The French Society of Pharmacognosy is really pleased and honoured to have been invited by the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA) as a privileged partner of the 67th International Congress and Annual Meet-ing in Innsbruck, 1st to 5th September, 2019. For many reasons, the participa-tion of AFERP members to the annual GA Congress dropped down these recent years. So, we warmly thank the GA board members as well as Prof. Dr Hermann Stuppner and the local organizing committee for inviting us to this prestigious event. This is indeed a real opportunity to meet the natural product community of sister societies, in addition to the world natural product meetings on Natural Products organised every 4 years together with the American Society of Phar-macognosy. After the GA organisation in Copenhagen 2016, we will meet again for this big event in San-Francisco in 2020. In the gap, events organised by each Society maintain dynamism for NP research and scientific exchanges stimulat-ed by close relationships.

In addition to highly qualified speakers, the scientific program is particularly attractive and diverse with up to date research works in Natural Products, re-inforced by 4 pre-congress events and 3 workshops. We have encouraged our members to participate in GA 2019 supporting a plenary speaker and address-ing travel grants and awards to students. We are confident about the success of this meeting through fruitful scientific discussions, but also due to the excellent and friendly “Tyrolean atmosphere” which is anticipated there. This is promised thanks to the incentive social program proposed, including the choice of presti-gious places for the congress events in Innsbruck, celebrating this year the 350 years of a university of excellence and also internationally recognised for the quality of its research in Natural Products.

So, we have no doubt this will be a great event with a number of lucky partici-pants who will be stimulated to collaborate and to meet again.

Laurence Voutquenne President of AFERP (French Society of Pharmacognosy)

ORGANIZING SOCIETY Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research (GA)I: www.ga-online.org

French Society of Pharmacognosy (AFERP) I: www.aferp.fr

LOCAL ORGANIZER Prof. Dr. Hermann Stuppner Institute of PharmacyDepartment of PharmacognosyUniversity of Innsbruck, Austria

CONGRESS ORGANIZERSPCO Tyrol CongressCongress und Messe Innsbruck GmbHRennweg 3, 6020 Innsbruck, AustriaT: +43 (0)512 575600, I: [email protected]

EXHIBITION AND SPONSORSHIPS12! studio12 gmbhKaiser Josef Straße 9, 6020 Innsbruck, AustriaT: +43 (0)512 890438E: [email protected]

Wir bauen Brücken. Seit 1669

WELCOME CONTACT

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SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE

Prof. Giovanni Appendino, ItalyProf. Yoshinori Asakawa, JapanUniv.-Prof. Dr. Rudolf Bauer, AustriaProf. Dr. Anna-Rita Bilia, Italyo.Univ.-Prof.Dr. Günther Bonn, AustriaProf. Joël Boustie, FranceProf. Alessandra Braca, ItalyAo. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Franz Bucar, AustriaProf. Dr. Veronika Butterweck, SwitzerlandProf. Andreas I. Constantinou, CyprusProf. Nunziatina De Tommasi ItalyUniv.-Prof.Dr. Verena Dirsch, AustriaProf. Dr. Thomas Efferth, GermanyAss. Prof. Dr. Emerson Ferreira Queiroz, SwitzerlandAss. Prof. Dr. Nikolas Fokialakis, GreeceProf. Dr. Robert Fuerst, GermanyProf. Simon Gibbons, UKProf. Elvira Gille, Romaniaao Univ. Prof. Dr. Sabine Glasl-Tazreiter, AustriaProf. De-An Guo, ChinaAss. Prof. Maria Halabalaki, GreeceProf. Matthias Hamburger, SwitzerlandProf. Michael Heinrich, UKProf. Dr. Andreas Hensel, GermanyProf. Judit Hohmann, HungaryUniv.-Prof. Dr. Christian Huck, Austria

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Attila Hunyadi, HungaryProf. Dr. Oliver Kayser, GermanyProf. Dr. Sami A. Khalid, SudanProf. Ikhlas Khan, USAProf. A. Douglas Kinghorn, USAProf. Dr. Anna Karolina Kiss, PolandProf. Dr. Werner Knoess, GermanyProf. Francisco Macias, SpainAss.-Prof. Stefania Marzocco, ItalyDr. med. Günter Meng, GermanyProf. Guido Frank Pauli, USAProf. John M. Pezzuto, USAProf. Luc Pieters, BelgiumProf. Dr. Pascal Richomme-Peniguel, FranceProf. Dr. Judith Rollinger, AustriaProf. Dr. Guillermo Schmeda-Hirschmann, ChileProf. Alexander Shikov, RussiaAssoc. Prof. Krystyna Skalicka – Woźniak, PolandProf. Alexios Skaltsounis, GreeceProf. Dr. Deniz Tasdemir, GermanyAssoc. Prof. Ioannis P. Trougakos, GreeceProf. Aurelia Tubaro, ItalyProf. Alvaro Viljoen, South AfricaDr. Cica Vissiennon, GermanyProf. Jean-Luc Wolfender, Switzerland

LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Assoz. Prof. Dr. Markus GanzeraIng. Elisabeth GstreinSabine KrallDr. Stefan SchwaigerDr. Bianka SiewertUniv.-Prof. Dr. Hermann StuppnerDr. Sonja SturmVeronika Temml, PhD

Coworkers of the Department of Pharmacognosy

Mostafa Alilou, MSc.Dr. Nora EngelsMag. Nora Gibitz-EisathVerena Gratl, BSc.Mag. Fabian HammerleMag. Stefanie HoferStefan Loos MSc.Mag. Fabian MayrHieu Nguyen Ngoc, MSc.Dieu Nguyer Thi Xuan, BSc., MSc.Maria Orfanoudaki MSc.Mag. Luca Pompermaier

COMMITTEES COMMITTEES

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the University of Frankfurt, Germany. His lab focusses on the pharmacological characterization of natural compounds and plant extracts with activity on en-dothelial cells in the context of inflammation and cancer. He received renowned awards by different scientific societies (e.g. German Pharmaceutical Society, Ger-man Pharmacological Society, GA), is elected member of the Board of Directors of the GA (since 2016) and acts as Co-Editor-in-Chief of Planta Medica (since 2019).

JUERG GERTSCHJUERG GERTSCH studied cultural antrophology at the Uni-versidad Central de Venezuela (UCV) and Neurosciences and Biochemistry at Sussex University (UK) and the Biozentrum Basel. He received his M.Sc. in Biochemistry from Sussex Uni-versity (1997) and his Dr.sc.nat. in pharmacognosy, ethnobota-ny and natural product chemistry from the Swiss Federal Ins-titute of Technology (ETH) Zurich in 2002 under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Otto Sticher and Prof. Dr. Sir Ghillean Prance (Kew Gardens, London). Between 2003 and 2009 he was postdoc and

then group leader at the Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the laborato-ry of Prof. Karl-Heinz Altmann at ETH Zurich. He has taught pharmaceutical biology and ethnopharmacology at ETH and the University of Zurich. Between 2009 and 2013 he was a tenure track assistant professor and since 2013 full professor of Membrane Biochemistry at the Medical Faculty at the University of Bern. Since 2019 he is a professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences at the Uni-versity of Bern. Dr. Gertsch has done extensive fieldwork among the Yanomami Amerindians in Venezuela and carried out ethnopharmacological expeditions in Mexico, Bolivia and Sarawak. He was a visiting professor at the University of Cagliari, Italy and Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Biannually, he lectures at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico where he co-supervises PhD students. Dr. Gertsch’s research focuses on molecular pharmacology of the endocannabi-noid system and drug discovery. His research group works on projects related to chemical biology, neuropharmacology and biochemical pharmacology of lipids, with a focus on the endocannabinoid system. He is a PI and in the management board of the NCCR TransCure. Dr. Gertsch is author and co-author of more than 130 scholarly articles in renowned international journals and is a co-inventor on 4 licenced patents. Since 2014 he is deputy and co-director of the Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine at the University of Bern.

GIOVANNI APPENDINO Giovanni Appendino is Professor of Organic Chemistry at De-partment of Pharmaceutical Sciences of the Università del PIemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy. His research activity takes inspiration from plant natural products to address problems in various realms of biomedical investigation, from pharma-cology and nutrition (new drug leads and dietary ingredients) to organic/medicinal chemistry (new synthetic methodologies and optimization of natural product drug leads) and cell bio-

logy (novel mechanisms of activity). Author of over 350 peer-reviewed articles and 15 book chapters on the chemistry and bioactivity of plant natural products. Editor-in-Chief of the journal Fitoterapia and member of the Advisory Board of Natural Products Reports, Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B and PharmaNutrition. Member of the Italian Academic of Sciences (Accademia dei XL) and recipient of the Quilico Medal from the Italian Chemical Society (2009) and the Bruker Prize from the Phytochemical Society of Europe (2015).

MEHDI BENIDDIRMehdi A. Beniddir graduated in pharmacy and received his MSc degree from Paris-Sud University in 2009. He obtained his PhD under the guidance of Dr Françoise Guéritte and Dr Marc Litaudon at the Institut de Chimie des Substances Natu-relles (ICSN-CNRS) in 2012. He was subsequently a postdoc-toral fellow of Prof. Erwan Poupon at Paris-Sud, Paris-Saclay University, where he was appointed associate professor of na-tural product chemistry in 2014. His research interests include

the streamlined discovery of intricate natural substances from plants, marine invertebrates and micro-organisms using MS-based dereplication approaches.

ROBERT FUERSTRobert Fuerst studied pharmacy at the University of Munich, Germany. He performed his PhD thesis (2002-2005) at the De-partment of Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Biology (chair: Angeli-ka M. Vollmar), where he also worked as post-doc fellow (2005-2007). In 2011, he received the Venia Legendi for Pharmaceutical Biology and Pharmacology from the Faculty of Chemistry and Pharmacy at the University of Munich. Since 2012 Robert Fuerst works as a Full Professor of Pharmaceutical Biology at

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY SPEAKERS

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spectrometry. The goal of his research is to investigate the interaction between different organisms in natural (Plant, microorganisms, marine and terrestrial animals) applying metabolomic strategies. Lopes leads one FAPESP thematic project, he is founder of the Mass Spectrometry Facility CEMMO and also ini-tiated the of NAP-USP research nucleus in natural and synthetic products. He is Member of the Brazilian Academy of Science, Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and President of the Brazilian Chemical Society. Advisory Boarder member of the Planta Medica, Rapid Communications in Mass Spetrometry, Scientific Reports and ACS-OMEGA. Received in his career eight prizes with highlight to the honorary medal of the Brazilian Society of Mass Spectrometry and the Prize of Innovation Fernando Galembeck of the Brazilian Society of Che-mistry. He is the author of five books, 15 books chapters and over 380 refereed scientific publications and is currently rated with a WoS h-index of 37.

BARRY R. O’KEEFEDr. Barry O’Keefe was awarded a Bachelors of Science degree in Botany from Michigan State University and a Doctorate in Pharmacognosy from the University of Illinois at Chicago. He pursued post-doctoral research in the Laboratory of Drug Dis-covery Research and Development at the National Cancer In-stitute (USA). He is now the Acting Chief of the Molecular Tar-gets Program in the Center for Cancer Research and is Chief of the Natural Products Branch in the Developmental Thera-peutics Program of the National Cancer Institute, National In-

stitutes of Health (USA). Dr. O’Keefe also currently leads the Protein Chemistry and Molecular Biology Section of the Molecular Targets Program that specializes in the isolation and identification of novel bioactive proteins, the identification of specific molecular targets for cancer and viral infections, and the development of novel assay sys-tems for the evaluation and screening of natural products against polypeptide and polynucleotide targets of interest.

MICHAEL A. HUFFMANMichael A. Huffman is a Professor in the Department of Eco-logy and Social Behavior, Primate Research Institute of Kyoto University, Japan. Huffman received tenure at the Primate Re-search Institute of Kyoto University in 2001, where he remains today. A native of Denver Colorado, he started his career in primatology as an undergraduate in 1979 with a field study on wild Japanese macaque behavioral ecology of Arashiyama (Kyoto) in the Department of Zoology, Kyoto University. This re-

search became the foundation for his later field studies towards an MSc (1985) and DSc (1989) degrees in the Laboratory of Human Evolution Studies. In addition to investigations on free-ranging and captive Japanese macaques spanning over 40 years, he has intensively studied the behavioral ecology of wild chimpanzees in Tanzania and Uganda between 1985 and 2004, with a focus on primate host parasite ecology, primate self-medication and ethnopharmaco-logy (with an emphasis on traditional medicines acquired from observations of wild animals). Since 2006 he is been conducting fieldwork in Sri Lanka, Taiwan, India, and Vietnam, with collaborations in over 35 countries on all continents. Huffman has published extensively in the fields of cultural primatology, animal self-medication, ethnobotany, pharmacology, primate host-parasite ecology, reproductive behavior and physiology, behavioral endocrinology, phylogeogra-phy, and historical primatology; including 10 books, over 150 refereed journal articles, 38 book chapters, 59 review articles, review book chapters and other miscellaneous articles. His research is cited in textbooks in ethology, parasito-logy, and ethnobotany and several books on general science. With his students and international collaborators, he has published on over 15 primate species from apes to lemurs, and other mammal species in Japan, Taiwan, Sri Lanka, India, Vietnam, China, Bangladesh, Tanzania, Uganda, Guinea, South Africa, and Brazil. He is deeply committed to building bridges through inter-disciplinary collaborations and mentoring. http://www.pri.kyoto-u.ac.jp/sections/social_systems_evolution/huffman/in-dex.html

NORBERTO PEPORINE LOPESProf. Norberto Peporine Lopes is currently Professor of Orga-nic Chemistry at Physic and Chemistry Department of School of Pharmaceutical Sciences of Ribeirão Preto from University of São Paulo since 1998. He is Temporary Visiting Professor at Food Chemistry Department of Munster University (Germany) since 2009. Prof. Lopes has extensive experience in the natu-ral products chemistry and analytical chemistry focus on mass

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY SPEAKERS

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ALVARO VILJOENBorn in 1969, Pretoria South Africa. Completed a BSc, BSc Hons. (cum laude) and MSc (cum laude) in Botany at Stel-lenbosch University (SA). In 1994 Alvaro commenced with a PhD at the University of Johannesburg on the chemotaxono-my of the genus Aloe. In July 2005 he was appointed as a re-search fellow in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tshwane University of Technology (Pretoria). More than eighty post-graduate students have graduated under his supervision

since 2002. His research interest is the phytochemistry and biological activity of medicinal and aromatic plants indigenous to South Africa. He has authored / co-authored >220 peer reviewed papers mostly on the phytochemical explora-tion and pharmacological activity of indigenous medicinal and aromatic plants. He has been elected on to the editorial board of the Journal of Essential Oil Research (Francis & Taylor), Phytochemistry Letters (Elsevier), he is the Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Ethnopharmacology (Elsevier) and reviewing-editor for South African Journal of Botany (Elsevier). In October 2013 Alvaro was awarded the National Research Chair in Phytomedicine a position which he holds con-currently as Director of the SAMRC Herbal Drugs Research Unit in South Africa.

XIN XIEXin Xie, Ph.D., Professor/Principle Investigator, Shanghai Ins-titute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Depu-ty director of The National Center for Drug Screening. Dr. Xie received her Ph.D. from University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in 2002, studying the neuro-protective roles of gangliosides. Prior to her doctoral work, Dr. Xie obtained her B.S. in chemistry from Peking University in 1996. Dr. Xie works on drug discovery projects related to G-protein coupled recep-

tors, including target validation, assay development, high-throughput screening and in vivo pharmacology. Her research work is mainly focused on autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases, while team efforts are also directed towards small molecules that can enhance the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) or promote somatic cell transdifferentiation.

GUIDO PAULI Trained as a pharmacist with specialization in pharmaceuti-cal analysis, Dr. Pauli holds a doctoral degree (Dr. rer. nat.) in pharmacognosy. He is currently the Norman R. Farnsworth Professor of Pharmacognosy, Director of the Program for Col-laborative Research in the Pharmaceutical Sciences (PCRPS), and Associate Director of the Institute for Tuberculosis Re-search (ITR) at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy. His basic and translational research project invol-

ve bioactive natural products (NPs) from diverse sources, particularly plants and actinomycetes, NP technologies (CENAPT), dietary supplements (Botanical Center), clinical and dental intervention materials, drug discovery, the NAPRA-LERT database, and institutional training programs. Main research interests encompass the metabolomic analysis of natural health products, botanicals, anti-TB hit-to-lead development, dental biomodifiers, and pharmaceutical ana-lysis. He has expertise in the development of analytical methods and innovati-ve approaches, including quantitative NMR and countercurrent separation. Dr. Pauli seeks to address challenges posed by nature’s metabolomic variation and enhance the understanding of natural products as health products and sources of new drugs. His academic track record includes mentoring of 18 Ph.D. stu-dents, 20 postdocs, 16 visiting scientists, and international collaborations par-ticularly in China and Europe. His 200+ peer-reviewed publications have yielded an h-index of 44 (Scopus).

PAUL REDDELLPaul Reddell is co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of QBio-tics Group Limited, an Australia company that specialises in the discovery, development and commercialisation of new natural products from Queensland’s tropical rainforests for human and animal health. In this role he is responsible for leading QBiotics’ in-house discovery programs in oncology, wound healing, anti-inflammatories and antimicrobials. He also co-ordinates and manages the company’s portfolio of

contract discovery research projects at major universities and research institu-tes in Australia, Europe and the United Kingdom. Prior to joining QBiotics, Dr Reddell was Research Program Leader and Senior Principal Research Scientist at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation’s (CSIRO) Tropical Forest Research Centre where he had broad research interests in rain-forest ecology, including plant defence chemistry. He has a PhD in plant-micro-be symbioses from the University of Western Australia and has held honorary academic positions at University of Bristol and Oregon State University.

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY SPEAKERS

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Sunday, September 01

Monday, September 02

Tuesday, September 03

Wednesday, September 04

Thursday, September 05

University of InnsbruckCCB, Innrain 80 - 82

Congress InnsbruckRennweg 3

Congress InnsbruckRennweg 3

Congress InnsbruckRennweg 3

08:45

REGIS

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GA Opening & Award Ceremony

08:45

REGIS

TRAT

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Plenary Lecture 3

Plenary Lecture 4

Bionorica Award

REGIS

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Plenary Lecture 7

EXCU

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ND PO

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TIVITI

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YRW AwardsAfrican Research Award

Willmar Schwabe Research Fellowship10:00 10:00

Poster Session 211:00 Coffee Break 11:00 Coffee Break

Plenary Lecture 1 Short Lectures E

Short Lectures F

Short Lectures G

12:00

YRW

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searc

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Work

shop Lunch

12:00

LunchWorkshop 1Molecular

Networking Lunch Workshop 2Access & Benefit

Sharing

13:00

Afric

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14:00 Plenary Lecture 2 14:00 Plenary Lecture 5

Plenary Lecture 6

Plenary Lecture 8

Short Lectures A

WorkshopRegulatory

Affairs

Short Lectures B

Keynote Lecture 2

15:00 15:00 Short Lectures J

Short Lectures K

Short Lectures LCoffee Break Keynote Lecture 1

16:00 Short Lectures C

WorkshopRegulatory

Affairs

Short Lectures D

16:00 Short Lectures H

Short Lectures I

Coffee Break

Plenary Lecture 9

17:00 17:00Poster Session 1Wine & Cheese

Plenary Lecture 10

Closing Ceremony18:00 18:00

GA Members MeetingKaiser Leopold Hall

University of Innsbruck

19:00

Get-togetherCCB, Aula

University of Innsbruck

Congress Evening atSwarovski Kristallwelten

19:00

20:00 20:00

Meeting of the GA networking group

Animal Healthcare Gasthaus Goldenes Dachl

21:00 21:00

22:00 22:00

LEGEND

Workshops Hall Brüssel

Plenary Lectures Hall Tirol

Short Lectures A, D, E, H, J Hall Tirol

Short Lectures F, K Hall Brüssel

Short Lectures B, C, G, I, L Hall Strassburg

Keynote Lectures Hall Tirol

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INFORMATION FOR SPEAKERS

PRESENTATION FORMATPlease bring your presentation as a ppt. or pptx. file (screen format 16:9) on a USB memory stick.Presentation laptops will be provided in the session halls. Please note, a presentation with your own laptop is not possible. Make sure to hand in your presentation to the media check minimum 2 hours before your presentation starts. LANGUAGEThe official language is English. No translation will be provided during sessions. LOCATION MEDIA CHECK CONGRESS INNSBRUCKRoom Serles/ ground floor

MEDIA CHECK OPENING HOURS Sunday, Sep 1 16:00 - 18:00 Monday, Sep 2 07:45 - 18:00 Tuesday, Sep 3 07:45 - 18:00 Wednesday, Sep 4 07:45 - 17:30

INFORMATION FOR PRE-CONGRESS PRESENTERS

Please bring your presentation as a ppt. or pptx. file (screen format 16:9) on a USB memory stick directly to the session hall at the CCB Innsbruck.

INFORMATION FOR POSTER PRESENTERS

POSTER FORMATPlease bring your poster in portrait style (max. format A0, portrait format, 841x1.189mm). Mounting material will be provided on site. No other formats are allowed! Posters which exeed the above mentioned dimensions will not be displayed on site.  POSTER SESSIONSTwo poster sessions are going to be held:

• Poster Session 1: Tuesday, September 03, 2019 from 16:25 - 18:25 (posters P-001 - P-229 + Posters Animal Healthcare and Veterinary Phytotherapy)

• Poster Session 2: Wednesday, September 04, 2019 from 10:20 - 12:20 (posters P-230 - P-493)

Presenting authors are asked to be present at their posters during the poster sessions.

Posters P-001 - P-229 + Veterinary Posters should be mounted on Tuesday, September 03 in the morning and have to be taken down after the poster session Posters P-230 - P-493 should be mounted on Wednesday, September 04 in the morning and have to be taken down by the end of the Congress on Wednesday evening.

INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS

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PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2019CCB (University of Innsbruck)

09:00 – 17:00 ANIMAL HEALTHCARE AND VETERINARY PHYTOTHERAPY Room M.01.47009:10 – 09:15 Welcome and Greetings Marta Mendel and Cäcilia Brendieck-Worm

09:15 – 10:30 Impulse Lectures

09:15 – 09:45 Impulse Lecture Phytochemicals in animal nutrition – their potential as functional feedIL VET-01 Qendrim Zebeli Institute of Animal Nutrition and Functional Plant Compounds, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Austria

09:45 – 10:15 Impulse Lecture Let feed and food be our medicine - how plants phytochemical diversity enhances health

IL VET-02 Fred ProvenzaDepartment of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, USA

10:15 – 10:30 General Discussion

10:30 – 11:15 Coffee Break

11:15 – 12:30 Veterinary Phytopharmacology

11:15 – 11:45 Keynote Lecture Pharmacological and toxicological insights into veterinary phytotherapyKL VET-01 Marta Mendel

Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 8 Ciszewskiego St., Warsaw 02-786, Poland

11:45 – 12:00 Invited Short Lecture Effect of Sustained Dietary Application of Thyme Oil on Antioxidant Parameters and Thymol Content in Plasma and Tissues of BroilersISL VET-01 Iveta Placha1, Vladimira Ocelova1, Remigius Chizzola2, Kristina Bacova1, Stefan Faix1

1Institute of Animal Physiology, Centre of Biosciences, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Soltesovej 4-6, 040 01 Kosice, Slovak Republic; ²Institute of Animal Nutrition and Functional Plant Compounds, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Veterinär-platz 1, 1210 Vienna, Austria

Scientific program

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15:00 – 15:15 General Discussion

15:15 – 15:45 Coffee Break

15:45 – 17:00 Animal Self Medication and Ethnoveterinary medicine

15:45 – 16:15 Keynote Lecture After 10.000 years of domestication – can livestock still self-medicate?KL VET-03 Fred Provenza

Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, USA

16:15 – 16:30 Invited Short Lecture Medicinal diet of Tibetan macaques in Southern ChinaISL VET-03 Michael A Huffman

Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University,41-2 Kanrin, Inuyama, Japan

16:30 – 16:45 Contributed Short LectureA survey of plant remedies for livestock diseases in the Mnisi com-munity, South Africa, and investigation of their biological activities

SL VET-03 Edward Thato Khunoana1, Balungile Madikizela1, Joseph Omorogiuwa Erhabor1,2, Sanah Malomile Nkadimeng1, Luke Fiddes Arnot3, Ilana Van Wyk4, Lyndy Joy McGaw1

1Phytomedicine Programme, Department of Paraclinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X04, Onderstepoort 0110, Pretoria, South Africa; 2Phytomedicine Unit, Department of Plant Biology and Biotechnology, University of Benin, PMB, 1154, Benin City, Nigeria; 3Department of Production Animal Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X04, Onderstepoort 0110, Pretoria, South Africa; 4Hans Hoheisen Wildlife Research Station, Orpen Rd, Hoedspruit, South Africa

16:45 – 17:00 General Discussion

12:00 – 12:15 Contributed Short Lecture A combination of saponins and essential oils of Asteraceae, Lauraceae and Myrtaceae plants counteracts coccidiosis-related production losses in fast-growing broilersSL VET-01 Stefan Hirtenlehner1, Jan Dirk van der Klis1, A. Lorraine Fuller2, Greg F. Mathis3 and Andreas S. Müller1

1 Delacon GmbH, Weissenwolffstr. 14, Steyregg, Austria; 2 Poultry Science Depart-ment, University of Georgia, CAES Campus, 110 Cedar Street, Athens, GA30602, USA; 3 Southern Poultry Research Inc, 2011 Brock Road, Athens, USA

12:15 – 12:30 General Discussion

12:30 – 14:00 Lunch Break

14:00 – 15:15 Clinical research

14:00 – 14:30 Keynote Lecture Mistletoe in adjuvant cancer treatment of companion animalsKL VET-02 Ulrike Biegel1, Uta von Bodungen2, Katja Ruess3, Marcus Reif4,

Yvonne Knauf5, Nina Stratmann6

1 Forschungsinstitut für Biologischen Landbau (FiBL), Ackerstrasse 113, 5070 Frick, Switzerland; 2 Praxis 4 Pfoten, Schulweg 5, 2562 Port, Switzerland, 3 Marigin Center for Veterinary medicine (Veterinary clinic), Firststrasse 31, 8835 Feusis-berg, Switzerland; 4 Gesellschaft für klinische Forschung (GFK), Hardenberg-straße 20, 10623 Berlin, Germany; 5 Georg-August-Universität-Göttingen (GAUG), Wilhelmsplatz 1, 37073 Göttingen, Germany; 6Tierarztpraxis Dr. Nina Stratmann, Vorhölterstraße 17, 44267 Dortmund, Germany

14:30 – 14:45 Invited Short Lecture Devil´s Claw – Pharmacokinetics in horsesISL VET-02 Sonja Axmann1, Karin Hummel2, Katharina Nöbauer2,

Ebrahim Razzazi-Fazeli2, Karin Zitterl-Eglseer1

1Institute for Animal Nutrition and Functional Plant Compounds, Department of Farm Animals and Veterinary Public Health, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Austria; 2Technology Platform VetCore, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Austria

14:45 – 15:00 Contributed Short LectureAloe vera gel and Coriandrum sativum seeds: Traditional medical plants and their role as anti-diabetic agents in dogs

SL VET-02 Simone Wöscher1, Manfred Coenen1, Getu Abraham1, Kenny Kuchta2 1 Institute of Animal Nutrition, Nutrition Diseases and Dietetics, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Leipzig, An den Tierkliniken 9, 04103 Leipzig, Germany; 2 Clinic for Gastroenterology and Gastrointestinal Oncology, Göttingen University, Robert-Koch-Str. 40, 37075 Göttingen, Germany

PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2019 PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2019

In addition to the Pre-Congress Symposium animal healthcare and veterinary medicine is also a topic of the main congress in the afternoon on Tuesday 3rd of September. Two plenary lectures will be held from 14.00-15.10. Mike Huff-man will give a broad overview about animal self-medication and Giovanni Appendino and Paul Reddell report on a clinical trial with a new plant based anti-cancer drug in dogs. In the later afternoon a short lecture session with 5 short lectures will be held followed by a poster session with about 20 veteri-nary contributions. Tuesday evening the meeting of the GA-networking group on Medicinal Plants and Natural Products in Animal Healthcare and Veteri-nary Medicine will take place at 20.30 in the Restaurant “Gasthaus Goldenes Dachl”, Hofgasse 1, 6020 Innsbruck ( www.innsbruckplus.at/goldenesdachl) about 5 min. walking distance from Congress Innsbruck.

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13:00 – 17:00 Afternoon session Chair: Mark Blumenthal

13:00 – 13:30 The truth behind herbal products: How can HPTLC help herbal industry to detect adulteration? ISL EA-06 Débora A Frommenwiler1,2, Maged HM Sharaf³, Eike Reich¹ ¹ CAMAG AG, Sonnenmattstrasse 11 4132, Muttenz, Switzerland; ² Unitat de Farmacologia, Farmacognòsia i Terapèutica, Facultat de Farmàcia i Ciències de l’Alimentació, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Joan XXIII, 27-31, 08028, Barcelona, Spain; ³ CAMAG Scientific, Inc., 515 Cornelius Harnett Drive, Wilmington, NC 28401, USA

13:30 – 13:50 How some suppliers attempt to fool commonly used analytical methods ISL EA-07 Stefan Gafner¹, Mark Blumenthal¹, Steven Foster ², John H. Cardellina³, Ikhlas A. Khan⁴, Roy Upton⁵

¹American Botanical Council, Austin, TX 78714, USA, ²Steven Foster Group, Eureka Springs, AR 72632, USA, ³ReevesGroup, Virginia Beach, VA 23451, USA, ⁴NCNPR, University of Mississippi, MS 38677, USA, ⁵American Herbal Pharmacopoeia, Scotts Valley, CA 95067, USA

13:50 – 14:10 The 2019 curcumin crisis in Italy: what we know so far, and early lessons ISL EA-08 Luca Bucchini Hylobates Consulting srl, Via Tarsia 61, Rome, Italy

14:10 – 14:30 Authentic and Non-Adulterated Botanical Ingredients in an Unethical Market Situation. Full Traceability, High Quality Production and Exhaustive Analytical ControlISL EA-09 Anna Mulà, Agustin Villar EUROMED, S.A. , C/Rec de Dalt 21-23 Pol.Ind. „Can Magarola“, 08100 - Mollet del Vallès, Spain

14:30 – 15:00 Coffee Break

15:00 – 15:20 Phytochemical data mining for plant identification and risk assessment

Julien Diaz Botanicert

15:20 – 15:40 Herbal Product Analysis: Are Analytical Standards Your Achilles Heel?ISL EA-11 René de Vaumas Extrasynthèse SA, Zone Industrielle Lyon Nord, Impasse Jacquard, 69730 Genay, France

09:00 – 17:00 ECONOMIC ADULTERATION OF BOTANICAL INGREDIENTS Room L.01.22009:00 – 12:00 Morning Session Chair: Andrea Zangara

09:00 – 09:10 Welcome Andrea Zangara (Euromed)

09:10 – 09:40 Preventing adulteration and fraud in botanical ingredients in the international marketplace: The ABC-AHP-NCNPR Botanical Adulterants Prevention ProgramISL EA-01 Mark Blumenthal1, Stefan Gafner1, Steven Foster 2, John H. Cardellina3, Ikhlas A. Khan4, Roy Upton5

1American Botanical Council, Austin, TX 78714, USA, 2Steven Foster Group, Eureka Springs, AR 72632, USA, 3ReevesGroup, Virginia Beach, VA 23451, USA, 4NCNPR, University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677, USA, 5American Herbal Pharmaco-poeia, Scotts Valley, CA 95067, USA

09:40 – 10:10 Combining analytical tools to identify adulteration: some practical examples ISL EA-02 Anna Rita Bilia

Department of Chemistry, University of Florence, via Ugo Schiff 6, Florence, Italy

10:10 – 10:30 Authenticity versus botanical specificity: The use of interchangeable species ISL EA-03 Roy Upton

American Herbal Pharmacopoeia, PO Box 66809 Scotts Valley, CA, USA

10:30 – 11:00 Coffee Break

11:00 – 11:30 Rien van Diesen Europol

11:30 – 12:00 Barry Traband Amway/Food Supplements Europe

12:00 – 13:00 Lunch Break

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13:30 - 13:45 Short Lecture Oxidised juncuenin B analogues with increased antiproliferative activity on human adherent cell lines: semisynthesis and biological evaluation SL YRW-04 Csaba Bús1, Norbert Kúsz1, Tímea Gonda1, Ágnes Kulmány2, István Zupkó2, Barbara Tóth1, Judit Hohmann1, Attila Hunyadi1, Andrea Vasas1

1 Department of Pharmacognosy, Eötvös Street 6, 6720, Szeged, Hungary; 2 Institute of Pharmacodynamics and Biopharmacy, Eötvös Street 6, 6720, Szeged, Hungary

13:45 - 14:00 Short Lecture Melissa officinalis essential oil loaded inside glycerosomes for the topical appliance against herpes labialis (HSV-1)SL YRW-05 Giulia Vanti1, Virginia Dourdouni2, Diamanto Lazari2, Christos Panagiotidis2, Sotirios G. Ntallis2, Stavroula Litsiou2, Christina Patsoura2, Vieri Piazzini1, Laura Risaliti1, Maria Camilla Bergonzi1, Anna Rita Bilia1

1 Department of Chemistry, University of Florence, Via Ugo Schiff 6, 50019 Sesto Fiorentino (Florence), Italy, 2 Laboratory of Pharmacology, Department of Pharma-cognosy/Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece

14:00 - 14:15 Short Lecture How plant shape their root associated microbiome to acquire resilience against the pathogen infection? What is the mechanism behind?SL YRW-06 Kourosh Hooshmand, Enoch Narh Kudjordjie, Rumakanta Sapkota, Mogens Nicolaisen, Inge S Fomsgaard

Department of Agroecology - Aarhus University, Slagelse, Denmark 14:15 - 14:30 Short Lecture Phyloactivity-based screening of ethnomedically inspired plant extract libraries against Trypanosoma cruzi and Chagas diseaseSL YRW-07 Sandhya K. Radha Krishnan1, Andrea Salm1, Ombeline Danton2, Matthias Hamburger2, Marco Leonti3, Juerg Gertsch1

1 Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, University of Bern, 3012 Bern, Switzerland;2 Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland;3 Dipartimento die Scienze Biomediche, University of Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy

14:30 - 14:45 Short Lecture Optimization of growth media for leafcutter ant associated antimicrobial producing bacteria using cuticular hydrocarbonsSL YRW-08 Johannes-Paul Fladerer, Juliana Fitzek, Franz Bucar

Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Graz, Universitaetsplatz 4, A-8010 Graz, Austria

15:40 – 16:00 How to compete with adulterations in Chinese medicine ISL EA-12 Rudolf Bauer Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 4, 8010 Graz, Austria

16:00 – 17:00 Roundtable discussion

12:00 – 17:00 YOUNG RESEARCHERS’ WORKSHOP (YRW) Room M.EG.180

12:00 - 12:05 Welcome

12:05 - 12:20 Short Lecture Prioritization of high-value natural products from a large chemo-diverse plant extracts collection: a focus on structural noveltySL YRW-01 Luis Quirós1, Arnaud Gaudry1, Adriano Rutz1, Miwa Dounoue1, Marcel Kaiser2, Bruno David3, Laurence Marcourt1, Emerson Ferreira

Queiroz1, Jean-Luc Wolfender1 and Pierre-Marie Allard1

1 Phytochimie et Produits Naturels Bioactifs, Section des Sciences Pharmaceuti-ques, Université de Genève, CH-1211 Genève 4, Switzerland ; 2 Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, Petersplatz 1, CH-4003 Basel, Switzerland; 3 Green Mission Pierre Fabre, Branche Phytochimie et Biodiversité, Institut de Recherche Pierre Fabre, 3 Avenue Hubert Curien, BP 13562, 31562 Toulouse, France

12:20 - 12:35 Short Lecture Identification of C. elegans lipid lowering constituents from chaga by correlation of 1H NMR spectra with phenotypic screeningSL YRW-02 Benjamin Kirchweger1, Karmen Kapp1,2, Ulrike Grienke1, Theresa Lehner1, Julia Zwirchmayr1, Ammar Tahir1, Judith M. Rollinger1

1 Department of Pharmacognosy, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Althanstraße 14, 1090 Vienna, Austria; 2 Division of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, PL 56 (Viikinkaari 5E), 00014 Helsinki, Finland

12:35 - 12:50 Short Lecture Feature-Based Molecular Networking and Network Annotation Propagation applied to natural antiviral compound research from tropical EuphorbiaceaeSL YRW-03 Simon Remy, Florent Olivon, Deyvis Solis, David Touboul, Marc Litaudon

Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles, CNRS ICSN, UPR 2301, University of Paris Saclay, 91198, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

12.50 - 13.30 Meet the expert & Lunch

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13:00 – 16:00 AFRICAN RESEARCH WORKSHOP Room L.EG.220 Chairs: Cica Vissiennon, Emerson F. Queiroz

13:00 - 13:30 Impulse Lecture Revisiting African traditional medicine within the 21st century context- past, present and future perspectivesIL AR-01 Sami Ahmed Khalid1,2

1 Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Science & Technology, Omdurman, Sudan; 2

Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum, P.O. Box 1996, Khartoum, Sudan

13:30 - 13:45 Short Lecture Antioxidant and Anti-Inflammatory activities of Cameroon nutritional spice extracts in human gastric epithelial cells SL AR-01 Achille Parfait Atchan Nwakiban1, Enrico Sangiovanni2, Stefano Piazza2, Marco Fumagalli2, Saba Khalilpour2, Giulia Martinelli2, Andrea Magnavacca2, Giangiacomo Beretta3, Gabriel Agbor4, Jules-Roger Kuiaté1, Mario Dell’Agli2 1 Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of science, University of Dschang, Cameroon; 2 Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 3 Department of Environmental Science and Policy, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 4 Institute of Medical Research and Medicinal Plants Studies (IMPM), Yaoundé, Cameroon

13:45 – 14:00 Short Lecture Chemical composition and in vitro investigation of the antibacterial activity of identified compounds from fungus-growing termites Macrotermes bellicosus SL AR-02 Dima Hammoud Mahdi1,5, Jane Hubert2, Andreas Schubert3, Zacharie Vissiennon1, Virgile Ahyi1, Karen Nieber4, Cica Vissiennon5,6 1 IRGIB Africa University, Inter-Regional University of Industrial Engineering Biotechnologies and Applied Sciences, Cotonou, Benin; 2 Institut de Chimie Moléculaire de Reims (UMR CNRS 7312), SFR CAP’SANTE, Université de Reims Champagne Ardenne, Reims, France; 3 Fraunhofer IZI, Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology, Leipzig, Germany; 4 University of Leipzig, Institute of Pharmacy, Leipzig, Germany; 5 University of Leipzig, Medical Faculty, Institute of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Leipzig, Germany; 6 Repha GmbH Biologische Arzneimittel, Langenhagen, Germany

14:00 - 14:15 Short Lecture Identification of glycogen phosphorylase as molecular target for antidiabetic action of Nauclea latifolia Smith fruitsSL AR-03 Shereen AbdAlgaffar1, Hiba Ali2, Pascal Richomme³, Séverine Derbré³, Sami Khalid1, 4

1 Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Science & Technology, Omdurman, Sudan; ² Commission for Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering, National Center for Research, Khartoum, Sudan; ³ Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Pharmacy, 16 bd Daviers, 49045 AngersCedex 01, France;⁴Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum, P.O. Box 1996, Khartoum, Sudan

14:45 – 15:00 Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:15 Short Lecture Immunosuppressive activity of Artemisia argyiSL YRW-09 Amy M. Zimmermann-Klemd1, Jakob K. Reinhardt2, Anna Morath3,4,5,6, Wolfgang Schamel3,4,6, Roman Huber1, Matthias Hamburger2, Carsten Gründemann1

1 Institute for Environmental Health Sciences and Hospital Infection Control, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; 2 Pharmacen-ter, University Basel, Basel, Switzerland; 3 Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; 4 Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; 5 Spemann Graduate School of Biology and Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; 6 Center for Chronic Immunodeficiency, Medical Center Freiburg and Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

15:15 - 15:30 Short Lecture Novel dual-function type III polyketide synthase from Hypericum polyphyllumSL YRW-10 Christian Bunzel1, Benye Liu1, Ludger Beerhues1,2

1 Technische Universität Braunschweig, Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology, Mendelssohnstraße 1, 38106 Braun-schweig, Germany; 2 Technische Universität Braunschweig, Center of Pharmaceutical Engineering, Franz-Liszt-Straße 35a, 38106 Braunschweig, Germany

15:30 - 15:45 Short Lecture Simulating human gastrointestinal and colonic biotranformation pathways through an in vitro assay reveals insight on hydroxytyrosol and oleuropein metabolism SL YRW-11 Maria Eleni Sakavitsi1, Annelies Breynaert2, Apostolis Angelis1,. Luc Pieters2, Nina Hermans2, Sofia Mitakou1, Maria Halabalaki1 1 Department of Pharmacognosy and Natural Products Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Athens, Athens, Greece; 2 Research group Natural Products & Food Research and Analysis, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium 15:45 - 16:00 Short Lecture Identification of Transcription Factors from Radula marginata TAYLORSL YRW-12 Tajammul Hussain, Oliver Kayser Technical University Dortmund, Emil-Figge-Strasse 66, D-44227 Dortmund, Germany

16:00 - 17:00 Awards, wrap-up/discussion

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14:15 - 14:30 Short Lecture Effects of Garlic (Allium sativum L.) Feed Additive on Experimentally-induced Hepatotoxicity and Nephrotoxicity in Commercial ChickensSL AR-04 Omolade Abodunrin Oladele, Oluwaseun Olanrewaju Esan, Helen Oyebukola Nottidge, Ini Lewis Akpan

Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan. Nigeria

14:30 – 15:00 Break

15:00 - 15:15 Short Lecture Phytochemistry of Zulu Medicinal PlantsSL AR-05 Fanie R van Heerden, N Tajuddeen School of Chemistry and Physics, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

15:15 - 15:30 Short Lecture Tyrosinase TLC-autography for South African indigenous tea, Athrixia phylicoides DC, and potential use as a cosmeceutical extractSL AR-06 Vuyisile Samuel Thibane1, Maanea Lonia Ramphinwa1,2, Fhatuwani Nixwell Mudau1 1 University of South Africa, Department of Agriculture and Animal Health, Florida Science Campus, Roodepoort 1709, South Africa; 2 University of Venda, Department of Horticultural Sciences, Thohoyandou 0950, South Africa

15:30 - 15:45 Short Lecture Bioactive Natural Products of Endophytic Fungi from Medicinal Plants Growing in Timor IslandSL AR-07 Antonius R B Ola Chemistry Department- Integrated Research Center (Biosains) Laboratory, Nusa Cendana University, Jln. Adisucipto Penfui, Kupang, Indonesia

15:45 – 16:00 Short Lecture Metabolomic profiling and in vivo toxicity of essential oils as promising hits and affordable bioactive agents against Madurella mycetomatisSL AR-08 Shereen AbdAlgaffar1, Katalin Veres2, Judit Hohmann2,  Mubarak Elamin1, Wendy van de Sande3 and Sami Khalid1,4

¹ Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Science & Technology, Omdurman, Sudan; ² Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary;³ Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; 4 Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Khartoum, P.O. Box 1996,Khartoum, Sudan

16:00 Awarding best lecture & Closing

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2019

 08:45 – 11:00 GA OPENING AND AWARD CEREMONY Hall Tirol

Welcome addresses by:Univ.-Prof. Dr. Hermann Stuppner, University of InnsbruckChair of the Local Organizing Committee

Univ.-Prof. Dr. Bernhard FügenschuhVice-Rector for Student Affairs and Teaching, University of Innsbruck

o. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Günther Bonn, University of Innsbruck and Professor Dr. Michael A. Popp Bionorica SE, "Phytovalley® Tirol"

Prof. Dr. Michael A. Popp, Bionorica SEBionorica Award

Prof. Laurence Voutquenne-Nazabadioko, AFERP-PresidentAFERP Travel Grant Winners

Opening of the Congress by:Prof. Dr. Anna Rita BiliaGA-President

GA Award Ceremony:GA Travel Grants

Young Researcher Workshop Awards and African Research Award

Dr. Willmar Schwabe Research Fellowship

Planta Medica Best Paper Award

Dedication of Planta Medica, Special Issue to Prof. Dr. Cosimo Pizza

GA-Honory Memberships

Egon Stahl Award in Silver

Egon Stahl Award Lecture

Plants for Health Foundation

Special 70th Anniversary of Univ.Prof.i.R. Mag.Dr.Dr.h.c. Brigitte Kopp and Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Blaschek

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2019PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2019

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14:50 – 15:05 Protective effect of Plumericin in inflammatory bowel disease: regulation of inflammatory and oxidative stress response in vitro and in vivoSL A-02 Shara Francesca Rapa1, Birgit Waltenberger2, Rosanna Di Paola3, Giuseppina Autore1,Salvatore Cuzzocrea3, Hermann Stuppner2,

Stefania Marzocco1. 1Department of Pharmacy, Schol of Pharmacy, University of Salerno, Via Giovanni Pao-lo II 132, 84084, Fisciano, SA, Italy; 2Institute of Pharmacy, Member of the Center for Molecular Biosciences Innsbruck, Leopold-Franzens University of Innsbruck, Austria; 3Department of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical and Environmental Sciences, University of Messina, Messina, Italy.

15:05 – 15:20 Saponins from saffron corms inhibit the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines at both protein and gene levelsSL A-03 Morris Keller1, Sarah Fankhauser2, Noreen Giezendanner2, Michelle König2, Franziska Keresztes1, Ombeline Danton1, Matthias Hamburger1, Veronika Butterweck2, Olivier Potterat1

1Division of Pharmaceutical Biology, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland; 2Institute for Pharma Technology, University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland, Muttenz, Switzerland

15:20 – 15:35 Therapeutic and analgesic effects of Ephedrine alkaloids-free Ephedra Herb extract on complete Freud’s adjuvant-induced arthritis model mouseSL A-04 Shunsuke Nakamori1,2, Naoki Miyajima1,2, Sumiko Hyuga2, Yoshie Minami1,2, Hiroka Kazama1,2, Miharu Hiyama1,2, Mari Endo2, Jinwei Yang3, Naohiro Oshima4, Nahoko Uchiyama5, Yoshiaki Amakura6, Masashi Hyuga5, Takashi Hakamatsuka5, Yukihiro Goda5,

Hiroshi Odaguchi2, Toshihiko Hanawa2, and Yoshinori Kobayashi1,2

1Department of Pharmacognosy, School of Pharmacy, Kitasato University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8641, Japan, 2Oriental Medicine Research Center of Kitasato University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8642, Japan, 3Tokiwa Phytochemical Co., Ltd., 158 Kinoko, Sakura-shi, Chiba, 285-0801, Japan, 4Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokyo University of Science, 2641 Yamazaki, Noda-shi, Chiba 278-8510, Japan, 5National Institute of Health Sciences, 3-25-26 Tonomachi, Kawa-saki-ku, Kawasaki-shi, Kanagawa 210-9501, Japan, 6Department of Pharmacognosy, College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Matsuyama University, 4-2 Bunkyo-cho, Matsuya-ma-shi, Ehime 790-8578, Japan

15:35 – 16:15 Coffee Break

11:00 – 11:40 Coffee Break

11:40 – 12:15 PLENARY LECTURE 1 Hall Tirol Chairs: Joel Boustie, Pascal Richomme

The NCI Program for Natural Product Discovery

PL-01 Christopher C. Thornburg1, John R. Britt1, Jason R. Evans1,2, Rhone K. Akee1, James A. Whitt1, Spencer K. Trinh1, Matthew J. Harris1, Jerell R. Thompson1, Teresa L. Ewing1, Suzanne M. Shipley1, Paul G. Grothaus3, David J. Newman3, Tanja Grkovic1, Barry R. O’Keefe3,4

1 Natural Products Support Group, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc., Frederick Na-tional Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, MD 21702, USA; 2 Data Manage-ment Services, Inc., Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Frederick, MD 21702,USA; 3 Natural Products Branch, Developmental Therapeutics Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD 21702, USA; 4 Molecular Targets Program, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD 21702, USA

12:15 – 14:00 Lunch Break | Presidential Lunch

14:00 – 14:35 PLENARY LECTURE 2 Hall Tirol Chairs: Joel Boustie, Pascal Richomme

Digitizing historical collections of natural products to further explore the monoterpene indole alkaloids chemical space

PL-02 Mehdi A. BeniddirBioCIS, Univ. Paris-Sud, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, 92290 Châtenay-Malabry, France.

14:35 - 15:35 PARALELL SESSIONS (SL A, WORKSHOP RA, SL B)

14:35 – 15:35 SHORT LECTURES A Hall Tirol Chairs: Juerg Gertsch, Barry O’Keefe

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products 14:35 – 14:50 Cannabis sativa L. extract reduces inflammatory markers in human fibroblasts and keratinocytesSL A-01 Enrico Sangiovanni1, Marco Fumagalli1, Barbara Pacchetti2, Stefano Piazza1, Andrea Magnavacca1, Saba Khalilpour1, Gloria Melzi1, Giulia Martinelli1, Mario Dell‘Agli1

1Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 2Linnea SA, Riazzino, Switzerland

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14:50 – 15:05 Quantum mechanical modeling of NIR spectra of thymolSL B-02 Justyna Grabska, Krzysztof B. Bec, Christian W. Huck

Institute of Analytical Chemistry and Radiochemistry, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 80-82, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria

15:05 – 15:20 Purification & Isolation of Compounds from Natural Products Using an SFE-SFC WorkflowSL B-03 Eric S.E. van Beelen, Jacquelyn Runco Waters Corporation, 34 Maple Street, Milford, USA

15:20 – 15:35 Vibrational spectroscopy and chemometric data analysis: The principle components of rapid quality control of herbal medicinesSL B-04 Ilze Vermaak1,2, Thandazile Mavimbela1, Sidonie Tankeu1, Marie Djokam1, Maxleene Sandasi1,2, Weiyang Chen1, Guy Kamatou1, Alvaro Viljoen1,2

1Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tshwane University of Technology, Private Bag X680, Pretora, 0001, South Africa 2SAMRC Herbal Drugs Research Unit, Tshwane University of Technology, Private Bag X680, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa

15:35 – 16:15 Coffee Break

16:15 -17:15 PARALLEL SESSIONS (SL C, SL D)

16:15 – 17:15 SHORT LECTURES C Hall Strassburg Chairs: Attila Hunyadi, Cica Vissiennon

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products 16:15 – 16:30 Root extracts from Ononis spinosa exert anti-inflammatory activity in vitro on IL-8 and TNF-α release by inhibition of TLR-4 receptorSL C-01 Verena Spiegler1, Barbara Michalak2, John Addotey3, Thorsten Saenger1, Joachim Jose1, Anna K. Kiss2, Andreas Hensel1

1University of Münster, PharmaCampus, Corrensstraße 48, D-48149 Münster, Germany 2Department of Pharmacognosy and Molecular Basis of Phytotherapy, Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland 3Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceu-tical Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana

14:35 – 17:15 WORKSHOP REGULATORY AFFAIRS Hall Brüssel Chair: Werner Knoess

Regulatory Affairs and new analytical methodology – status and future

The objective is to stimulate an extensive dialogue between science and regulation. At this year´s workshop participants will get insight into recent advances of analytical methodology and the impact and challenges with respect to regulation. The presentations will cover different aspects such as PCR-related techniques, hyphenated methods, chemometric approaches etc. Partici-pants shall learn and understand the different aspects and actively join the discussion about the following questions: What can regulators learn from science? What can scientists contribute to regulation? How can research support regulation? What is the current status of new methodology in regulation of herbal and traditional medicines? Which are the challenges of the future?

14:35 – 14:50 Welcome & introduction New analytical methodology and regulatory affairs Werner Knoess, University of Graz, Austria

14:50 – 15:15 DNA-testing: from Research to RegulationISL RA-01 Caroline Howard

De Montfort University, The Gateway, Leicester, U.K.

15:15 – 15:40 Hyphenated methods, Potentials and LimitationsISL RA-02 Stefan A. Schönbichler

Bionorica Research GmbH, Mitterweg 24, Innsbruck, Austria

15:40 - 16:15 Coffee Break

16:15 - 16:40 DNA-based Authentication: Incorrect Use and Exaggerated Expectations Damage a Valuable ApproachISL RA-03 Johannes Novak

Institute for Animal Nutrition and Functional Plant Compounds, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Veterinaerplatz 1, A-1210 Wien, Austria

16:40 - 17:15 Panel Discussion

14:35 – 15:35 SHORT LECTURES B Hall Strassburg Chairs: Krystyna Skalicka-Wozniak, Franz Bucar

Analytical methods for quality control of herbal medicinal products 14:35 – 14:50 The Use of Vibrational Spectroscopy in Medicinal Plant Analysis: Current and Future DirectionsSL B-01 Christian W. Huck1

, Krzysztof B. Bec1, Justyna Grabska1 1Institute of Analytical Chemistry and Radiochemistry, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 80-82, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria

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16:45 – 17:00 Constitution of a Lichen Metabolite Data Base through HRLC-MS/ MS analysis of 250 lichen compoundsSL D-03 Damien Olivier1,3, Marylène Chollet-Krugler¹, David Rondeau², Mehdi A Beniddir³, Solenn Ferron¹, Harrie Sipman⁴, Robert Lücking⁴, Pierre Le Pogam-Alluard*3, Joël Boustie*1

¹ Univ Rennes, CNRS, ISCR (Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes) - UMR 6226, F-35000 Rennes, France; ² Univ Rennes, CNRS, IETR (Institut d'Electronique et Télécommunications de Rennes)-UMR 6164, F-35000 Rennes, France ; ³ Univ Paris-Sud, CNRS, BioCis (Biomolécules : Conception Isolement et Synthèse)-UMR 8076, F-92290 Châtenay-Malabry, France; ⁴ Botanischer Garten und Botanisches Museum, Freie Universität Berlin, Königin-Luise-Strasse 6–8, D-14195 Berlin, Germany

17:00 – 17:15 Phytochemistry, quality control aspects and metabolomic approaches for the systematic investigation of Pistacia lentiscus L. var resinSL D-04 Maria Halabalaki

Division Pharmacognosy and Natural Products Chemistry, Department of Phar-macy, University of Athens, Panepistimioupoli Zografou, 15771 Athens, Greece.

19.00 CONGRESS EVENING AT SWAROVSKI KRISTALLWELTEN Departure at 18.15 from Congress Innsbruck

16:30 – 16:45 Sesquiterpene lactones from Siegesbeckia orientalis inhibit pro-in flammatory functions of human neutrophilsSL C-02 Nora S. Engels1, Birgit Waltenberger1, Barbara Michalak2, Fang-Rong Chang3, Anna K. Kiss2, and Hermann Stuppner1

1 Institute of Pharmacy/ Pharmacognosy and Center for Molecular Biosciences Innsbruck (CMBI), University of Innsbruck, Innrain 80-82, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria; 2 Department of Pharmacognosy and Molecular Basis of Phytotherapy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Medical University of Warsaw, Banacha 1, 02-097 Warsaw, Poland; 3 Department of Pharmacognosy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Kaohsiung Medical Uni-versity, 80708 Kaohsiung, Taiwan

16:45 – 17:00 Nutritional spices from Cameroon inhibit inflammatory markers from human gastric epithelial cellsSL C-03 Achille Parfait Atchan Nwakiban1, Enrico Sangiovanni2 , Stefano Piazza2, Marco Fumagalli2, Giangiacomo Beretta3, Gabriel Agbor Agbor4, Jules-Roger Kuiaté1, Mario Dell’Agli2

1 Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of science, University of Dschang, Came-roon; 2 Department of Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 3 Department of Environmental Science and Po-licy, University of Milan, Milan, Italy; 4 Institute of Medical Research and Medicinal Plants Studies (IMPM), Yaoundé, Cameroon

17:00 – 17:15 Plant-Endophyt Communication: Maytansine as an exampleSL C-04 Souvik Kusari, Michael Spiteller

Institute of Environmental Research (INFU), Department of Chemistry and Chemi-cal Biology, Chair of Environmental Chemistry and Analytical Chemistry, TU Dort-mund, Otto-Hahn-Str. 6, 44221 Dortmund, Germany

16:15 – 17:15 SHORT LECTURES D Hall Tirol Chairs: Oliver Kayser, Jean-Luc Wolfender

Metabolomics and molecular networking 16:15 – 16:30 Development of an innovative Molecular Networking-based approach for the discovery and targeted isolation of new bioactive metabolites from higher plantsSL D-01 Marc Litaudon, Florent Olivon, Simon Remy, David Touboul

Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles, ICSN - CNRS UPR 2301, Université Paris-Sud, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

16:30 – 16:45 Molecular networks and CPC fractionation for rapid screening of bioactive natural moleculesSL D-02 Souhila Messaili, Cyril Colas, Emilie Destandau

Institut de Chimie Organique et Analytique, Université d’Orléans-CNRS, UMR 7311 BP 6759, 45067 Orléans CEDEX 2, France.

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11:20 – 11:35 Eliciting Nature’s Activities (ELINA): A biochemometric approach to unravel complex bioactive mixturesSL E-02 Ulrike Grienke1, Paul Foster2,3, Julia Zwirchmayr1, Ammar Tahir1, Judith M. Rollinger1, Emmanuel Mikros1,4

1 Department of Pharmacognosy, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Althanstraße 14, 1090 Vienna, Austria; 2 Institute of Metabolism and Systems Re-search, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom; 3 Centre for Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Birmingham Health Partners, Bir-mingham, United Kingdom; 4 Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Athens, Panepistimiopolis Zografou, Athens, Greece

11:35 – 11:50 Quantification of diterpene acids in copaiba oleoresin by UHPLC- ELSD and heteronuclear two-dimensional qNMRSL E-03 Serhat Sezai Çiçek1, Anna Laís Pfeifer Barbosa1,2, Ulrich Girreser2

1 Institute of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biology, Kiel University, Gutenbergstraße 76, Kiel, Germany; 2 Institute of Pharmacy, Department of Phar-maceutical and Medicinal Chemistry, Kiel University, Gutenbergstraße 76, Kiel, Germany

11:05 – 11:50 SHORT LECTURES F Hall Brüssel Chairs: Veronika Butterweck, Maria Halabalaki

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products (mixed)

11:05 – 11:20 Rhodiola rosea Improves Lifespan, Locomotion, and Neurodegeneration in a Drosophila melanogaster Model of Huntington‘s DiseaseSL F-01 Jasmin G. J. Arabit, Rami Elha1, Samuel E. Schriner, Evgueni A. Sevrioukov, and Mahtab Jafari

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA

11:20 – 11:35 Regulations of ASIC 4,5-HTR and SERT in the esophageal mucosa under STW5 treatment support a corporate role in pain sensingSL F-02 Gudrun Ulrich-Merzenich1, Lisa Welslau1, Olaf Kelber2, Anastasiia Sherbakova1,3 , Christiane Esch4, Thore Thiesler4, Hans-Peter Fischer4, Glen Kristiansen4, Ahmed Meguid Kassem5, Heba Aziz-Kalbhenn2

1Medical Clinic III, University Hospital Bonn, University of Bonn, Venusberg Cam-pus 1, 53127 Bonn, Germany; 2 Scientific Department, Innovation and Develop-ment, Steigerwald Arzeneimittelwerk GmbH, Bayer Consumer Health, Havelstras-se 5, 64238 Darmstadt, Germany; ³ Department of Forestry, Volga State University of Technology, Lenin sqn 3, 424020 Yoshkar-Ola, Russia. 4 Institute of Pathology, UKB, Bonn University,Venusberg Campus 1, 53127 Bonn, Germany, 5Tropical Medi-cine Dept. and Gastrointestinal Endoscopy Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Kairo, Egypt

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2019

08:45 – 09:20 PLENARY LECTURE 3 Hall Tirol Chairs: Anna Rita Bilia, Judith Rollinger

Integrative analysis of bioactive compounds from frogs, plants and microorganisms from the Brazilian BiodiversityPL-03 Andres Brunetti1,2, Norberto Peporine Lopes1

1NPPNS, Department of Physic and Chemistry at FCFRP-USP. Av. Do Café s/n, Bairro Monte Alegre, CEP: 14903-040, Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil, 2 Labora-tory of Evolutionary Genetics, Institute of Subtropical Biology „Claudio Juan Bidau“ (CONICET-UNaM), Posadas, Misiones, Argentina.

09:20 – 09:55 PLENARY LECTURE 4 Hall Tirol Chairs: Anna Rita Bilia, Judith Rollinger

Will Perplexity Prevail over Complexity in Biomedical Natural Products Research?PL-04 Guido F. Pauli

Center for Natural Product Technologies (CENAPT), Program for Collaborative Research in the Pharmaceutical Sciences (PCRPS), and Institute for Tuberculosis Research (ITR), College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), Chica-go, IL, 60612, U.S.A.

09:55 – 10:30 BIONORICA AWARD Chairs: Michael A. Popp

10:30 – 11:05 Coffee Break

11:05 -11:50 PARALLEL SESSIONS (SL E, SL F, SL G)

11:05 – 11:50 SHORT LECTURES E Hall Tirol Chairs: Guido Pauli, Christoph Seger

Applied NMR SESSION

11:05 – 11:20 Computer-assisted fully automatic Structure Revision of Organic Natural Products based on their C13-NMR Data using the CSEARCH-ProtocolSL E-01 Wolfgang Robien

University of Vienna, Department for Organic Chemistry, Währinger Straße 38, Vienna, Austria

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12:00 – 14:00 Lunch Break

12:00 – 14:00 WORKSHOP Hall Büssel

Efficient visualisation and annotation of natural extract metabolite profiles with molecular networksWS1 Jean-Luc Wolfender, University of Geneva, Switzerland

14:00 – 14:35 PLENARY LECTURE 5 Hall Tirol Chairs: Michael Walkenhorst, Sami Khalid

The evolution of animal self-medication and lessons for the development of medicine and new medicinesPL-05 Michael Alan Huffman Kyoto University, Inuyama, Japan

14:35 – 15:10 PLENARY LECTURE 6 Hall Tirol Chairs: Michael Walkenhorst, Sami Khalid

Chemistry, Mode of Action and Clinical Efficacy of the Anticancer Diterpenoid Tigilanol Tigliate (EBC-46)PL-06 Giovanni Appendino1, Alberto Pagani1, Craig Williams2, Jason Cullen3, Glenn Boyle3, Peter Parson3, Justine Campbell4, Victoria Gordon4, Peter Schmidt4, Paul Reddell4

1Università del Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy, 2University of Queensland, Bris-bane, Australia, 3QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia, 4QBiotics Group Ltd, Yungaburra, Australia

15:10 – 15:35 KEYNOTE LECTURE 1 Hall Tirol Chairs: Michael Walkenhorst, Sami Khalid

Natural ingredients of skin lightening cosmeticsKL-01 Katarzyna Gaweł-Bęben Department of Cosmetology, The University of Information Technology and Management in Rzeszów, Sucharskiego 2, 35-225 Rzeszów, Poland

11:35 – 11:50 Benzoxazinoid phytochemicals, abundant in rye bread, are taken up in humans. Analytical method for plasma metabolites is highly neededSL F-03 Stine K Steffensen, Inge S Fomsgaard

Department of Agroecology, Forsøgsvej 1, 4200 Slagelse, Aarhus University, Denmark

11:05 – 11:50 SHORT LECTURES G Hall Strassburg Chairs: Nikolas Fokialakis, Stefania Marzocco

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products

11:05 – 11:20 Chemical profiles and pharmacological properties of two Anthemis species: Anthemis tinctoria var. pallida and A. cretica subsp. tenuiloba SL G-01 Giustino Orlando1*, Gokhan Zengin2*, Claudio Ferrante1, Lucia Recinella1, Annalisa Chiavaroli1, Sheila Leone1, Luigi Brunetti1, Luigi Menghini1

1Department of Pharmacy, University „G. d‘Annunzio“ of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti 66100, Italy; 2Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Selcuk University, Konya, Turkey

11:20 – 11:35 Potential anti-herpes and cytotoxic action of novel semisynthetic digitoxigenin-derivativesSL G-02 Laurita Boff1*, Jennifer Munkert2*, Flaviano Melo Ottoni3*, Naira Fernanda Zanchett Schneider1, Gabriela Silva Ramos3, Wolfgang Kreis2, Saulo Fernandes de Andrade4, José Dias de Souza Filho5, Fernão Castro Braga3, Ricardo José Alves3, Rodrigo Maia de Pádua3, Cláudia Maria Oliveira Simões1

1Laboratório de Virologia Aplicada, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Farmácia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Florianópolis, SC, 88040-970, Brazi, .2Friedrich-Alexander-Universität, Lehrstuhl für Pharmazeutische Biologie, Staudtstr. 5, D-91058, Erlangen, Germany, 3Departamento de Produtos Farmacêuticos, Faculdade de Farmácia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), Belo Horizonte, MG, 31270-901, Brazil, 4Departmento de Produção de Matéria-Prima, Faculdade de Farmácia, Universidade Federal de Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, RS, 90610-000, Brazil, 5Departmento de Química, Instituto de Ciências Exatas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), Belo Horizonte, MG, 31270-901, Brazil. *These authors contributed equally to this work.

11:35 – 11:50 Standardized herbal extracts of Japanese Kampo medicine and their effects on human and murine pancreatic cancer cellsSL G-03 Kenny Kuchta1, Kevin Weimer1, Lina Frank1, Hans Rausch2, Volker Ellenrieder1, Silke Cameron1

1 Clinic for Gastroenterology and Gastrointestinal Oncology, Göttingen University, Robert-Koch-Str. 40, 37075 Göttingen, Germany; 2 Phytochem Referenzsubstan-zen, Reuttier Str. 56, 89231 Neu-Ulm, Germany

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15:50 – 16:05 Evaluation of the traditional use of some Yemeni plants for the treatment of some livestock diseasesSL I-02 Rawiya Hassan Alasbahi¹, Maria Johanna Groot²

¹Department of Pharmacognosy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Aden University, Aden, Yemen; ²Wageningen Food Safety Research, Akkermaalsbos 2, 6708 WB Wagenin-gen, Netherlands

16:05 – 16:20 The effect of mixture of carvacrol, cinnamaldehyde and capsicum oleoresin on metabolic parameters in broiler chickensSL I-03 Brigita Hengl1, Mislav Đidara2, Marcela Speranda2

1 Croatian Agency for Agriculture and Food, Center for Food Safety, Ivana Gundulića 36b, Osijek, Croatia; 2 J.J. Strossmayer University Faculty of Agrobio-technical sciences Osijek, Vladimira Preloga 1, Osijek, Croatia

16:20 – 16:35 Parasites and plants –bioactive compounds with anti-parasitic effect from Cichorium intybusSL I-04 Angela Hørdum Valente¹, Bartholomeus Mattheus de Roode², Andrew Richard Williams¹, Henrik Toft Simonsen³, Stig Milan Thamsborg¹

¹ Section for Parasitology and Aquatic Diseases, Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenha-gen, Dyrlægevej 100, 1870 Frederiksberg C, Denmark; ² Sensus b.v., Borchwerf 3, 4704 RG Roosendaal, 4700 BH Roosendaal, The Netherlands; ³ Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark, Søltofts Plads, 2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark.

16:35 – 16:50 Beneficial properties and mechanistic study of the medicinal plant, Bidens pilosa, for host health, growth and gut microbiotaSL I-05 Tien-Fen Kuo, Yueh-Chen Wu, Greta Yang, Wen-Chin Yang

Agricultural Biotechnology Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

16:25 – 18:25 POSTER SESSION I Wine & Cheese

18:30 – 20:30 GA MEMBERS MEETING Kaiser Leopold Hall, University of Innsbruck

20:30 MEETING of the GA-networking group on Medicinal Plants and Natural Products in Animal Healthcare and Veterinary Medicine Gasthaus Goldenes Dachl, Hofgasse 1

15:35 - 16:20 PARALLEL SESSIONS (SL H, SL I)

15:35 – 16:20 SHORT LECTURES H Hall Tirol Chairs: Alexander Shikov, Sabine Glasl-Tazreiter

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products 15:35 – 15:50 Innovative strategies for chemo-diversification of natural products and discovery of potential new leadsSL H-01 Katia Gindro,1 Davide Righi,2 Robin Huber,2 Laurence Marcourt,2 Sylvain Schnee,1 Jean-Luc Wolfender2 and Emerson Ferreira Queiroz2

1 Agroscope, Plant Protection Research Division, Route de Duillier 50, P.O. Box 1012, 1260 Nyon, Switzerland. 2 Phytochimie et Produits Naturels Bioactifs, Section des Sciences Pharmaceuti-ques, Université de Genève, CH-1211 Genève 4, Switzerland

15:50 – 16:05 Mushrooms – An Unrevealed Source for Promising PhotopharmaceuticalsSL H-02 Bianka Siewert1, Fabian Hammerle1, Isabella Bingger2, Ursula Peintner3, Andrea Pannwitz4, Sylvestre Bonnet4, and Hermann Stuppner1

1Institute of Pharmacy/Pharmacognosy and Center for Molecular Biosciences Innsbruck (CMBI), University of Innsbruck, Innrain 80-82, Innsbruck, 6020 Austria;

2 Management Center Innsbruck, Maximilianstraße 2, Innsbruck, 6020 Austria; 3 Institute of Microbiology, University of Innsbruck, Technikerstraße 25d, Innsbruck, 6020 Austria; 4 Leiden Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, Einsteinweg 55, 2333 CC Leiden, The Netherlands

16:05 – 16:20 Xanthones from the mangosteen fruit (Garcinia mangostana) disrupt androgen receptor functionality in prostate cancerSL H-03 Mirielle Nauman1, 2, Bhaskar Vemu2, and Jeremy Johnson1, 2.

1Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy, Chicago, IL,USA; 2Department of Pharmacy Practi-ce, University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy, Chicago, IL, USA.

15:35 – 16:50 SHORT LECTURES I Hall Strassburg Chair: Marta Mendel

Veterinary Medicine

15:35 – 15:50 Regulatory Effects on Inflammatory Signaling by a Phytogenic Feed Additive assessed in vitro and in vivo including RNA-SequencingSL I-01 Bertrand Grenier, Silvia Fibi, Suzana Ilic, Theresa Schott, Elisabeth Mayer, Klaus Teichmann, Gerd Schatzmayr

BIOMIN Research Center, Technopark 1, 3430 Tulln, Austria

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14:00 – 14:35 PLENARY LECTURE 8 Hall Tirol Chairs: Alvaro Viljoen, Luc Pieters The Amaryllidaceae alkaloid narciclasine as modulator of endothelial activation processesPL-08 Robert Fuerst Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology, Faculty of Biochemistry, Chemistry and Pharmacy, Goethe University Frankfurt, Max-von-Laue-Str. 9, 60438 Frankfurt, Germany

14:35 – 15:00 KEYNOTE LECTURE 2 Hall Tirol Chairs: Alvaro Viljoen, Luc Pieters

Novel Noscapine Derivatives as Potent Anticancer and Antiprotozoal Agents

KL 02 Peyman Salehi1, Faezeh Nemati1, Kosar Babanezhad-Harikandei1, Nasim Hadian1, Morteza Bararjanian1, Ines Bruno2

1 Department of Phytochemistry, Medicinal Plants and Drugs Research Institute, Shahid Beheshti University, Evin, 1983963113 Tehran, Iran, [email protected], 2

Department of Pharmacy, University of Salerno, Via Giovanni Paolo II 132, 84084, Fisciano, Italy

15:00 - 16:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS (SL J, SL K, SL L)

15:00 – 16:00 SHORT LECTURES J Hall Tirol Chairs: Emerson Ferreira Queiroz, Alessandra Braca

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products 15:00 – 15:15 New weapons against bacterial adhesion, invasion, quorum sensing, cell damaging factors of pathogens: Natural products as new anti-virulence compoundsSL J-01 Andreas Hensel, Shabnam Sarshar, Maren Gottesmann, Melanie Deipenbrock, Verena Spiegler University of Münster, Corrensstraße 48, D-48161 Münster, Germany

15:15 – 15:30 Phytochemical and pharmaco-toxicological characterization on water hemp water extractsSL J-02 Claudio Ferrante, Giustino Orlando, Lucia Recinella, Annalisa Chiavaroli A, Sheila Leone, Luigi Brunetti, Luigi Menghini. Department of Pharmacy, University "G. d'Annunzio" of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti 66100, Italy.

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2019

08:45 – 09:20 PLENARY LECTURE 7 Hall Tirol Chair: Rudolf Bauer

GPCR-targeted Drug DiscoveryPL-07 Xin Xie Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China

09:20 – 09:50 2 YRW AWARDS Chair: Robert Fuerst

09:50 – 10:05 1 AFRICAN RESEARCH AWARD Chair: Robert Fuerst

10:05 – 10:20 WILLMAR SCHWABE RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP Chair: Robert Fuerst

10:20 – 12:20 POSTER SESSION II Coffee Break

12:20 – 14:00 Lunch

12:45 – 14:00 WORKSHOP 2 Hall Brüssel

Access and Benefit Sharing, Practical advice, Questions and answers David Bruno, Pierre Fabre Research Institute, Toulouse, France

Key steps and legal obligations to insure the legal certainty of the samples sourcing will be presented in a short introduction (cf. also Poster P-464). Then participants will exchange on ABS issues. Answers and tailored advice will be provided.

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15:45 – 16:00 Effect of an oil-free hydroethanolic pumpkin seed extract on symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasiaSL K-04 Martin Leibbrand1, Simone Siefer2, Christiane Schön2, Tania Perrinjaquet-Moccetti3, Albert Kompek4, Anca Csernich4, Franz Bucar5, Matthias Heinrich Kreuter3

1Medical Office of Dr. Martin Leibbrand, Landenbergerstraße 2, 73728 Esslin-gen, Germany; 2BioTeSys GmbH, Schelztorstraße 54, 73728 Esslingen, Germany; 3Frutarom Switzerland Ltd., Scientific Affairs BU Health, Rütistrasse 7, 8820 Wädenswil, Switzerland; 4Apomedica Pharmazeutische Produkte GmbH, Rosseg-gerkai 3, 8010 Graz, Austria; 5Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 4, 8010 Graz, Austria

15:00 – 16:00 SHORT LECTURES L Hall Strassburg Chairs: Leandros Skaltsounis, Nunziatina De Tommasi

Others 15:00 – 15:15 An imposter in the house? Best practices for prevention of adulteration in the U.S. botanicals and dietary supplements industrySL L-01 Kirsten Tripplett Traditional Medicinals, Inc. 4515 Ross Road, Sebastopol, CA, U.S.A. I

15:15 – 15:30 Development of Artemisia annua essential oil liposomes with antifungal activity against Candida speciesSL L-02 Laura Risaliti1, Gabriella Pini2, Rosa Donato3, Cristiana Sacco3, Roberta Ascrizzi4, Giulia Vanti1, Maria Camilla Bergonzi1, Anna Rita Bilia1.

1University of Florence, Department of Chemistry “Ugo Schiff”, Sesto Fiorentino, Florence, Italy, 2University of Florence, Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Florence, Italy, 3University of Florence, Department of Health Sciences, Florence, Italy, 4University of Pisa, Department of Pharmacy, Pisa, Italy

15:30 – 15:45 Does quercetin intake alter the concentration of pesticides in honey bees?SL L-03 Hamidreza Ardalani, Nanna Hjort Vidkjær, Per Kryger, Inge S. Fomsgaard

Department of Agroecology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Aarhus University, Denmark

15:45 – 16:00 The efficient isolation of secondary metabolites from Chilean native fruits by counter-current chromatographySL L-04 Felipe Jiménez-Aspee1, Daniel Mieres-Castro2, Jean Paul de Andrade2, Guillermo Schmeda-Hirschmann2

1 Departamento de Ciencias Básicas Biomédicas, Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de Talca, Campus Lircay, 3460000 Talca, Chile; 2 Instituto de Química de Recursos Naturales, Universidad de Talca, Campus Lircay, 3460000 Talca, Chile.

15:30 – 15:45 Plant-derived products as antibiotic enhancers and antibiotic- resistance modifying agentsSL J-03 Anca Miron1, Petruta Aelenei1, Adriana Trifan1, Cristina Mihaela Rimbu2, Cristina Elena Horhogea2, Simon Vlad Luca1, Anca-Narcisa Neagu3, Evelyn Wolfram4, Ana Clara Aprotosoaie1

1 Grigore T. Popa University of Medicine and Pharmacy Iasi, Universitatii Str. 16, 700115, Iasi, Romania; 2 Ion Ionescu de la Brad University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Iasi, Mihail Sadoveanu Al. 8, 700489, Iasi, Romania; 3 Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Carol I Bd., 700505A, Iasi, Romania; 4 Zürich University of Applied Sciences, Grüentalstrasse 14, 8820, Wädenswil, Switzerland

15:45 – 16:00 Nature-derived peptides: a growing niche for GPCR ligand discovery SL J-04 Christian W. Gruber Medical University of Vienna, Center for Physiology and Pharmacology, Schwarzspanierstr. 17, 1090 Vienna, Austria

15:00 – 16:00 SHORT LECTURES K Hall Brüssel Chairs: Anna Kiss, Verena Dirsch

Clinical Studies

15:00 – 15:15 Effect of the fixed combination of valerian, lemon balm, passionflower and butterbur extracts (Ze 185) on prescriptions of benzodiazepinesSL K-01 Martin E.Keck1, 2, Simon Nicolussi3, Kerstin Spura1, Cordula Blohm3,4, Catherine Zahner3, Juergen Drewe3

1 Clienia Private Clinic Schlössli, Schlösslistrasse 8, CH-8618 Oetwil am See, Swit-zerland, 2 Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Kraepelinstr. 2-10, D-80804 Munich, Germany, 3 Max Zeller Söhne AG, Seeblickstr. 4, CH-8590 Romanshorn, Switzer-land, 4 Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Research (SAKK), Effingerstr. 33, CH-3008 Bern, Switzerland

15:15 – 15:30 Add-on therapy with EPs 7630 in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease – An overview on clinical efficacy and safetySL K-02 Heinrich Matthys1, Fathi Abdul Malek2

1 Medical Director Emeritus, Department of Pneumology, University Hospital at Freiburg University, Freiburg, Germany; 2 Clinical Research Department, Dr. Will-mar Schwabe GmbH & Co. KG, Karlsruhe, Germany

15:30 – 15:45 Efficacy and tolerability of EPs® 7630 for children and adolescents with acute bronchitisSL K-03 Wolfgang Kamin1, Marília Grando Sória2

1 Clinic for Paediatrics, Evangelic Hospital Hamm, Werler Straße 130, 59063 Hamm, Germany; 2 Clinical Research Department, Dr. Willmar Schwabe GmbH & Co. KG, Willmar-Schwabe-Str. 4, 76227 Karlsruhe, Germany

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2019 SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM- WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2019

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EXCURSIONS AND POST CONGRESS ACTIVITIESTHURSDAY, SEP 5

Post Congress Excursion to Bozen/ITALY (Laimburg, Ötzi Museum)Ticket per Person: € 50,00

06:45 Departure in Innsbruck and coach to Laimburg Research Centre (Italy)

09:00 -09:45 Welcome and presentation of the Laimburg Research CentreDr. Michael Oberhuber, Director of the Laimburg Research CentreAula Magna

9:45-10:15 Presentation of the Research area Arable Crops and Aromatic PlantsDr. Manuel Pramsohler, Leader of the Group Arable Crops and Aromatic PlantsAula Magna

10:15-11:00 Presentation of the Institute for Plant HealthDr. Klaus Marschall, Head of the Institute for Plant HealthAula Magna, Institute for Plant Health

11:00-12:30 Guided tour of the Stone Cellar and wine tastingDott. mag. Günther Pertoll, Head of the Laimburg WineryLaimburg Winery

12:30-13:00 Departure to Bolzano to reach NOI Techpark (Bolzano South)13:00-14:00 Lunch at the NOIsteria (costs are not included)14:00-15:00 Guided tour of the NOI Techpark and of the Laboratory for

Flavours and MetabolitesDr. Peter Robatscher, Head of the Research area Food Chemistry

15:00-15:30 Departure to reach the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology15:30-16:30 Guided tour of the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology18:00 Coach to Innsbruck

16:00 – 16:30 Coffee Break

16:30 – 17:05 PLENARY LECTURE 9 Hall Tirol Chairs: Andreas Hensel

The application of classic and modern pharmacognosy in monographing African traditional medicines – a botanical traveloguePL-09 A.M. Viljoen, S. Combrinck, I. Vermaak, M. Sandasi

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and SAMRC Herbal Drugs Research Unit, Faculty of Science, Tshwane University of Technology, Private bag X680, Pretoria 0001, South Africa

17:05 – 17:40 PLENARY LECTURE 10 Hall Tirol Chairs: Andreas Hensel

Endocannabinoid signaling across species – evolution and perspectives for drug discoveryPL-10 Juerg Gertsch Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, NCCR TransCure, University of Bern, Bühlstrasse 28, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland

17:40 – 18:30 CLOSING CEREMONY

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM - WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2019 EXCURSIONS AND POST CONGRESS ACTIVITIES

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LIST OF POSTERSPOSTER SESSION 1: TUESDAY, SEP 3, 16:25 – 18:25P-001 – P-229; P-V-01 – P-V-24

Analytical methods for quality control of herbal medicinal products

P-001 A Validated UHPLC-CAD Method for Quantitative Determination of Astragaloside VII Mustafa Unver Kurt (Urla, İzmir, Turkey) et al.

P-002 Analysis of Herbofix® herbal infusions and comparative study with traditional infusions employing HPTLC, HPLC-DAD and UPLC-MS Aikaterini Argyropoulou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-003 Aquaphotomics study of a resurrection plant Haberlea rhodopensis Jelena Muncan (Kobe, Japan) et al.

P-004 Chemical profiling of Croton gratissimus Burch Guy Paulin Kamatou (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-006 Determination of perillaldehyde in perilla herbs based on relative molar sensitivity (RMS) using a combination of 1H-quantitative NMR and HPLC/UV

Nahoko Uchiyama (Kawasaki, Japan) et al.

P-007 Development of a fast and efficient separation method of secondary metabolites from Rhodiola rosea roots by High Performance Countercurrent Chromatography Julia Langeder (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-008 Development of an HPLC-MS/MS multi-method for the detection of sesquiterpene lactones and polyphenols occurring in Arnica plant materials Franziska Kolrep (Berlin, Germany) et al.

P-009 DNA barcoding analysis: Quality control of published DNA sequences Claire Lockie-Williams (United Kingdom) et al.

P-010 Effect of electromagnetic radiation on the phenolic content of mexican arnica (Heterotheca inuloides Cass.) Marcos Soto-Hernandez (Mexico, Mexico) et al.

P-011 High-performance liquid chromatography for analysis of corosolic acid in Lagerstroemia species and their hypoglycemic activities

Waraporn Putalun (Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand) et al.

P-012 Hypericum perforatum quality of raw material: coming full-circle Francesca Scotti (London, United Kingdom) et al.

P-013 Integrated approach for the extraction and quality assessment of fibre-type Cannabis sativa L. based on UPLC-PDA and HPTLC

Petros S. Tzimas (Athens, Greece) et al.

COSTUMED INNSBRUCK CITY TOURTicket per Person: € 30,00Start: 10:00 AM at Congress InnsbruckDuration: approx. 2 hours

Listen to interesting and charming stories about personal relationships and daily life in Court narrated by Emperor Maximilian I and his wives Mary of Burgundy and Maria Sforza.

Join us on a fascinating and entertaining travel through history. This tour is in combination with the Court-Church, where you find the tomb of Emperor Maximilian I. with 28 overlife sized bronze statues – members of his family, heroes of history – all standing around the Cenotaph. The VIPs from the 16th century!

1ST CHARITY WALK „UP THE MOUNTAINS“ (Birgitz, Adelshof - Birgitzer Alm - Birgitzköpflhaus - Nockspitze)Donation per Person: € 25,00

The foundation invites all of you for a spectacular charity walk – great mountains, great view, great plants in the wonderful nature near Innsbruck and a bit of physical activity after the scientific conference!

What happens: Early in the morning the bus takes us to the starting point (Adelshof). First stop is the Birgitzer Alm, located at 1808 m above sea level (about 1 to 2 h walk) – enjoy a typical Alm (high mountain meadow) and rest. For those still hungry for more, we go up further (about 1 hour) to the Birgitzköpflhaus (2098 m) – rest and enjoy the great panorama.For the very sportive participants we can try to get up to the top of Nockspitze (2403 m), an exhausting 1 hour hike. Take a breath-taking photo and enjoy nature and yourself.Walking back to the starting point (another 3 hours)

Only for good walkers, who have experience in mountain areas; good physical condition is a prerequisite.The foundation and organizers will take no liability for risks and losses during the event. We will try our best to get you a great and unforgettable day out.

And one more aspect: the charity hike can only start if the weather is fine. We will com-municate this the day before.

The Foundation’s Board:Prof. Dr. Rudolf Bauer (Graz, Austria); Prof. Dr. Michael Heinrich (London, U.K.); Prof. Dr. Andreas Hensel (Münster, Germany); Dr. Bernd Roether (Neumarkt, Germany)

LIST OF POSTERSEXCURSIONS AND POST CONGRESS ACTIVITIES

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P-027 Quantification of small quantities of a standardized Dry Grape Extract in complete feed using UHPLC-MS/MS Maxime Le Bot (Beaucouzé, France) et al.

P-028 Quantitative determination of fatty acid content in Sclerocarya birrea A.Rich.Hochst (Marula) seed oil using MIR calibration models Baatile Komane (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-029 Quantitative metabolomics of Iranian saffron based on their HPLC- DAD and MALDI-TOF-MS Hassan Rezadoost (Tehran, Iran) et al.

P-030 Simultaneous determination of three canthin-6-one alkaloids in different extracts of Eurycoma longifolia and Eurycoma harmandiana using HPLC-UV Jiranan Chaingam (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-031 Solvent-Free Microwave Extraction of Essential Oil of Cinnamomum species Horng-Huey Ko (Kaohsiung, Taiwan) et al.

P-032 The quality variation of Danshen – An interdisciplinary approach to studying herbal medicine Ka Yui Kum (London, United Kingdom) et al.

P-033 Using ion mobility 2D separation and specificity as a routine strategy to enhance profiling of complex medicinal plant extracts Janete Yariwake (Wimslow, United Kingdom) et al.

P-034 Validated HPLC-DAD method for resveratrol determination during identification in raw materials and stability, preformulation, permeability studies Judyta Cielecka-Piontek (Poznan, Poland) et al.

Biodiversity and chemical ecology

P-035 Age-related variation in polyphenol content and expression of phenylpropanoid biosynthetic genes in a medicinal and aromatic perennial Agastache rugosa Adam Matkowski (Wroclaw, Poland) et al.

P-037 Expression profile of three genes involved in terpene biosynthesis in Lavandula angustifolia cultivars Gabriela - Alina Ștefan (Iași, Romania) et al.

P-038 Genetic diversity and phytochemical characterisation of Sideritis scardica populations from Greece

Eirini Sarrou (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-014 Integrated NMR-based Profiling and HPLC-DAD Analysis for Extra Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO) Authentication Assessment

Stavros Beteinakis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-016 Mass detection for chromatographers: Benefits for the analysis of herbal medicines Eric S.E. Van Beelen (Milford, MA, United States) et al.

P-017 Matrix free laser desorption ionization as a versatile tool for the chemical characterization of complex mixtures of phenolic compounds

Andreas Schinkovitz (Beaucouzé, France) et al.

P-018 Metabolomics approach for discrimination of water extracts of Citrus-type crude drugs using NMR and HR-LC-MS Nahoko Uchiyama (Kawasaki, Japan) et al.

P-019 NIR spectroscopy in simulation – a new way for augmenting near-infrared phytoanalysis Krzysztof Bec (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-020 Online supercritical fluid extraction – supercritical fluid chromatography – diode-array detection: an interesting approach for investigation of milk thistle (Silybum marianum) preparations

Nora Gibitz-Eisath (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-021 Optimization of extraction condition for flavonoids in Genkwa Flos using response surface methodology

Geonha Park (Seoul, South Korea) et al.

P-022 Phytoanalytical Profiling of Cassia auriculata by LC-PDA-ESI-MS/MS and HPTLC supporting its metabolic claims

Aboli Girme (Anand, India) et al.

P-023 Qualitative and Quantitative LC-MS Analysis of Different Rhodiola rosea Rhizome Extracts Fabian Alperth (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-024 Quality of cranberry-derived products: one HPTLC method for identification and detection of adulterants Débora Frommenwiler (Muttenz, Switzerland) et al.

P-025 A plant used in Mexican traditional medicine improves colitis due to regulation of antioxidant mechanisms

Maria Margarita Canales-Martinez (Mexico City, Mexico) et al.

P-026 Quantification of Silimarin in Silibum Marianum with near-infrared spectroscopy: A comparison of benchtop vs. handheld devices Sophia Mayr (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

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P-051 Enhanced Carbazole Alkaloid and Antioxidant Capacity in Callus Culture of Medicinal Plant Clausena Harmandiana by Bacilius Subtilis Elicitor

Panitch Boonsnongcheep (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-052 Establishment of callus and cell suspension culture of Momordica charantia L. and their phytochemicals Benyakan Pongkitwitoon (Bangkok, Thailand) et al.

P-053 Genetic Features of Lycopene Content Associated with Flesh Color in Watermelon Geung-joo Lee (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-054 How light photoperiod and medium composition could increase the production of a potent anticancer metabolite by Nostoc Alexandros Polyzois (Paris, France) et al.

P-055 Novel dual-function type III polyketide synthase from Hypericum polyphyllum Christian Bunzel (Braunschweig, Germany) et al.

P-056 Polyketide-Related Biosynthesis of Plant Anthranoids Sara Nassar (Braunschweig, Germany) et al.

P-057 Production of depsides and other phenolic acids in agitated cultures of black and red aronias after feeding with caffeic acid

Halina Ekiert (Kraków, Poland) et al.

P-058 Production of phenolic acids in shoot cultures of black aronia (Aronia melanocarpa) cultivated in RITA bioreactors Halina Ekiert (Kraków, Poland) et al.

P-059 Regulation of histone 3 acetylation for increasing ginsenoside production in adventitious root cultures of Panax ginseng

Xuefeng Lu (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

P-060 RNAi mediated knock down of 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases in Digitalis lanata shoot cultures Tim Leykauf (Erlangen, Germany) et al.

P-061 Sodium nitroprusside triggers mitragynine biosynthesis in Kratom Juraithip Wungsintaweekul (Hat Yai, Thailand) et al.

P-062 Telomerase activators derived from Astragalus sapogenins via biotransformation with the recently discovered endophytic fungus Camarosporium laburnicola Melis Küçüksolak (Urla, Izmir, Turkey) et al.

P-063 Temporal and Spatial Characterization of 2-phenylethanol biosynthesis related gene in Persian musk rose (Rosa moschata Herrm.)

Akbar Karami (Shiraz, Iran) et al.

P-039 How plant shape their root associated microbiome to acquire resilience against the pathogen infection? what is the mechanism behind?

Kourosh Hooshmand (Slagelse, Denmark) et al.

P-040 Induction of secondary metabolism of marine derived Streptomyces cacaoi Emre Gezer (Urla, Izmir, Turkey) et al.

P-041 Optimization of growth media for leafcutter ant associated antimicrobial producing bacteria using cuticular hydrocarbons

Johannes-Paul Fladerer (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-042 Orchids and their mycorrhizal fungi: An insufficiently explored relationship Quentin Favre-Godal (Saint Jean De Braye, France) et al.

P-043 Production of Kojic Acid by Endophytic Fungi from Medicinal Plants Growing in Timor Antonius R B Ola (Kupang, Indonesia) et al.

P-044 Rediscovering Traditional Vegetables to Enhance Food and Environmental Sustainability of Sub-Saharan Agriculture

Lorenzo Guzzetti (Milan, Italy) et al.

P-045 Variation in the composition and antioxidant activity of Vaccinium myrtillus populations collected in Croatia and Montenegro

Jasna Jablan (Zagreb, Croatia) et al.

Biosynthesis and biotechnology of natural products

P-046 Assembly of a fungal macrocyclic polylactone is catalyzed by two iterative polyketide synthases

Waraporn Bunnak (Bangkok, Thailand) et al.

P-047 BAHD-like malonyltransferase genes from Digitalis lanata and Arabidopsis thaliana and their putative role in cardenolide biosynthesis

Marina Tropper (Erlangen, Germany) et al.

P-048 Biotransformations with the enzymatic secretome of Botrytis cinerea combined with organic solvents for the generation of novel complex stilbene derivatives Robin Huber (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-049 De novo transcriptomic analysis and establishment of cell suspension culture system to improve saponin production in Oplopanax elatus Tae Kyung Hyun (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

P-050 Effect of illumination on growth and phytochemical profile of Salvia yangii grown in vitro

Weronika Kozłowska (Wroclaw, Poland) et al.

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Identification and authentication of plant material

P-077 Application of Matrix Solid-Phase Dispersion for HPLC analysis of polyphenol profile in 50-years old herbarium specimens of Polygonum aviculare Adam Matkowski (Wroclaw, Poland) et al.

P-078 Authenticity assessment and detection of adulteration in Bulgarian rose (Rosa damascena Mill.) essential oils

Sonja Schrack-Belschner (Bad Boll, Germany) et al.

P-079 Comparison of oil cakes from Camellia oleifera and Camellia sinensis by LC-DAD-MSn and LC-ESLD Maxime Le Bot (Beaucouzé, France) et al.

P-080 Composition of rose (Rosa damascena Mill.) essential oils from various geographic origins Sonja Schrack-Belschner (Bad Boll, Germany) et al.

P-081 HPTLC identity testing for Rhamni purshianae cortex and isolation of Cascarosides B, C and D as reference compounds Evelyn Wolfram (Wädenswil, Switzerland) et al.

P-082 Identification and Quantification of Polymethoxylated Flavonoids in Different Citrus Species Using UPLC-QTOF-MS/MS And HPLC-DAD

Maxime Brits (Wilrijk, Belgium) et al.

P-083 Identification of radical scavenging ability and active ingredient of the hot water extract of Forsythia viridissima

Hyeong Ryeol Lee (Cheongju-si, South Korea) et al.

P-084 Identification of some Gnetum spp. (Gnetaceae) in Southern Vietnamese by DNA barcode

Hung Tran (Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam) et al.

P-085 LC-TOF-MS-based Metabolomic Fingerprinting of Rumex species Stefan Loos (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-064 Tissue cultures of Gypsophila elegans as means for production of pharmacologically active triterpenoids Sylwia Zielinska (Wrocław, Poland) et al.

P-065 Use of Botrytis cinerea enzymatic secretome to generate original phenylpropanoids derivatives having Wnt inhibition on triple negative breast cancer cells Laurence Marcourt (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-066 Variation of phenolic compounds and expression of phenylpropanoid biosynthetic genes in two medicinal and aromatic species of Salvia subg. Perovskia Weronika Kozłowska (Wrocław, Poland) et al.

Herbal drug formulations

P-067 Assessing the role of the gut microbiome for the mode of action of the fixed herbal combination STW-5

Timo Thumann (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-068 Development of escin-based nanovesicles loaded with berberine chloride and percutaneous permeation study

Giulia Vanti (Florence, Italy) et al.

P-069 Development of lipid-based nanocarriers for increasing gastro-intestinal absorption of lupinifolin extracted from Albizia myriophylla Benth

Nuannoi Chudapongse (Muang, Thailand) et al.

P-071 Formulation of herbal cosmetic lotions with essential oil content Enkelejda Goci (Tirana, Albania) et al.

P-072 Liposomal incorporation of Thymus essential oils and in vitro antibacterial activity

Marija Kindl (Zagreb, Croatia) et al.

P-073 Melissa officinalis essential oil loaded glycerosomes: preparation and in vitro activity evaluation against herpes labialis (HSV-1)

Giulia Vanti (Florence, Italy) et al.

P-074 Novel nanocarriers for the bioactive natural products alkannins for topical use

Andreana N. Assimopoulou (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-075 Preparation, characterization and in vitro evaluation of novel silymarin-loaded nanomicelles

Anna Rita Bilia (Florence, Italy) et al.

P-076 Study of disturbed metabolism correction in tumor cells treated by combination of iron oxide nanoparticles and Limonium extract Aizhan Zhussupova (Almaty, Kazakhstan) et al.

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P-098 Gas chromatography-based metabolomics in the identification of potential anti-quorum sensing compounds in commercial essential oils

Maxleene Sandasi (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-099 Identification of Antifungal Quinolizidines Using GC/MS-Based Metabolomics Ericsson Coy-Barrera (Cajicá, Colombia) et al.

P-100 Integrated UPLC-HRMS based metabolomics investigating hydroxytyrosol effect in human obesity

Theodora Nikou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-101 Integrating UPLC-MS/MS-based Molecular Networking and NMR structural determination for the untargeted phytochemical characterization of the fruit of Crescentia cujete (Bignoniaceae)

Andrés Rivera-Mondragón (Antwerp, Belgium) et al.

P-102 Investigation of Greek Honeys using HR-NMR and LC-HRMS metabolomics, for determination of their geographical, botanical origin and authenticity

Gabriela Belén Lemus Ringele (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-103 Investigation of the phytochemical profiles of Boronella spp (Rutaceae) using molecular networking

Marina Kritsanida (Paris, France) et al.

P-104 LC-MS/MS and molecular networking: A complementary approach for chemical composition evaluation of plant extracts -Case study with Orchida-ceae species Quentin Favre-Godal (Saint Jean De Braye, France) et al.

P-106 Metabolic profile elucidation after in vitro biotransformation of Herniaria hirsuta by an innovative data analysis strategy for dynamic multiclass experiments

Laura Peeters (Antwerp, Belgium) et al.

P-107 Metabolomic profiling and in vivo toxicityof essential oils as promising hits and affordable bioactive agents against Madurella mycetomatis

Shereen Abd Algaffar (Omdurman, Sudan) et al.

P-108 Metabolomics, genetics and epigenetics analysis of European yew for the selection of antineoplastic taxol/taxane producing plant material in Greece.

Filippos Aravanopoulos (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-109 Multi-informative bioactivity-based molecular networking of a large chemodiverse plant collection allows efficient identification of trypanocidal Natural Products Arnaud Gaudry (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-110 NMR metabolic profiling of Greek Pistacia lentiscus leaves and fruit extracts for the identification of biomarkers with skin beneficial effects.

Dr. Antigoni Cheilari (Athens, Greece) et al.

Metabolomics and molecular networking

P-087 13C-NMR dereplication of medicinal plant extracts using a home-made software Antoine Bruguière (Angers, France) et al.

P-088 A High-Throughput Multivariate Statistics Platform For The Discovery Of Tyrosinase Inhibitors

Argyro Vontzalidou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-089 A holistic UPLC-HRMS-based approach exploring the phytochemistry, bioactivity and metabolome impact of Cichorium spinosum’ s decoction in Drosophila melanogaster

Eleni Vaskani Mikropoulou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-090 Comprehensive Chemotaxonomy: Mining Data from Tandem Mass Spectrometry of Lichens Simon Ollivier (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-091 Comprehensive study of foliar endophyte communities in a Rainforest palm: a model for deciphering host-microbe interactions and exploring metabolite

chemo-diversity Leonie Pellissier (Geneve, Switzerland) et al.

P-092 Constitution of a Lichen Metabolite Data Base through HRLC-MS/MS analysis of 250 lichen compounds Damien Olivier (Rennes, France) et al.

P-093 Cutting-edge analytical technologies for the comprehensive metabolic profiling of Alkanna tinctoria roots cultured in greenhouse conditions Nebojša Rodić (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-094 Direct Injection-Electron Ionization-Mass Spectrometry and NMR Metabolomics Method for Analyzing Rhubarb Species That Inhibit Adult T-cell Leukemia Proliferation Hisahiro Kai (Nobeoka, Japan) et al.

P-095 Efficient isolation of new bioactive metabolites from the marine endophytic fungi Fusarium solani Abdulelah Alfattani (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-096 Expression of the genes involved in alkaloids biosynthetic pathway in Papaver orientale L. suspension culture Mohammad Reza Naghavi (Karaj, Iran) et al.

P-097 Feature-Based Molecular Networking and Network Annotation Propagation applied to natural antiviral compound research from tropical Euphorbiaceae

Simon Remy (Gif-sur-Yvette, France) et al.

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P-124 Phytochemical investigation and extended LC-HRMS & HRMS/MS characterization of secondary metabolites from roots, leaves and fruits of Mandragora autumnalis (Solanaceae) Maria Eleni Sakavitsi (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-125 Antidiabetic constituents from the aerial parts of Tiliacora triandra Opeyemi Olatunji (Hat Yai, Thailand) et al.

P-126 Anti-inflammatory compounds from Xylaria sp SWUF09-62 fungus Sirirath McCloskey (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-129 Antioxidant activity and phenolic composition of costmary (Chrysanthemum balsamita L.) flower Erzsébet Varga (Tirgu Mures, Romania) et al.

P-130 Antioxidant and Antibacterial Activities of Selected Thai Medicinal Plant-Derived Galactogogue Extracts Prapairat Seephonkai (Maha Sarakham, Thailand) et al.

P-131 Antiproliferative property of sea fan extracts against colon (HCT116) and lung (A549) cancer cell lines Chona Gelani (Iligan City, Philippines) et al.

P-132 Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi as tool in pharmaceutical and cosmeceutical industry for the enhanced production of secondary metabolites of Anchusa officinalis

Evangelia Tsiokanos (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-133 Bioactive diterpenoids from South African Thymelaceae and Euphorbiaceae Fanie R Van Heerden (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa) et al.

P-134 Bioactive polyketides from a marine green alga-derived fungus Aspergillus sp. NTU967 Tzong-Huei Lee (Taipei, Taiwan) et al.

P-135 Bio-guided fractionation of prenylated benzaldehyde derivatives as potent antimicrobial and antibiofilm from Ammi majus L. fruits-associated Aspergillus amstelodami Osama Salama (Cairo, Egypt) et al.

P-136 Bio-guided phytochemical study of Plectranthus mutabilis Codd. Vera Isca (Lisboa, Portugal) et al.

P-137 Bjerkandera adusta as a source of benzoic acid derivatives targeting 26S proteasome and cathepsins B & L

Katerina Georgousaki (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-138 Camoreoside A-I, novel triterpene saponins, from the seeds of Camellia japonica

Jaeyoung Ko (Yongin-si, South Korea) et al.

P-111 Plant Extracellular Vesicle Lipids and Secondary Metabolites Eric Woith (Berlin, Germany) et al.

P-112 Polyphenol composition of disease-resistant grapevine hybrids Verena Gratl (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-113 Strategy for exhaustive plant metabolomes characterization from a qualitative and quantitative perspective Adriano Rutz (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-115 Targeted isolation of selaginellin derivatives using molecular networking strategy enhanced by in silico annotation

Sunmin Woo (Seoul, Korea) et al.

P-116 Targeted LC-MS/MS analysis for the quantification of taxanes: Assessment of chemodiversity in different European yew (Taxus baccata) populations from Greece

Filippos Aravanopoulos (Foinikas Kalamaria, Greece) et al.

P-117 Taxonomically informed metabolite annotation and data organization in natural products research

Pierre-Marie Allard (Geneva, Schweiz) et al.

Natural products chemistry

P-118 6-Metoxyflavonols from the aerial parts of Tetragonia tetragonioides (Pall.) Kuntze and their potential as anti-inflammatory agents

Yeong-Geun Lee (Yongin, South Korea) et al.

P-119 A triterpene glycoside from the black sea cucumber Holothuria atra Yunita Eka Puspitasari (Antwerp, Belgium) et al.

P-120 Absolute configuration of sesquiterpene lactones with potent immunosuppressant activity Jakob K. Reinhardt (Basel, Switzerland) et al.

P-121 An epigenetic modifier induces the production of new metabolites by Aspergillus terreus AST0006 Marcelo Rodrigues de Amorim (Tucson, United States) et al.

P-122 Analytical tools for students to study anthocyanins and carotenoids from autumn leaves

Marianna Manninen (Turku, Finland) et al.

P-123 Antibacterial abietane-type diterpenoids from Plectranthus africanus Ducret Awouafack M (Dschang, Cameroon) et al.

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P-153 Cowpea Weevil Larvae Inhibit Cowpea Seed Germination: Search for Feeding Inhibitors and Seed Germination Enhancers from Cassia tora Seeds Valentine Chi Mbatchou (Navrongo, Ghana) et al.

P-155 Discovery of novel skin-whitening agents produced by endophytic fungi associated with desert plants. The case of Comoclathris spp.

Katerina Georgousaki (Granada, Spain) et al.

P-156 Effect of different culture media on secondary metabolite production of Xylaria sp. SWUF08-81

Kittiwan Sresuksai (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-157 Effects of Cinnamomum cassia Stem Bark Aqueous Extract and Vitamin K on Hemostasis using Plantain Stem and Snail Bluish Liquids Valentine Chi Mbatchou (Navrongo, Ghana) et al.

P-158 Essential oil composition of roots, aerial parts and fruits of Ferulago pauciradiata Boiss. & Heldr Ceyda Sibel Kılıç (Ankara, Turkey) et al.

P-159 Protective effects of ethanol extract of a Mexican propolis on indomethacin-induced gastric mucosal damage in mice Marco Aurelio Rodriguez-Monroy (Tlalnepantla, Mexico) et al.

P-160 Exploitation of Streptomyces lopnurensis from the marine environment for the discovery of novel skin whitening agents Nikolaos Tsafantakis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-161 Extraction of active compounds of Sedum roseum by natural deep eutectic solvent Vera Kosman (Kuzmolovo, Leningrad Region, Russian Federation) et al.

P-162 Flavonoids and oxepinones from the leaves and twigs of Desmos cochinchinensis and their α-glucosidase inhibitory activities Pornphimon Meesakul (Meuang, Thailand) et al.

P-163 Flavonol arabinofuranosides from the methanolic extract of Hypericum jovis Greuter Maria-Eleni Grafakou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-164 Four new benzoyltyramines from the peels of Atalantia monophylla and their cytotoxicity Aonnicha Sombatsri (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-165 HPLC-UV/MS phytochemical characterization of the ethanolic tincture of Cardiospermum halicacabum Evangelia Bampali (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-166 Identification of new labdane diterpenoids from the aerial parts of Otostegia persica utilizing NMR and circular dichroism calculations Mostafa Alilou (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-139 Chalcone dimers from the twigs of Pistacis chinensis Takaaki Yamaguchi (Gifu, Japan) et al.

P-140 Characterization of chemical constituents from Fissistigma polyanthoides stems Hieu Nguyen Ngoc (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-141 Chemical compositions from Biscogniauxia sp. PK15-040 fungus Audomsak Churat (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-142 Chemical constituents and cytotoxic activity from Xylaria spp. fungi Pakin Noppawan (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-143 Chemical constituents and their anti-inflammatory activity from the fungus, Diaporthe phaseolorum var. caulivora

Shuen Shin Yang (Kaohsiung, Taiwan) et al.

P-144 Chemical Constituents, Molecular Docking, and Acetylcholinestrase Inhibitory Activity of Macaranga gigantea Norizan Ahmat (Shah Alam, Malaysia) et al.

P-145 Chemical profiling of mycosporine-like amino acids in Bostrychia spp. and novel sulphated and brominated compounds from Bostrychia calliptera

(Ceramiales, Rhodophyta) Maria Orfanoudaki (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-146 Chemical Profiling, Biostatic and Biocidal Dynamics of Origanum vulgare L. Essential Oil Sahar Fikry (Alexandria, Egypt) et al.

P-147 Chilean “chaura” berries (Gaultheria phillyreifolia and G. poeppigii): isolation of secondary metabolites and antioxidant activity Daniel Mieres Castro (Talca, Chile) et al.

P-148 Combined HPLC-PDA-MS and NMR study of Matricaria pubescens extracts from Algeria Anastasia Karioti (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-149 Comparative phytochemical study of various extracts from Limonium gmelinii Aizhan Zhussupova (Almaty, Kazakhstan) et al.

P-150 Comparative study of biological activities and chemical constitution of Agaricus subrufescens and Pleurotus ostreatus mushrooms Maria Luiza Zeraik (Londrina, Brazil) et al.

P-151 Composition of the essential oil of Tagetes tenuifolia Cav. and Tagetes filifolia Lag. from Guatemala Juan Francisco Perez-Sabino (Guatemala, Guatemala) et al.

P-152 Corylus avellana as source of antioxidant diarylheptanoids Sonia Piacente (Fisciano (Salerno), Italy) et al.

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P-180 Isolation, purification and identification of 20 – hydroxymaytenin as a bioactive metabolite from Maytenus heterophylla liquid cell culture Thanet Pitakbut (Dortmund, Germany) et al.

P-181 Isolation, Structure Elucidation, and Absolute Configuration of Germacrane Isomers from Carpesium divaricatum Zhong-mei Zou (Beijing, China) et al.

P-182 LC/MS of the soft coral Sarcophyton ehrenbergi and its isolated associated endophytic fungi: Aspergillus oryzae and Aspergillus flavus Yasmin Elkhawas (Cairo, Egypt) et al.

P-183 LC-MS and NMR guided isolation of monoterpene dimers from cultivated Thymus vulgaris Varico 3 hybrid and their antityrosinase activity Anastasia Karioti (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-184 LC-MS guided the efficient isolation of afzelin and quercitrin from herbal plants Thanh-Hoa Vo (Taipei, Taiwan) et al.

P-185 LC-MS/MS analysis and biological activities of the fruits of Genipa americana, Eugenia pyriformis and Araucaria angustifolia from Brazil Maria Luiza Zeraik (Londrina, Brazil) et al.

P-186 Metabolite profiles of green, green/red, and red pigmented leaves of Lactuca sativa L. cultivars harvested at mature and bolting stages Ju-Hee Rhee (Jeonju-si, South Korea) et al.

P-187 Millexatins A-M, antibacterial flavonoids from Millettia extensa Surat Laphookhieo (Chiang Rai, Thailand) et al.

P-188 Modern liquid-liquid techniques turn EVOO to a pool of new natural products and provide gram-scale isolation of high importance bio-phenols Apostolis Angelis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-189 Modification of Oligomeric and Polymeric Proanthocyanidins via Oxidation in Alkaline Conditions Iqbal Bin Imran (Turku, Finland) et al.

P-190 Molecular docking as a tool to design new royleanone derivatives for colon cancer therapy based on PKC-δ modulation Vera Isca (Lisboa, Portugal) et al.

P-191 Monomeric And Oligomeric Pigments In Red Wines: Contribution To Color And Differences In Compositions Between Wine Varieties And Vintages

Juuso Laitila (Turku, Finland) et al.

P-192 Naphthoquinones isolated from Fusarium solani, an endophytic fungi of Cola nitida Nkeoma Okoye (Umunze, Nigeria) et al.

P-167 Immunosuppressant Flavonoids from Scutellaria baicalensis Nova Syafni (Basel, Switzerland) et al.

P-168 Immunosuppressive compounds from Chlamydomonas sp. KSF108 Byungsun Min (Gyeongsan-si, South Korea) et al.

P-169 In vivo anthelmintic activity evaluation of licarin A, a neolignan isolated from leaves of Nectandra oppositifolia (Lauraceae) Geanne Conserva (Santo André, Brazil) et al.

P-170 Ingol and ent-Atisane Diterpenes from the Aerial Parts of Euphorbia deightonii Dóra Rédei (Szeged, Hungary) et al.

P-171 Investigation of Anti-protozoal Activities and Metabolite Profiling of Helichrysum Species Based on Traditional Use Maryam Akaberi (Mashhad, Iran) et al.

P-172 Investigation of the marine microorganism Cladosporium halotolerans for the isolation and identification of bioactive metabolites with potential anti-aging activity

Nikolaos Tsafantakis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-173 Investigations of The Pharmacological Properties of Carvotacetones Isolated from Sphaeranthus africanus Huyen Tran (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-174 Iridiod glucosides from Ceratotheca sesamoides: A Neglected Vegetable, exert Monoamine A & B Inhibitory, Antioxidant with Structure Activity Relationship (SAR)

Oluwasesan M. Bello (Dutsin-Ma, Nigeria) et al.

P-175 Isolation and characterization of bromophenolic compounds in the red alga Vertebrata lanosa Stefanie Hofer (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-176 Isolation and identification of Wnt inhibition-specific metabolites from an Amazonian palm tree endophyte Lasiodiplodia venezuelensis

Leonie Pellissier (Geneve, Switzerland) et al.

P-177 Isolation and Structure Elucidation of several Tri- and Sesquiterpenes from Commiphora myrrha (NEES) ENGL. Katrin Kuck (Regensburg, Germany) et al.

P-178 Isolation of Tetramer Stilbenoids from Shorea leprosula Miq., Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitory Activity and Molecular Docking Study Aisyah Salihah Kamarozaman (Dengkil, Malaysia) et al.

P-179 Isolation of Three Flavonoids and a Phenolic Compound from Macaranga hypoleuca (Rchb.F. & Zoll.) Müll. Arg. Norizan Ahmat (Shah Alam, Malaysia) et al.

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P-207 Phytochemical and biological investigations on potentially antimicrobial and anticancer Guinean plant species Mamadou Aliou Balde (Antwerp, Belgium) et al.

P-210 Phytochemical investigation of Cyperus malaccensis subsp. monophyllus Mayu Hibi (Gifu, Japan) et al.

P-211 Phytochemical investigation of the fruits of Paliurus spina-christi Mill. Dennis Abatis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-213 Prioritization of high-value natural products from a large chemo-diverse plant extracts collection: a focus on structural novelty

Luis Quiros-Guerrero (Geneva, Switzerland) et al.

P-214 Protein precipitation activity of refined proanthocyanidin fractions Milla Leppä (Turku, Finland) et al.

P-215 Qualitative and quantitative determination of flavonoids in different organs of Atriplex nitens Schkuhr and evaluation of anti-hyaluronidase activity

Adam Mynarski (Cracow, Poland) et al.

P-216 Quantitative determination of phenolics compounds in Origanum vulgare extract by high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem

mass spectrometric detection Edlira Neza (Tirana, Albania) et al.

P-217 Rapid and effective recovery of Oleanolic and Maslinic acid from olive products using Centrifugal Partition Extraction Lemonia Antoniadi (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-218 Rearranged Clerodanes from the Stems of Tinospora baenzigeri Khanitha Pudhom (Bangkok, Thailand) et al.

P-219 Roxydienone, a Novel Cyclohexenone from Trachyspermum roxburghianum Awat Wisetsai (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-220 Secondary metabolites and their anti-inflammatory activity from the root of Machilus zuihoensis Hsun-Shuo Chang (Kaohsiung, Taiwan) et al.

P-222 Terpenoids from the whole plant of Vaccinium emarginatum Hayata and their anti-inflammatory activity

Yueh-hsiung Kuo (Taichung, Taiwan) et al.

P-223 The alkamide constituents of Zanthoxylum rhetsa (Roxb.) DC. fruits Dieu Nguyen (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-224 The Antioxidant Activity of Caesalpinia sappan heartwood extracted with Different Ethanol Concentrations

Supranee Kongkham (Pathumthani, Thailand) et al.

P-193 Natural deep eutectic solvents: an eco-friendly alternative for the extraction of naphthoquinones from Alkanna tinctoria roots Elodie Bossard (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-194 New amide, chalcone, and flavonoid derivatives from the leaf and fruit extracts of Melodorum siamensis Wuttichai Jaidee (Chiang Rai, Thailand) et al.

P-195 New flavonoids from the flowers of Coreopsis lanceolata and their pharmacological activities Hyoung-geun Kim (Yongin, South Korea) et al.

P-196 New isocoumarins and flavonoids from Citrus grandis Osbeck fruits and their antidiabetic activities

Hyoung-geun Kim (Yongin, South Korea) et al.

P-197 New sesquiterpenoids from an endophytic fungus Paraconiothyrium brasiliense ECN258 Ken-Ichi Nakashima (Nagoya, Japan) et al.

P-198 Norisoprenoids from Asystasia gangetica (L) T. Anderson var. micrantha (Acanthaceae) Aisyah Salihah Kamarozaman (Dengkil, Malaysia) et al.

P-199 Oleoside type secoiridoids from the flowers of Syringa dilatata and their potential as anti-inflammatory agents Yeong-Geun Lee (Yongin, South Korea) et al.

P-200 Oxidised juncuenin B analogues with increased antiproliferative activity on human adherent cell lines: semisynthesis and biological evalua-tion Csaba Bús (Szeged, Hungary) et al.

P-201 PEGASUS: An analytical chemometrics platform for the discovery of bioactive natural compounds Nektarios Aligiannis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-202 Pharmacokinetic investigation of hydrogenated natural curcumin metabolites Attila Hunyadi (Szeged, Hungary) et al.

P-203 Pharmacokinetics of epicatechin and ɣ-valerolactone in rat plasma and tissues after oral treatment with the Crataegus special extract WS® 1442

Susanne Vogel (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-204 Phenolic constituents isolated from the flower of Carex kobomugi Naohito Abe (Gifu, Japan) et al.

P-205 Phenolic content and antioxidant potential evaluation of unexploited byproducts from Vitis vinifera L. Arianna Marengo (Torino, Italy) et al.

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P-V-08 Evaluation of the traditional use of some Yemeni plants for the treatment of some livestock diseases

Maria Groot (Wageningen, Netherlands) et al.

P-V-09 Novel Herbal Veterinary Narcotics for Aquacultures of Clarias gariepinus Kenny Kuchta (Göttingen, Germany) et al.

P-V-10 Can plants with good anthelmintic activity against free-living and animal parasitic nematodes be effective against plant parasitic nematodes?

Fikile Makhubu (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-V-11 Effects of phytogenic feed additives on mortality and growth performance of weaned piglets

Andreas S. Müller (Steyregg, Österreich) et al.

P-V-12 Effects of a phytogenic feed additive in growing-finishing pigs Barbara Novak (Tulln, Austria) et al.

P-V-13 The in vitro antibacterial activity and safety of Morinda lucida leaf extracts against Salmonella serovars relevant in livestock infections

Olasunkanmi Stephen Olawuwo (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-V-14 Use of garlic in parasite management: results of in vitro examinations Leopold Podstatzky (Thalheim/Wels, Austria) et al.

P-V-15 Use of grapefruit seed extract in parasite management: first results of in vitro examinations

Leopold Podstatzky (Thalheim/Wels, Austria) et al.

P-V-16 In vitro study of the Plumbago indica root extract on Fasciola gigantica Naruwan Saowakon (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-V-17 The anthelmintic effects of Artocarpus lakoocha stem extract on Fasciola gigantica

Naruwan Saowakon (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-V-18 Effects of a standardized natural yeast-thiamine-complex in 34 dogs with tick infestation

Enrico Schramm (Rastatt, Germany) et al.

P-V-19 Standardization of an in vitro spectrophotometric method for the evaluation of the ammonia-binding properties of plant extracts rich in saponins

Sorphon Suor-Cherer (Beaucouze, France) et al.

P-V-20 Polyphenolics from Romanian native medicinal plants and used in veterinary medicine Erzsébet Varga (Tirgu Mures, Romania) et al.

P-V-21 Effects of garlic (Allium sativum L.) in postweaning pigs – a placebo controlled study Michael Walkenhorst (Frick, Switzerland) et al.

P-225 The chemical constituents from the stems of Dalbergia stipulacea Priyapan Posri (Khon Kaen, Thailand) et al.

P-226 Three new secoiridoid derivatives from Olea europaea flowers: isolation, identification and biological evaluation Panagiotis Mavros (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-227 Transferring Petrochemical Methods to Pharmacognosy: A Novel Screening System for Oligomeric Proanthocyanidins using Kendrick Mass Defect

Nico Symma (Münster, Germany) et al.

P-228 Unlocking Secrets of Congolese Biodiversity: The Chemistry of Croton haumanianus (Euphorbiaceae) J. Léonard Sani M. Isyaka (Guildford, United Kingdom) et al.

P-229 Unprecedented isoflavanoid-neoflavonoid analogues isolated from Brazilian red propolis Juliana Regina Gubiani (São Carlos, Brazil) et al.

Animal healthcare and veterinary medicine

P-V-01 A combination of saponins and essential oils of Asteraceae, Lauraceae and Myrtaceae plants counteracts coccidiosis-related production losses in fast-growing broilers

Andreas S. Müller (Steyregg, Austria) et al.

P-V-02 Aloe vera gel and Coriandrum sativum seeds: Traditional medical plants and their role as anti-diabetic agents in dogs

Getu Abraham (Leipzig, Germany) et al.

P-V-03 A survey of plant remedies for livestock diseases in the Mnisi community, South Africa, and investigation of their biological activities

Lyndy Joy McGaw (Gauteng, South Africa) et al.

P-V-04 In vitro activity of essential oil mixture against Staphylococcus aureus isolated from cats with pyoderma Jacqueline Csokai (Bad Kissingen, Germany) et al.

P-V-05 In vitro biological activities of some South African Syzygium and Eugenia (Myrtaceae) species with potential as phytogenic feed additives

Lyndy Joy McGaw (Gauteng, South Africa) et al.

P-V-06 Goats who know their grass Nitya Ghotge (Pune, India) et al.

P-V-07 Medicinal classification of plants; A fresh look Nitya Ghotge (Pune, India) et al.

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POSTER SESSION 2: WEDNESDAY, SEP 4, 10:20 – 12:20P-230 – P-493

Biological and pharmacological activities of natural products

P-230 A biochemometric approach for the identification of anti-inflammatory coumarines from Peucedanum ostruthium Julia Zwirchmayr (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-231 A Bufadienolide-enriched fraction of Bryophyllum pinnatum inhibits human myometrial contractility in vitro Stefanie Santos (Zurich, Switzerland) et al.

P-232 A multi-compound extract of Rhodiola rosea reduced acute mild stress-induced corticosterone release more than salidroside alone in mice Isabelle Guinobert (Paris, France) et al.

P-233 A new semi-synthetic sapogenol derivative inducing regulated necrosis Göklem Üner (Urla, Izmir, Turkey) et al.

P-234 The ripening stage of ginseng (Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer) berry influences its phytochemical compositions and their bioavailability

Sora Jin (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

P-235 Activity of three South African plants on phytopathogenic bacteria and fungi of tomatoes and chemical profiling of the extracts

Fikile Makhubu (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-236 Activity ranking and mechanism prediction of antituberculosis based on chemical property space

Muaaz Alajlani (Halle, Germany) et al.

P-237 AFME inhibits cadmium-induced ER stress and autophagy in human prostate epithelial cells Seon-Min Lee (Jinju, South Korea) et al.

P-238 Age-related chemical profiles and osteoblast differentiation activity of 18-month old Cissus quadrangularis L Thanika Pathomwichaiwat (Rajathevi,, Thailand) et al.

P-239 AGEs (Advanced Glycation End products): An Advanced Method for an Advanced Problem Stefaniya Velichkova (Antwerpen, Belgium) et al.

P-240 An integrated strategy to characterize new anti-inflammatory lead compounds derived from Filipendula ulmaria (meadowsweet) Anastasia Van der Auwera (Antwerp, Belgium) et al.

P-V-22 Ethnoveterinary use of medicinal plants in the treatment of claw diseases – a survey with farmers from 20 Swiss cantons

Michael Walkenhorst (Frick, Switzerland) et al.

P-V-23 Medicinal diet of Tibetan macaques in Southern China Michael Alan Huffman (Inuyama, Japan) et al.

P-V-24 Devil´s Claw – Pharmacokinetics in horses Sonja Axmann (Vienna, Austria) et al.

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P-255 Antimalarial Activities of Four Nigerian Plants Used Singly and in Combination against Plasmodium berghei Infection in Mice Ifeoma Orabueze (Idi-Araba, Surulere, Nigeria) et al.

P-257 Antimicrobial Activity of Essential oils of four citrus species against selected oral pathogens and GC-MS identification of their constituents Josephine Ofeimun (Benin City, Nigeria) et al.

P-258 Antimicrobial and Anti-inflammatory potentials of Aidia genipiflora (DC.) Dandy (Rubiaceae) Daniel Anokwah (Kumasi, Ghana) et al.

P-259 Antimicrobial properties of tannin extracts as animal feed Sara Štumpf (Maribor, Slovenia) et al.

P-261 Antimycobacterial screening and safety evaluation of Tithonia rotundifolia, a southern Africa alien invasive weed Lyndy Joy McGaw (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-263 Antioxidant and Anti-inflammatory potential of Aloe vera and Punica granatum: onconutraceutical potential in intestinal epithelial cells Stefania Marzocco (Fisciano - Saleno, Italy) et al.

P-265 Antipruritic effects of the aerial part of Oxalis corniculata Hisae Oku (Nishinomiya, Japan) et al.

P-266 Antispasmodic phenolic compounds isolated from Morus nigra root bark Attila Hunyadi (Szeged, Hungary) et al.

P-267 Anti-staphylococcal activity of Myristica hypargyraea and Myristica inutilis from Samoa Marketa Houdkova (Praha 6 - Suchdol, Czech Republic) et al.

P-268 Antiviral Screening and Bioautographic assessment of radical scavenging, estrogenic and AchE-inhibitoric activity of Sideritis Species Evelyn Wolfram (Wädenswil, Switzerland) et al.

P-269 Aqueous Ethanolic Extract of Solanum nigrum Linn. Stimulates Glucagon-like Peptide-1 Secretion from Enteroendocrine NCI-H716 Cells Hye Young Kim (Jeollabuk-do, South Korea) et al.

P-270 Argan‘s by-products as anti-aging and depigmenting agents in dermocosmetics Hicham Mechqoq (Agadir, Morocco) et al.

P-271 Bactericidal Property of Myrrh Oil and Two Formulations against Standard Bacterial Strains and Multidrug-Resistant Clinical Isolates with GC/MS Chemical Profiling

Noha Khalil (Cairo, Egypt) et al.

P-241 Analysis of bioactive constituents of Hardy Kiwi (Actinidia arguta) Hanna Shin (Suwon, Republic of Korea) et al.

P-243 Antiadhesive activity of the phtalide Sedanenolide from Apium graveolens fruits (Celery) against uropathogenic E. coli

Andreas Hensel (Münster, Germany) et al.

P-244 Antiausterity activity against pancreatic cancer cells and antiplasmodial properties of naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids and their analogues

Vinesh Maharaj (Pretoria, South Africa) et al.

P-245 Antibacterial activity of abietane diterpenes from the roots and hairy roots of Salvia corrugata Vahl.

Angela Bisio (Genova, Italy) et al.

P-246 Antibacterial activity of p-menthanes against bacteria causing respiratory infections in vapour phase

Julia Werle (Prague, Czech Republic) et al.

P-247 Antibacterial Activity of Wood Vinegars from Tamarindus indica, Mangifera indica and Azadirachta indica Pakanit Kupittayanant (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-248 Antibacterial Constituent of the Endophytic Fungi Aspergillus flavus from the Mangrove Plant Sonneratia Alba

Antonius R B Ola (Kupang, Indonesia) et al.

P-249 Anti-cancer and anti-gout potential of some Indonesian and Malaysian medicinal plants

Susi Endrini (Pekanbaru Riau Province, Indonesia) et al.

P-250 Anticholinesterase activity of an endemic Atlantic rain forest bamboo species Fernanda Anselmo-Moreira (São Paulo, Brazil) et al.

P-251 Antidiabetic Effect of ρ-Hydroxybenzaldehyde in Type-2 Diabetes Rats Model Aminu Mohammed (Zaria, Nigeria) et al.

P-252 Antihyperglycemic and antihyperlipidemic activity of the ethanol extract of Tiliacora triandra in high fat diet/streptozotocin diabetic rat model Opeyemi Olatunji (Hat Yai, Thailand) et al.

P-253 Anti-inflammatory activity and ROS regulation of sinapaldehyde in LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophages Seung-hwa Baek (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-254 Anti-inflammatory and barrier stabilising effects of myrrh, coffee charcoal and chamomile flower extract in a multicomponent-cell-model of the intestinal mucosa Laura Weber (Leipzig, Germany) et al.

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P-287 Chemical composition and antimicrobial activities of two Mentha species essential oils

Gabriela - Alina Ștefan (Iași, Romania) et al.

P-288 Chemical composition and in vitro investigation of the antibacterial activity of identified compounds from fungus-growing termites Macrotermes bellicosus

Dima Hammoud Mahdi (Cotonou, Benin) et al.

P-289 Chemical composition, direct and indirect antibacterial activity against multidrug resistant bacteria and toxicity of essential oil of Cymbopogon giganteus leaves

Joëlle Quetin-Leclercq (Cotonou, Benin) et al.

P-290 Diterpenoids from roots of Zhumeria majdae Rech.f. & Wendelbo inhibitor of Heat Shock Protein 90 (Hsp90)

Samad Nejad Ebrahimi (Tehran, Iran) et al.

P-291 Clove oil reduces the aminoglycoside resistance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Marcus Ludwig (Berlin, Germany) et al.

P-292 Combination effects of essential oils with antimicrobials Yvonne Holm (Helsinki, Finland) et al.

P-293 Combinatory Effect of Plant Compounds and their Derivatives with Conventional Antibiotics on Diarrhoea Causing Bacteria Hayford Osei-Owusu (Prague, Czech Republic) et al.

P-294 Complexity – Another bit of the puzzle in the standardization of testing methods to determine efficacy of natural products Anna-Maria Keaveney (Cork, Ireland) et al.

P-295 Computational Investigation of multi-target effects in the arachidonic acid cascade on the example of potent natural 5-LO inhibitor garcinoic acid

Veronika Temml (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-296 Cryptotanshinone from Salvia miltiorriza roots reduces Cytokeratin 1/10 expression in keratinocytes by activation of peptidyl-prolyl-cis-trans- isomerase FKBPO1A

Andreas Hensel (Münster, Germany) et al.

P-297 Cymbopogon nardus: chemical profiling and in vivo performance of essential oil for treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis in mice

Luciani Gaspar De Toledo (Araraquara, Brazil) et al.

P-298 Cystoseira barbata (Stackhouse) C. Agardh from Romanian Black Sea coast: phlorotannins profile, in vitro antioxidant and antiproliferative potential

Adriana Trifan (Iasi, Romania) et al.

P-272 Benzoxazinoids in human diet: an anti-cancer agent? Bina Bhattarai (Slagelse, Denmark) et al.

P-273 Bioactivity-Guided Fractionation of Extracts Using Mushroom Tyrosinase – Friend or Foe? Fabian Mayr (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-274 Bioassay Guided Isolation of Naphthoquinones from Onosma aksoyii, Investigation of Their Cytotoxic Properties Demet Kul (Urla, Izmir, Turkey) et al.

P-275 Bio-guided fractionation of essential oils looking for plant bioactive secondary metabolites with potential hypoglycemic activity Barbara Sgorbini (Torino, Italy) et al.

P-277 Biotransformation of the Promising Neuro-Regenerative Hop-Chalcone Xanthohumol C

Corinna Urmann (Straubing, Germany) et al.

P-279 Branched-Chain Amino Acids (BCAAs) Prometes Liver Regeneration by Decreasing SOCS3 Expression to Enhance IL-6/STAT3 Proliferative Signals

Emre Ceyhan (Eskisehir, Turkey) et al.

P-280 Bryophyllum pinnatum fractions inhibit the oxytocin-induced increase of intracellular calcium concentration in human myometrial cells

Stefanie Santos (Zurich, Suíça) et al.

P-281 Bufadienolides and Anti-angiogenic homoisoflavonoids from Rhodocodon cryptopodus, Rhodocodon rotundus and Rhodocodon cyathiformis

Eduard Mas-Claret (Guildford, United Kingdom) et al.

P-282 Caenorhabditis elegans as model to study natural products affecting metabolism and lifespan Theresa Lehner (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-283 Camelina sativa glucosinolates fraction: NMR characterization and effect on human colon cell lines

Chiara Magoni (Milano, Italy) et al.

P-284 Cannabidiol-enriched Cannabis sativa L. extract modulates inflammatory-induced human peripheral mononuclear cells response Marco Biagi (Modena, Italy) et al.

P-285 CBD-A and THC-A content in different hemp varieties Marjeta Zagožen (Žalec, Slovenia) et al.

P-286 Challenges in the discovery of natural products effective against acute respiratory infections Michaela Schmidtke (Jena, Germany) et al.

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P-313 Evaluation of onconutraceutical potential and chemical characterization of vegetable smoothies

Shara Francesca Rapa (Salerno, Italy) et al.

P-314 Exploitation of Genome Mining Tools for Accelerated Natural Product Discovery Svenja Patz (Braunschweig, Germany) et al.

P-315 Exploration of α-Pyridone-Containing Compounds as Multitarget Antifungals Ericsson Coy-Barrera (Cajicá, Colombia) et al.

P-316 Exploring the traditional medicine of Atacama people from North of Chile as in inestimable source of bioactive compounds Sergio Ortiz (Paris, France) et al.

P-317 Further insights in the antiproliferative activity of cardenolides from the aerial parts of Pergularia tomentosa Sonia Piacente (Fisciano (Salerno), Italy) et al.

P-318 Glycerol extracts of Glycyrrhiza glabra, Echinacea purpurea, Silybum marianum, and Berberis vulgaris: chemical characterisation and cosmeceutical potential

Marijana Zovko Končić (Zagreb, Croatia) et al.

P-319 Greek mountain tea, a medicinal plant from Mediterranean countries and Balkan Nastaran Moussavi (Oslo, Norway) et al.

P-320 High affinity HERG and low affinity Cav1.2 Blockers Dehydroevodiamine and Hortiamine in Decoctions of the TCM drug Evodiae fructus Jakob Reinhardt (Basel, Switzerland) et al.

P-321 HPLC-based activity profiling of Haplophyllum tuberculatum In vitro activity against Madurella mycetomatis Abdelhalim Mahmoud (Basel, Switzerland) et al.

P-322 Hypoglycemic and Antioxidant Effects of Oral Treatment of Verbesina montanoifolia Extract in Diabetic Rats Bertha Fenton-Navarro (Morelia, México) et al.

P-323 Hypothesis: the water-insoluble beta glucans within mushrooms that activate the dectin-1b signaling pathway are derived from colonizing yeast Nirmal Pugh (Mississippi, United States) et al.

P-324 Identification of C. elegans lipid lowering constituents from chaga by correlation of 1H NMR spectra with phenotypic screening Benjamin Kirchweger (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-299 Cytotoxic activities of new water-soluble polysaccharides from Ornithugalum bungei Hamid-Rez Adhami (Tehran, Iran) et al.

P-300 Dietary polyphenols and their immuno-modulating effects: Implications during parasite-induced inflammation in the gut

Audrey Inge Andersen-Civil (Frederiksberg, Denmark) et al.

P-301 Dischidia nummularia – a potential plant for cytotoxicity and anti-proliferative activity Muhammad Khalil-ur-Rehman (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-302 Discovery of GABAA Receptor Modulators of Natural Origin – Validation of a FLIPR Assay for Screening and HPLC-based Activity Profiling

Teresa Faleschini (Basel, Switzerland) et al.

P-303 Effect of Zingiber officinale L. and Caesalpinia sappan L. combination extract on the lipid profile of high-fat diet rats Fadlina Chany Saputri (Depok, Indonesia) et al.

P-304 Effects of different essential oils on HaCaT keratinocytes against hydrogen peroxide induced oxidative stress

Edlira Neza (Tirana, Albania) et al.

P-305 Effects of oral co-administration of captopril and Hibiscus sabdariffa on blood pressure and histological changes on 2K1C animal model

Fadlina Chany Saputri (Depok, Indonesia) et al.

P-306 Effects of Oroxylum indicum (L.) Kurz Extract on Lipid Profile of High Fat Diet-Induced Mice

Tanaporn Hengpratom (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-307 Effects of Vernonia cinerea L. on uterine contraction in gestational diabetic rats Sajeera Kupittayanant (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-308 Elucidating bioactive phloroglucinol derivatives from Dryopteris sp. Sumana Bhowmick (Aberystwyth, United Kingdom) et al.

P-309 Enzyme Inhibitory, Antioxidant Activities And Phytochemical Studies On Juniperus macrocarpa & Juniperus excelsa

Sultan Pekacar (Ankara, Turkey) et al.

P-310 Eupatoriopicrin enhance the phagocytosis through modulation of S.aureus uptake and killing by THP-1 cells

Barbara Gierlikowska (Warsaw, Poland) et al.

P-311 Eupatoriopicrin may modulate lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation in human respiratory epithelium

Barbara Gierlikowska (Warsaw, Poland) et al.

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P-339 Investigation of EPs®7630 in coculture assays to predicts possible drug effects Sabrina Weisenburger (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-340 Investigations of potential cytotoxicity, and mutagenicity of guaianolides isolated from Chrysophthalmum montanum (DC.) Boiss

Fatma Ayaz (Konya, Turkey) et al.

P-341 Isolation and identyfication of active compounds responsible for the biological activity of mistletoe (Viscum album L.) from different host trees

Wioleta Pietrzak (Lublin, Poland) et al.

P-343 Loss of the Transcription Factor FoxM1 in Colorectal Cancer Cells exposed to Prenylated Xanthones isolated from Metaxya rostrata Eva Mittermair (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-344 Luffa operculata administration in late pregnancy in Wistar rats impairs behavior and can lead to the development of anxiety Cinthia Rocha (São Paulo, Brasil) et al.

P-345 Luffa operculata impaired testis relative weight and testosterone concentration in adult Wistar rats in comparison to young adult male rats Cinthia Rocha (São Paulo, Brasil) et al.

P-346 Mechanism for Anti-inflammatory effects of Farnesiferol B in Ischemia/reperfusion injury of kidney Lu Zhang, Zhibo Gai (Zürich, Switzerland) et al.

P-347 Medicinal Plant of the Family Lamiaceae as the Prevention of Fibrotic Disease Shih-Yi Lee (Taitung, Taiwan) et al.

P-348 Metabolites isolated from inflorescences of Piper aduncum L. (Piperaceae) and structure-activity relationship study of chalcones derivatives with

anti-Trypanosoma cruzi activity Kaio S. Gomes (Santo André, Brazil) et al.

P-349 Molecular networking for the study of antimicrobial activity of Calophyllum inophyllum L. oil resin Camille Beaugendre (Paris, France) et al.

P-350 Multiple pharmacognostic evaluation of Crocus sativus L byproducts as innovative sources of active principles Giustino Orlando (Chieti, Italy) et al.

P-351 Mutagenic studies of plants frequently used in Accra metropolis, Ghana Emelia Oppong Bekoe (Legon, Ghana) et al.

P-352 Natural Products as Modifiers of Antibiotic Resistance Sebastian Schmidt (Berlin, Deutschland) et al.

P-325 Identification of glycogen phosphorylase as molecular target for antidiabetic action of Nauclea latifolia Smith fruits Shereen Abd Algaffar (Omdurman, Sudan) et al.

P-326 Identification of the main component of a rambutan leaf extract responsible for the stimulation of collagen 1 on human keratinocytes Florence Henry (Pulnoy, France) et al.

P-327 Immunomodulatory effect of Acacia nilotica pods on Leishmania parasitized THP-1 macrophage cells Nada Mustafa (Khartoum, Sudan) et al.

P-328 Immunosuppressive activity of Artemisia argyi Amy Zimmermann-Klemd (Freiburg Im Breisgau, Germany) et al.

P-329 In vitro activity of extracts and compounds from two indigenous medicinal plants against cercaria of Schistosoma haematobium Francis Armah (Cape Coast, Ghana) et al.

P-330 In vitro anti-melanogenisis effect of sesquiterpene lactones from roots of Saussurea lappa and their analogues Siwattra Choodej (Bangkok, Thailand) et al.

P-331 In vitro anti-staphylococcal combinatory effect of Cinnamomum cassia essential oil and 8-hydroxyquinoline evaluated simultaneously in liquid and vapour phase

Marie Netopilova (Prague 6 - Suchdol, Czech Republic) et al.

P-333 In vitro evaluation of the effect of Bidens tripartita extract and its main constituents on the intestine contractility Marta Mendel (Warsaw, Poland) et al.

P-334 In vitro hepatotoxicity of Petasites hybridus extract (Ze 339) depends on the concentration, intrinsic cytochrome activity and the species used

Veronika Butterweck (Romanshorn, Switzerland) et al.

P-335 In vitro neuraminidase inhibitory effect and activity against influenza virus A H1N1 of herbal drugs used for common cold Marco Biagi (Siena, Italy) et al.

P-336 Inhibition of NFκB-mediated immune response by β-damascenone Teresa Pirker (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-337 Inhibition Properties of Actinobacteria Extracts Towards β–lactam Resistance Sharifah Aminah Syed Mohamad (Shah Alam, Malaysia) et al.

P-338 Investigating Vasoactive Effects of Natural Plant Compounds on Porcine Coronary Artery Natcha Watanapokasin (Nakorn Nayok, Thailand) et al.

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P-368 Antiangiogenic activity of iridoids from Lamiaceae and Plantaginaceae species Anna Maria Iannuzzi (Pisa, Italy) et al.

P-370 Recovery Effect of a Monogalactosylmonoacylglycerol from the Brown Alga Agarum clathratum subsp. yakishiriense on Neomycin-induced Hair Cell Damage in Zebrafish

Jong Hwan Kwak (Suwon-si, South Korea) et al.

P-371 Red Wine and Ginkgo Biloba Extracts Induce vasorelaxant and Antioxidant Effects on the Digital Veins of Healthy Horses

Isabelle Guinobert (Orée D‘Anjou, France) et al.

P-372 Regulation of TRAF3-IKK interaction by an 8-hydroxydaidzein contributed to the inhibitory effect on the IRF-3 signaling pathway Young-Gyu Kang (Yongin-si, South Korea) et al.

P-373 Rose essential oils stimulate neural differentiation and autophagy in stem cells Izumi Sasanuma (Oyama, Japan) et al.

P-374 Safety Profile and Estrogenic Activity of Extracts and Phytoestrogen Rich Fractions of Vitex doniana and Millettia aboensis Amarachukwu Anwuchaepe (Awka, Nigeria) et al.

P-375 Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) Seed improves scopolamine-induced cognitive dysfunction in mice Chan Hum Park (Eumseong, South Korea) et al.

P-376 Sauromatum venosum – an anti-proliferative plant from the Himalayas Muhammad Khalil-ur-Rehman (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-377 Screening for Active Substances with TLC Bioautography: Challenges with Artefacts Rebekka Merki (Wädenswil, Switzerland) et al.

P-379 Secondary metabolites from marine sources as inhibitors of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and collagenase Maria Orfanoudaki (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-380 Selected extracts from Potentilla alba modulate the viability of normal and cancerous cells of the human colon epithelium Jakub Władysław Strawa (Lublin, Poland) et al.

P-381 Semi-synthesis Studies on Astragaloside VII and Immunomodulatory Activities of the Derivatives Nilgün Yakuboğulları (Urla, Izmir, Turkey) et al.

P-382 Sexual behavior of ovariectomized female rats after chronic genistein administration Amelia Tero-Vescan (Targu Mures, Romania) et al.

P-353 Neuroprotective extract fractions and single substances from Sideritis scardica in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, an in-vivo model for

neurodegenerative diseases Felix Heiner (Andernach, Germany) et al.

P-354 Neuroprotective potential of hydroalcoholic extracts of Juniperus species Sanda Vladimir-Knežević (Zagreb, Croatia) et al.

P-355 New abietane-type diterpenes from Perovskia abrotanoides and their anti-inflammatory activity Alessandra Braca (Pisa, Italy) et al.

P-356 Novel tissue engineering scaffolds as wound dressings loaded with Alkannins/Shikonins as active ingredients Athanasios S. Arampatzis (Thessaloniki, Greece) et al.

P-357 On the trail of fungal defense strategies – Employing a special workflow to spot photoactivity

Fabian Hammerle (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-358 Permeability of lichen compounds through the blood brain barrier as an important argument for their potential neuroprotective action

Judyta Cielecka-Piontek (Poznan, Poland) et al.

P-360 Phyloactivity-based screening of ethnomedically inspired plant extract libraries against Trypanosoma cruzi and Chagas disease

Sandhya Krishnan Radha Krishnan (Bern, Switzerland) et al.

P-361 Phytochemical and pharmacological profile of Origanum sipyleum extracts: Exploring for novel sources for potential pharmaceutical, food, and

cosmetic applications Claudio Ferrante (Chieti, Italy) et al.

P-363 Phytotherapy in children: Data from the PhytoVIS study, a NIS in 20,870 users of herbal medicinal products

Karen Nieber (Köln, Germany) et al.

P-364 Polyphenolic derivatives from propolis attenuates hypertension-induced heart failure

Hui-Chun Ku (New Taipei City, Taiwan) et al.

P-365 Preliminary results: Essential oils from Hypericum spp. growing wild in Greece and their wound healing effects

Maria-Eleni Grafakou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-366 Preliminary studies of the chemical composition and cytotoxic activity of Hottonia palustris herb

Jakub Władysław Strawa (Białystok, Poland) et al.

P-367 Prenatally exposition to Luffa operculata aqueous extract may have provided augment in the percentage of females in the litters

Ivana Suffredini (São Paulo, Brazil) et al.

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P-396 The rule of natural products in belowground interactions between plant species Hossein Hazrati (Slagelse, Denmark) et al.

P-397 The vitamin E derivative α-amplexichromanol as anti-inflammatory lead inspired from traditional African medicine

Konstantin Neukirch (Jena, Germany) et al.

P-398 Toxicological effect of Brazilian bamboo extracts in zebrafish larvae Claudia Maria Furlan (Sao Paulo, Brazil) et al.

P-399 Triterpenes present in Eucalyptus tereticornis inhibit adipocyte lipid accumulation and reduce their toxicity when they are in a plant extract Sergio Acin (Medellin, Colombia) et al.

P-400 Ursolic acid lactone from leaves of Eucalyptus terericornis regulates lipid accumulation and glucose uptake in cellular models

Sergio Acin (Medellin, Colombia) et al.

P-401 Using Animal Model Systems to Evaluate the Impact of Botanical Extracts on the Gut Microbiome

Jasmin Arabit (Irvine, United States) et al.

P-402 Variation of bioactive principles in different varieties of Perilla frutescens var. crispa

Tae Kyung Hyun (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

P-403 Xanthine oxidase inhibitory activities of some Vietnamese medicinal plants Hung Tran (Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam) et al.

P-404 Young adult male mice weight gain after being late prenatally exposed to buchinha-do-norte aqueous extract

Ivana Suffredini (São Paulo, Brazil) et al.

P-405 Zebrafish-based evaluation of antiepileptic activity of Pimpinella major (L.) Huds. and its main constituent pimpinellin

Simon-Vlad Luca (Iasi, Romania) et al.

P-383 Sidoamidines – 8-(Pyrrolidine-1-carboximidamide-2-yl)-(epi)gallocatechins. New components in the Pelargonium sidoides extract EPs® 7630 Karl Schötz (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-384 Study of neurodifferentiation potential of different extracts of Bacopa monnieri Stefanie Ritter (Straubing, Germany) et al.

P-385 Synergistic Anti-hyperuricemic Effect of Combined Medication of Alpinia oxyphylla and Allopurinol

Yoon-Young Sung (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-386 Synthesis and antiprotozoal activity of new isothiocyanate derivatives of bile acids

Kosar Babanezhad Harikandei (Tehran, Iran) et al.

P-387 Tannin Basic Building Blocks as Potential Scavengers of Chemical Carcinogens: A Computational Study Gregor Hostnik (Maribor, Slovenia) et al.

P-388 Tannins from Chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.) leaves and fruits show promising in vitro anti-inflammatory properties in gastric epithelial cells Stefano Piazza (Milano, Italy) et al.

P-389 Targeting mechanisms of the DNA damage response (DDR) by natural compounds Jana van Stuijvenberg (Düsseldorf, Germany) et al.

P-390 The benign prostate hyperplasia medication WS®1541 positively influences sexual behavior in a stress-induced model in rats

Sabrina Weisenburger (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-391 The effect of Psoraleae drupacea Bge on Brucella melitensis in vitro Galiya Baisalova (Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan) et al.

P-392 The effects of Sida rhombifoia L. on benign prostatic hyperplasia in testosterone propionate-induced animal model and its active constituents Eun Ju Jeong (Jinju, South Korea) et al.

P-393 The natural product Oleuropein shows enhanced anticancer and cardioprotective activity when co-administered in vivo with Doxorubicin Anastasia Papachristodoulou (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-394 The polyketide soraphen A exerts beneficial effects on cholesterol homeostasis in macrophages Verena Hiebl (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-395 The relevance of alkaloid proportions in Chelidonium maius extracts Sylwia Zielińska (Wrocław, Poland) et al.

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P-419 No clinically relevant interactions of St. John’s wort extract Ze 117 low in hyperforin with cytochrome P450 enzymes and P-glycoprotein

Juergen Drewe (Romanshorn, Switzerland) et al.

P-420 Salvia Extract for the Treatment of Menopausal Symptoms: A Randomized, Controlled, Blind Clinical Trial

Roland Schoop (Roggwil, Switzerland) et al.

P-421 St. John´s wort in a large epidemiological study on the use of herbal medicinal products Christiane Kolb (Darmstadt, Germany) et al.

P-422 STW 5 in 1515 patients with functional gastrointestinal diseases Johanna Möller (Darmstadt, Germany) et al.

P-423 Treatment of restless legs syndrome with Bryophyllum pinnatum: a case series Ana Paula Simões-Wüst (Zurich, Switzerland) et al.

Ethnobotany and ethnopharmacology

P-424 A classical factorial design model approach to wound healing potential of combined extracts of stem and leaves of Sphenocentrum jollyanum

Charles Nnadi (Nsukka, Nigeria) et al.

P-425 Antimicrobial activity and phytochemical analysis of Combretum collinum leaves extract

Peter Marquardt (Leipzig, Germany) et al.

P-426 Antimicrobial and cytotoxic properties of the Copaifera reticulata oleoresin and its major diterpene acids

Serhat Sezai Cicek (Kiel, Germany) et al.

P-427 Can one monograph cover all traditions? The Cyperus rotundus L., case Caroline Howard (Leicester, United Kingdom) et al.

P-428 Coumarins and anthelmintic A-type procyanidins from the roots of Paullinia pinnata L. Verena Spiegler (Münster, Germany) et al.

P-429 CYP450 activity inhibition by Guazuma ulmifolia and major phytochemical constituent, procyanidin β2 in vitro: Assessing the potential for drug interactions

David Picking (Kingston, Jamaica) et al.

P-430 Cytotoxic effect of white forsythia (Abeliophyllum distichum Nakai) extracts on human melanoma SK-MEL-2 cells

Tongkewn Yoo (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

Clinical studies with natural compounds and Herbal Medicinal Products

P-406 A multicenter, prospective, pharmacy-based cohort study with a combination of essential oils from peppermint and caraway in functional gastrointestinal disorders Berenike Stracke (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-407 Althaea officinalis root extract in the light of the PhytoVIS study, a NIS in 20,870 users of herbal medicinal products

Olaf Kelber (Darmstadt, Germany) et al.

P-408 An open-labeled randomized controlled trial on the efficacy of Thai traditional medicine for pressure ulcer Somtanuek Chotchoungchatchai (Bangkok, Thailand) et al.

P-409 Assessment of the effectiveness of Ivy leaf (Hedera helix) Syrup compared to acetylcystein in adults and children with acute bronchitis

Veronika Butterweck (Romanshorn, Switzerland) et al.

P-410 CU03-1001, 50% ethanol-extract of Moutan radices cortex and Cinnamomi ramulus (1:1) inhibited laser-induced choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in Brown Norway rats

Jin Sook Kim (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-411 Echinacea Reduces Antibiotics through Prevention of Respiratory Tract Infections in Children: A Randomized, Blinded, Controlled Clinical Trial

Roland Schoop (Brunnen, Switzerland) et al.

P-412 Effect of administration of hydroxytyrosol on weight and fat loss: preliminary data from a randomised double blind prospective study Leandros Skaltsounis (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-414 Effects of lavender oil on insomnia in patients with anxiety disorders – a meta-analysis

Stephan Klement (Karlsruhe, Germany) et al.

P-415 Herbal medicinal products are an important option for the treatment of functional GI diseases in children - a systematic review

Karen Nieber (Darmstadt, Germany) et al.

P-416 Herbal medicinal products in the public pharmacy: A surveillance study with STW 5 in patients with functional gastrointestinal diseases

Christiane Kolb (Darmstadt, Germany) et al.

P-417 Is Citrus aurantifulia effective in common cold? An experience among Iranian Hajj pilgrims Mehdi Pasalar (Shiraz, Iran) et al.

P-418 Mallow extract-containing hyaluronic (HA) acid eye drops for the treatment of dry eyes is perceived superior over an HA-only product

Gerald Künstle (Arlesheim, Switzerland) et al.

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Other

P-446 Changes of Active Components in Ginseng Sprouts According to Cultivated Period

Ka Soon Lee (Geumsan-gun, South Korea) et al.

P-447 Characterization of glycosylated flavonoids obtained from enzymatic reaction by matrix free laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (LDI-MS) Andreas Schinkovitz (Beaucouzé, France) et al.

P-448 Chemical composition and antioxidant compounds of Rehmannia glutinosa during steaming process

Yaejin Kim (Eumseong, South Korea) et al.

P-449 Comparison of Growth of Ginseng by Eco-friendly Soil Disinfecting Method in Rain-sheltered Shade House

Do Yeun Won (Yeongju, South Korea) et al.

P-450 Correlation Analysis between Free Sugar and Organic Acid Contents during Growing Period of Sprout Ginseng

Hee Chul Lee (Geumsan-gun, South Korea) et al.

P-451 Cultivation environment under rain shelter and growth characteristics of 5-year old ginseng

Young Nam An (Yeoncheon-gun, South Korea) et al.

P-452 Effects of Silicate or Germanium Foliar spray on Korean Ginseng Growth in Plastic House

Sang Young Seo (Jinan, South Korea) et al.

P-453 Evaluation of Different Inoculation Methods for Screening of Sclerotinia rot and Phytophthora blight in Korean Medicinal Perilla Germplasm

Ho-Sun Lee (Jeonju-si, South Korea) et al.

P-454 Gamification in Teaching Plant Systematics Stefan Böttger (Berlin, Deutschland) et al.

P-455 Historical Pharmacognostic collection and library at the University of Zagreb Sanda Vladimir-Knežević (Zagreb, Croatia) et al.

P-456 Identification of Transcription Factors from Radula marginata TAYLOR Tajammul Hussain (Dortmund, Germany) et al.

P-457 Impact of herbal substances on efflux pumps in bacterial and human cells Julia Solnier (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-458 In vitro permeation, skin-layers distribution and environmental emission of bioactive Tea Tree essential oil components from topic formulations

Barbara Sgorbini (Torino, Italy) et al.

P-431 Demystifying Bangladeshi ethnomedicines with modern approaches: Congea tomentosa as a source of potential anti-microbial and anti-cancer agents Mohammad Omar Faruque (Wuhan, China) et al.

P-432 Harnessing the wound healing potential of a conifer balm: Re-epithelialization enhancing effects of Norway spruce balm (Picea abies) Thomas Göls (Vienna, Austria) et al.

P-434 In vivo examination of anti-hyperlipidaemic effect of Stellaria media in rats Tivadar Kiss (Szeged, Hungary) et al.

P-436 Inventory of medicinal plants in the sacred forests of the manon Community of Guinea

Pé Louoguéa Simmy (N‘Zérékoré, Guinea) et al.

P-437 Investigations on Ayurvedic medicinal plants towards Inhibition of quorum sensing and biofilm produced by periodontal bacteria isolated from diabetic patients

Luc Pieters (D.I. Khan, Pakistan) et al.

P-440 Newboulasides isolated from Newbouldia laevis may be responsible for its anti-diabetic potential

Daniel Ajaghaku (Awka, Nigeria) et al.

P-441 Phytochemical and pharmacological investigations of Albizia julibrissin DURAZZ. bark extract with respect to anti-inflammatory effects

Pia Gabriela Raab (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-442 Phytochemical characterization and in vitro assessment of oral-health related pharmacological activities of Salvadora persica leaves. Eva-Maria Pferschy-Wenzig (Graz, Austria) et al.

P-443 Plaunol A Isolated from Croton stellatopilosus Suppress Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase (iNOS) and Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2)

Charoenwong Premprasert (Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand) et al.

P-444 Variation in bioactive compounds and bioactive principles of rosehip (Rosa rugosa Thunb.) during repening Minjeong Kwak (Cheongju, South Korea) et al.

P-445 Proper Planting Density for Direct seedling of 5 years old Ginseng in rain shelter hous

Ye-Ji Yoon (Cheorwon-gun, South Korea) et al.

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P-472 The Tramadol Origin: the end of a story or an endless controversy? Mathieu Agostini (Grenoble, France) et al.

P-473 Ultrasound extraction of biologically active compounds from Alhagi pseudalhagi seeds Galiya Baisalova (Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan) et al.

P-474 Variability of Total Phenolic Content and Main Phenolic Compounds in the Germplasm Collections of Perilla frutescens Leaves Jung Sook Sung (Jeonju, South Korea) et al.

P-475 In vitro Antiviral Effect of Cortex Mori Radicis Water Extracts against Influenza Viruses Won-kyung Cho (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

Phytopharmaceuticals, dietary supplements, functional food, cosmeceuticals

P-476 Acute oral dose toxicity studies of fermented Platycodon grandiflorus powder in Sprague-Dawley rats and Beagle dogs Jung-Ho Noh (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-477 Analysis of the volatile and non-volatile fraction of cocoa liquors and chocolates produced with cocoa beans from West-Africa and Ecuador Emmy Tuenter (Wilrijk, Belgium) et al.

P-478 Anti-allergenic Effects of Peanut sprouts Extract In a Systemic Anaphylaxis Food Allergy Mouse Model

Seung-Hyung Kim (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-479 Characterization of a standardized extract of fresh Curcuma Longa rhizomes Isabelle Guinobert (Paris, France) et al.

P-480 Genistein therapy in an animal model of estrogen deficiency Amalia Miklos (Targu Mures, Romania) et al.

P-481 Iminosugars from Baphia pubescens Hook (Fabaceae) as a potential source of antidiabetic phytopharmaceuticals

Agnieszka Michalik (Aberystwyth, United Kingdom) et al.

P-482 In Vitro Antibacterial activity of Modern Botany™ Products and Selected Natural Product cosmeceutical Ingredients

Simon Jackson (Cork, Ireland) et al.

P-483 In Vitro Antioxidant activity of Modern Botany™ Products and Selected Natural Product Ingredients Simon Jackson (Cork, Ireland) et al.

P-484 In vitro α-glucosidase and α-amylase enzyme inhibitory effects and free radical scavenging activity of Garcinia schomburgkiana extracts

Boonyadist Vongsak (Mung Chonburi, Thailand) et al.

P-459 Isolation of Lyngbyatoxin and other Teleocidin species from ,,Streptomyces Blastmyceticum” Culture

Sebastian Bieringer (Straubing, Germany) et al.

P-460 MediHealth – an interdisciplinary and international research and innovation staff exchange project to identify novel natural products for healthy ageing

Birgit Waltenberger (Innsbruck, Austria) et al.

P-461 New advances for an improved content of Sweroside and Swertiamarin in cultivated Gentiana lutea L. var. aurantiaca roots

Óscar González-López (Leon, Spain) et al.

P-462 Photosynthesis according to Chlorophyll Contents of Ginseng Sun Ick Kim (Genusangun, South Korea) et al.

P-463 Plantago Major in treatment of ulcerative colitis Ali Tavakoli (Shiraz, Iran) et al.

P-464 Practical advice to ensure legal certainty when accessing your genetic resource samples Bruno David (Toulouse, France) et al.

P-465 Qualitative parameters of hyssop (Hyssopus officinalis L.) as affected by infrared drying

Mohammad Taghi Ebadi (Tehran, Iran) et al.

P-466 Schiff base ligands derived from phenylenediamine and its metal complexes as enhancer against two mechanisms of antibiotic resistance

Sharifah Aminah Syed Mohamad (Shah Alam, Malaysia) et al.

P-467 Selection of seed disinfectant of Angelica acutiloba Kitagawa for reducing seed fungi

Eunsong Lee (Chungbuk, South Korea) et al.

P-468 Simulating human gastrointestinal and colonic biotranformation pathways through an in vitro assay reveals insight on hydroxytyrosol and oleuropein

metabolism Maria Eleni Sakavitsi (Athens, Greece) et al.

P-469 Simultaneous determination of malondialdehyde, glutathione, and glutathione disulfide with UPLC-Q-TOF/PDA in human lung cancer cells (A549)

Wontae Jeong (Cheongju-si, South Korea) et al.

P-470 Studies on the physicochemical properties on 3 types of Rehmannia glutinosa Kyungho Ma (Eumseong, South Korea) et al.

P-471 The stability of medicinal plant microRNAs in herb preparation process Wenyan Xie (Berlin, Germany) et al.

LIST OF POSTERSLIST OF POSTERS

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P-485 Investigation of Ellagic acid sourcing as a dietary supplement by UFLC-PDA-ESI-MS/MS Aboli Girme (Anand, India) et al.

P-486 New Zealand spinach (Tetragonia tetragonoides) as a functional food alternative for anti-obesity and anti-hyperuricemia Geung-Joo Lee (Daejeon, South Korea) et al.

P-487 Perinatal Taurine Supplementation In Maternal Diabetes Prevents Insulin-Glucose Dysregulation In Adult Rat Offspring Atcharaporn Thaeomor (Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand) et al.

P-488 Quantitative control of dietary supplements containing caffeine Bianca-Eugenia Osz (Targu Mures, Romania) et al.

P-489 Selenium-enriched ricegrass juice prevent cadmium-induced toxicity on HEK293 kidney cells

Panupong Puttarak (Hatyai, Thailand) et al.

P-490 Simultaneous HPLC quantitative analysis of major components of Maclura cochinchinensis stem extract and antityrosinase activity

Boonyadist Vongsak (Mung, Thailand) et al.

P-491 The expression of selected intestinal glucose, fructose and long-chain fatty acid transporters investigated in Caco-2 cells

Katharina Schreck (Berlin, Germany) et al.

P-492 The interest of eco-friendly water subcritical grape pomace extract as skin regeneration active ingredient

Lorène Gourguillon (Saint Jean De Braye, France) et al.

P-493 Tyrosinase TLC-autography for South African indigenous tea, Athrixia phylicoides DC, and potential use as a cosmeceutical extract Vuyisile Samuel Thibane (Florida, South Africa) et al.

Finzelberg GmbH & Co. KG Active Botanical Ingredients [email protected] www.finzelberg.com

FROM FINZELBERG

WITH HEALTHY AGING INGREDIENTS

VENUES

PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA VENUE

Pre-symposia and workshops will take place in the Center for Chemistry and Biomedicine InnsbruckUniversity of InnsbruckCenter for Chemistry and Biomedicine Innrain 80-826020 Innsbruck

CONFERENCE VENUE

The scientific program of GA 2019 will take place at Congress Innsbruck Rennweg 3 6020 Innsbruck

GENERAL INFORMATIONLIST OF POSTERS

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REGISTRATION INFORMATION

REGISTRATION OPENING HOURS Registration Desk CCB(for Pre-Congress Symposium participants only)

Sunday, Sep 1 08:00 - 14:00

Registration Desk Congress InnsbruckThe GA 2019 registration desk is located close to the main entrance of Congress Innsbruck at the Europa Foyer. Opening hours are as follows:

Sunday, Sep 1 16:00 - 18:00Monday, Sep 2 07:45 - 19:00Tuesday, Sep 3 07:45 - 16:30Wednesday, Sep 4 07:45 - 18:00

EXHIBITION OPENING HOURSCongress InnsbruckKristall- & Tirol Foyer

Monday, Sep 2 09:00 - 18:00Tuesday, Sep 3 09:00 - 17:00Wednesday, Sep 4 09:00 - 18:00

FEES AND DEADLINESRegistration can be done online until August 29, 2019. After this date only on-site registration is possible.

Full Conference registration includes the following unless otherwise specified:• admission to scientific sessions and poster presentations• admission to the industrial exhibition• printed material for the conference• abstract book• conference bag• coffee breaks and business lunches• Get Together on Sunday, September 1, 2019 (CCB Innsbruck)• Conference Evening at Swarovski Kristallwelten, Monday, September 2,

2019

GENERAL INFORMATION

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Early Bird Feeby May 26

Standard Feeby July 31

Late Feefrom August 1

ACCOMPANYING PERSON

Member* € 250.- € 350.- € 450.-The fee for accompanying persons includes evening events such as Get together, Swarovski

Evening as well as lunches at the conference venue but does not include access to any scientific sessions.

PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIA

Animal Healthcare and Veterinary Phytotherapy

Member*** € 200.- € 250.- € 300.-

Non-Member € 300.- € 350.- € 400.-

African Research Workshop

free registration

Economic Adulteration of Botanical Ingredients

Member/Non-Member*** € 100.- € 100.- € 150.-

Student € 25.- € 25.- € 50.-

Young Researchers‘ Workshop

€ 15.-

*    Member fees include members of the following societies: GA, AFERP** To purchase student admission. It is necessary to upload a confirmation/ immatriculation letter or present the confirmation at the registration desk for onsite registrations.*** Member fees include members of the following societies: GA, AFERP, SMGP, camvet.ch, GGTM, ÖGPhyt, NVF

All fees do not include any taxes since the organizers are tax-exempt.

Early Bird Feeby May 26

Standard Feeby July 31

Late Feefrom August 1

FULL CONFERENCE REGISTRATION

Member* € 520.- € 570.- € 620.-

Non-Member € 620.- € 670.- € 720.-

Student Member** € 345.- € 385.- € 425.-

Students Non-Member** € 420.- € 460.- € 500.-

Get Together (Sunday at CCB) included in full conference registration fee

Conference Evening (Monday at Swarovski Kristallwelten)

included in full conference registration fee

COMBINED REGISTRATION: FULL CONFERENCE & PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIUM ANIMAL HEALTHCARE AND VETERINARY PHYTOTHERAPY

Member*** € 670.- € 720.- € 770.-

Non-Member € 770.- € 820.- € 870.-

Student Member** € 420.- € 460.- € 500.-

Student Non-Member** € 495.- € 535.- € 575.-

COMBINED REGISTRATION: FULL CONFERENCE & PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIUM ON ECONOMIC ADULTERATION OF BOTANICAL

INGREDIENTS AND HERBAL MEDICINESMember*** € 620.- € 670.- € 770.-

Non-Member € 720.- € 770.- € 870.-

Student Member** € 370.- € 410.- € 500.-

Student Non-Member** € 445.- € 485.- € 575.-

GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

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INFORMATION A-Z

ABOUT AUSTRIAAustria has been a member of the European Union since 1995, the population is 8,5 million, the capital city being Vienna (Wien). Politically, Austria is a demo-cratic republic with the prime minister as the head of the government and par-liamentary elections every five years. The formal head of state is the president, who has more representative duties than political power. The country is divided into nine federal states, Innsbruck is the capital of the state of the Tyrol. The language spoken in Austria is German, but most Austrians speak English and many speak some French or Italian too and are happy to be of service to visitors.

ABOUT INNSBRUCKInnsbruck, the capital of the Tyrol, is located in the Alpine region of Austria, in the valley of the river Inn, at 580 metres above sea level. It is surrounded by mountain ranges and numerous peaks which reach an altitude of approx. 2,700 metres above sea level. The city has 121,000 inhabitants and hosts one of the oldest universities in Europe, founded in the year 1669. Today, over 30,000 stu-dents attend the university in Innsbruck. Due to its location, Innsbruck has an excellent tourist infrastructure and is best known for its rich cultural heritage, as well as for its endless opportunities in sports and recreation that include golf, hiking, climbing, rafting, paragliding, canyoning, swimming in lakes, skiing and snowboarding not only in winter time, but also in summer at one of the glaciers nearby. Innsbruck has been the host for Olympic Winter Games twice, in 1964 and 1976. In the town, some 160 restaurants, cafes and bars, most of them in walking distance to the convention centre, offer traditional Tyrolean and Austrian specialities as well as international dishes.

ABSTRACTSAbstracts selected for GA 2019 are presented in poster and short lecture sessions. All accepted and confirmed abstracts are available via the mobile app, printed abstract book as well as published later in a special conference issue of PLANTA MEDICA.

ATTIREBusiness casual is appropriate. Room temperature can vary in session rooms. We encourage attendees to dress in layers for their personal comfort.

AM AND PM COFFEE BREAKSDuring the conference, complimentary light snacks and refreshments will be available for registered delegates in the exhibition area.

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

NAME BADGESDelegates are requested to wear their name badge at all times in order to par-ticipate in the conference sessions, networking events and exhibition.

ONSITE SERVICESExperience and share GA2019!Share your images and experiences from GA 2019 with colleagues and friends. www.ga2019.at I #GA2019

WI-FI CONNECTION (AT CONGRESS INNSBRUCK)GA 2019 is providing free Wi-Fi in the conference area. To ensure a positive Wi-Fi experience for all users please do not use your own wireless hotspot de-vice. The additional Wi-Fi devices create significant RF interference which can interfere with all Wi-Fi networks. Please turn these devices off and connect to the Wi-Fi network GA and open your web browser to connect to the internet.

LOG IN DETAILS:Select Network name: CongressOpen your browser and insert:User: ga2019Password: innsbruck

REGISTRATION DESKThe registration desk is located at the Europa Foyer, close to the main en-trance of Congress Innsbruck.Opening hours Sunday, Sep 1 16:00 - 18:00Monday, Sep 2 07:45 - 19:00Tuesday, Sep 3 07:45 - 16:30Wednesday, Sep 4 07:45 - 18:00

GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

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RESTAURANTS & BARSThere are plenty of restaurants and bars in the inner-city of Innsbruck. Please ask at the registration Desk for information and recommendations.

SMOKINGIt is against the law to smoke in any indoor public place or worksite in Aust-ria. Smoking is prohibited in the entire building of Congress Innsbruck. Please note that public transport, transit shelters, taxis and work vehicles are also smoke-free.

OFFICIAL LANGUAGEThe official language of the GA 2019 is English. No simultaneous translation will be provided.

PARKINGThere is an underground car park at the Congress Centre. Participants obtain tickets at reduced rates from the porter’s desk on the ground floor of Cong-ress Innsbruck. Please note that theses reduced fares only apply to the Cong-ress garage (garage entry on the left side) and not the other parking facilities (garage entry on the right side). Please also note that street parking in the city is available but limited to 90 minutes.

PRE-CONGRESS SYMPOSIAThe Pre-Congress Symposia are held on Sunday, September 1st at the CCB (University of Innsbruck, Innrain 80-82).Separate registration for all symposia is necessary.

STAFF & VOLUNTEERSVolunteers are working throughout the conference venue and are happy to assist with any questions delegates may have regarding GA2019 or Congress Innsbruck. Delegates can easily locate them by their volunteer shirts.

CAMERAS AND CELL PHONESNo unauthorised recording is allowed in any event during the GA 2019. As a courtesy to fellow attendees, please set your cell phones on silent mode during the session.

CITY TRANSPORTATION AND TAXIThere is a good public transport system in Innsbruck and its surroundings. Most busses and trams operate until midnight. Detailed information on bus schedu-les is available at your hotel or at the registration desk. Tickets can be pre-pur-chased form tobacconists, ticket machines at the stops or directly on the bus.Taxis are usually available outside the conference center’s entrance. If you need support please contact the registration or delegate information help desk.

CURRENCY The official currency in Austria is the EURO (€). Major credit cards are accep-ted in many hotels, shops and restaurants. Automatic teller machines are also available throughout the city.

CONGRESS DOCUMENTS AND BADGESCongress documents have to be collected on-site at the registration desk. Name badges must be worn visibly at all times during the conference, networking ac-tivities and in the exhibition area.

CERTIFICATE OF ATTENDANCEA certificate of attendance will be available at the conference registration desk.

ELECTRICITYElectricity in Austria is 230 Volts, alternating at 50 cycles per second. If you tra-vel to Austria with a device that does not accept 230 Volts at 50 Hertz, a voltage converter is required.

LOST&FOUNDLost and Found items should be returned/claimed at the registration desk.

LUNCHDuring the conference, complimentary light lunches will be available for free for registered delegates in the exhibition area. Lunch boxes will be provided for participants of the lunch-time Workshops

GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

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TRAVEL TO INNSBRUCK

BY PLANEInnsbruck has an international airport that is primarily served by Austrian Air-lines or partner airlines. Several daily flights connect Innsbruck to Vienna or Frankfurt. Additional flights are available from and to a number of European destinations.Please check your travel agent for options or refer to www.innsbruck-airport.com.Intercontinental travellers normally connect via Frankfurt or Vienna. As many intercontinental non-stop flights arrive in Munich, this airport may also be con-sidered as a final destination. Transfer from Munich to Innsbruck is convenient by airport shuttle service or train (approx. 2.5 hrs transfer time) or you may rent a car in Munich and drive to Innsbruck (2 hrs drive time).

BY TRAIN Innsbruck is connected to the dense European Inter-City railway network. Therefore, fast and convenient daily trains reach Innsbruck from all over Eu-rope. Please check www.oebb.at for information on train schedules. The main railway station is located a 10 to 15 min walk from the Congress Innsbruck.

BY CARInnsbruck is connected to major European motorways arriving from the North (Western Europe and Germany via Munich), from the South (Italy via Verona), from the West (Switzerland via Zurich) and from the East (Hungary via Vienna). This means that Innsbruck can be reached by car within a couple of hours dri-ving from large parts of Central, Western and Eastern Europe. 

TRAIN STATIONInnsbruck main station is located in the centre of the city within walking distance to the conference venue. Taxis are also available outside the station’s entrance.

DISCLAIMERThe organizers have made every attempt to ensure that all information in this publication is correct. The organizers take no responsibility for changes to the program or any loss that may occur as a result of changes to the program. Some of the information provided in this publication has been provided by ex-ternal sources. Although every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy, currency and reliability of the content, the organizers accept no responsibility in that regard.

LIABILITY AND INSURANCENeither the organizers nor CMI / PCO Tyrol Congress as their agency accept any liability for personal injuries, or loss of, or damage to property belonging to congress delegates or accompanying persons, either during or as a result of the conference or during any of the networking events. It is recommended that par-ticipants arrange for their own personal health, accident and travel insurance before they depart from their countries. Only written agreements shall be valid. The place of jurisdiction shall be Innsbruck.

GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

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Nordkettenbahnen

SILL-PARK

DEZ

EXITInnsbruck West

EXITInnsbruck Mitte

KnotenInnsbruck

EXITInnsbruck Süd

EXITKranebitten/Völs

Westbahnhof

Hauptbahnhof

Stubaitalbhf.

Bhf. Igls

Lanser See

Inn

Flughafen Innsbruck / Innsbruck airport

NATTERS

GÖTZENS

VÖLS

IGLS

VILL

Olympia-world

Stadion

Bergisel-Stadion

Haupt-bahn-hof

Innenstadt /City Centre

Altstadt /Old Town

Sparkassen-platz

CongressInnsbruck

Zur MesseInnsbruck

Südt

iroler

Pla

tz

Hötting

Inn

Inn

Brun

ecke

r Stra

ße

Mei

nhar

dstra

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Meraner StraßeBrixner Straße

Inna

llee

Innrain

Innrai

n

Kaiser-Josef-Str.

Kapuzinerg.

Inns

traß

e

Bürgerstraße

Bürgerstraße

Universitätsstraße

Mariahilferstr

aße

Kaise

rjäge

rstr

aße

Renn

weg

Salurner Straße

Maria-�

eresien-Straße

Herzo

g-

Otto-

Straß

e

Anichstraße

Anichstraße

Höttingergasse

Museumstraße

Sillg

asse

Marktgraben

Burggr abe

n

Fallmerayerstraße

Wilh

elm-G

reil-

Stra

ße

Adam

gasse

Klar

a-P

ölt-W

eg

Herrengasse Euro

para

ts-P

rom

enad

e

Hofgasse

Rieseng.

Sti �sg

asse

Kiebach-gasseSeil

er-

gasse

Schlossergasse

Jesuitenkircheund -kolleg

AlteUniversität

Galerie

Stadtturm

Rathaus-galerien

Kunstraum Innsbruck

Servitenkirche

Triumph-pforte

FotoforumKellertheater

Leokino

Metropolkino

LandesmuseumFerdinandeum

Volkskunst-museum

Taxispalais

Altes-Neues-

Landhaus

Landes-

Hungerburgbahn

theater

Ho�irche

Annasäule

& -kloster

Audioversum

Casino

Freiheits-denkmal

Spitalkirche

HofgartenBundes-polizei-direktion

Stadtarchiv

DomSt. Jakob

Ho�urg

Helbling-haus

MarktHalle

GoldenesDachl /

Rudolfs-brunnen

Synagoge

Bozner-platz

Volksgarten

Konservatorium

SOWI-Universität Kapuziner-kirche & -kloster

MCI

Treibhaus

Terminal

Johannes-kirche

MusikschuleRai�eisensaal

Kau�ausTYROL

Golden Roof

MesseInnsbruck

Universität

Universitäts-sportstätten

Technische Universität

StationHungerburg

StationLöwenhaus

StationCongress

StationAlpenzoo

Hun

gerb

urgb

ahn

Auszug Hotels / Excerpt Hotels1. aDLERS Hotel2. Grand Hotel Europa3. Hilton Innsbruck4. Hotel Schwarzer Adler5. Austria Trend Hotel Congress Innsbruck6. Best Western Plus Hotel Leipziger Hof7. Best Western Hotel Mondschein8. Parkhotel Hall9. Sporthotel Igls10. Hotel Cafe Central11. Hotel Innsbruck12. Hotel Weißes Kreuz13. Best Western Plus Hotel Goldener Adler 14. Basic Hotel Innsbruck15. Hotel Ibis Innsbruck16. Hotel Ramada Innsbruck Tivoli17. Gasthof Hotel Weißes Rössl18. Hotel Tautermann19. Nala Individuellhotel

11111

hof155

2

555

6

7

7

888888

9

10

11 12

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233

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Kartogra�e: KOMPASS-Karten GmbH

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A12MünchenSalzburg

A12Bregenz

MAP

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INN

SBRU

CKGENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

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142 3

4

51 3

72

6

2

6

11

3

7 48

101 5

9

EINGANG / ENTRANCERennweg

EINGANG / ENTRANCEHerzog-Otto-Ufer

Ladezone / loading bay

Terrasse / balcony

1 2

57

3

4

86

EG / GROUND FL. m²/sq.m.

EUROPA FOYER 680 - - - -KEINE Einzelvermietung / NO individual rental

DOGANA FOYER 698 - - - -

BRÜSSEL FOYER 242 - - - -

RENNWEG FOYER 1.620ergibt sich aus Europa, Dogana und Brüssel Foyer / made up of Europa, Dogana und Brüssel Foyer

STRASSBURG FOYER 87 - - - -

ORANGERIE FOYER 101 - - - -

INN FOYER 519 - - - -

SAAL / HALL DOGANA 1.895 1.189 576 450 584

SAAL / HALL BRÜSSEL 271 297 160 119 143

SAAL / HALL STRASSBURG 164 164 90 90 104teilbar / divisible

SAAL / HALL ORANGERIE 254 251 132 138 112

RAUM / ROOM B/C/D 12/21/13 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM SERLES 25 - - - -

ARCHIV RESTAURANT 269 - - - 80

1. OG / 1ST FL. m²/sq.m.

TIROL FOYER 996 - - - -

KRISTALL FOYER 601 - - - -

SAAL TIROL 1.519 1.499 460 171 514

SAAL / HALL MAXIMILIAN 56 60 30 - 32

SAAL / HALL LUGGER* 37 37 24 - -

RAUM / ROOM NORDKETTE 24 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM STAR 1* 27 - - - -

2. OG / 2ND FL. m²/sq.m.

KÜNSTLER FOYER 678 - - - -

CASINO FOYER 360 - - - -

SAAL / HALL INNSBRUCK 615 601 300 243 280

SAAL / HALL IGLS* 75 61 36 - 42

RAUM / ROOM STAR 2* 28 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM DOUBLE 2* 37 - - - -

3. OG / 3RD FL. m²/sq.m.

DIESNER FOYER 520 - - - -

SAAL / HALL FREIBURG 129 109 64 - 64teilbar / divisible

SAAL / HALL GRENOBLE 125 108 72 - 96

SAAL / HALL NEW ORLEANS 68 76 46 42 -

SAAL / HALL AALBORG 45 48 24 - 40

* inkl. WC & Dusche / incl. toilet & shower

CONGRESS INNSBRUCK

3. OG / 3RD FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYER*

FREIBURG DIESNER FOYER

GRENOBLES

NEW ORLEANS

AALBORG

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

2. OG / 2ND FLOOR

SÄLE/HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME/ROOMS*

IGLS CASINO FOYER DOUBLE 2

INNSBRUCK KÜNSTLER FOYER STAR 2

TIROL

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

EG / GROUND FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME / ROOMS*

ORANGERIE INN FOYER B/C/D

DOGANA STRASSBURG FOYER SERLES

STRASSBURG EUROPA FOYER 1

BRÜSSEL DOGANA FOYER 1

BRÜSSEL FOYER 1

1 (keine Einzelvermietung) + + = Teile des RENNWEG FOYERS1 (no individual rental) + + = Parts of the RENNWEG FOYER

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

1. OG / 1ST FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME / ROOMS*

LUGGER KRISTALL FOYER STAR 1

MAXIMILIAN TIROL FOYER NORDKETTE

DOGANA

TIROL

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

Konzertbestuhlung / Concert style seating

Schulbestuhlung / Classroom style seating

Bankettbestuhlung (runde Tische) / Banquet style seating (round tables)

Bankettbestuhlung (eckige Tische) / Banquet style seating (square tables)

GESAMTÜBERSICHT / OVERVIEW

EG / GROUND FLOOR

3. OG / 3RD FLOOR

1. OG / 1ST FLOOR

2. OG / 2ND FLOOR

142 3

4

51 3

72

6

2

6

11

3

7 48

101 5

9

EINGANG / ENTRANCERennweg

EINGANG / ENTRANCEHerzog-Otto-Ufer

Ladezone / loading bay

Terrasse / balcony

1 2

57

3

4

86

EG / GROUND FL. m²/sq.m.

EUROPA FOYER 680 - - - -KEINE Einzelvermietung / NO individual rental

DOGANA FOYER 698 - - - -

BRÜSSEL FOYER 242 - - - -

RENNWEG FOYER 1.620ergibt sich aus Europa, Dogana und Brüssel Foyer / made up of Europa, Dogana und Brüssel Foyer

STRASSBURG FOYER 87 - - - -

ORANGERIE FOYER 101 - - - -

INN FOYER 519 - - - -

SAAL / HALL DOGANA 1.895 1.189 576 450 584

SAAL / HALL BRÜSSEL 271 297 160 119 143

SAAL / HALL STRASSBURG 164 164 90 90 104teilbar / divisible

SAAL / HALL ORANGERIE 254 251 132 138 112

RAUM / ROOM B/C/D 12/21/13 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM SERLES 25 - - - -

ARCHIV RESTAURANT 269 - - - 80

1. OG / 1ST FL. m²/sq.m.

TIROL FOYER 996 - - - -

KRISTALL FOYER 601 - - - -

SAAL TIROL 1.519 1.499 460 171 514

SAAL / HALL MAXIMILIAN 56 60 30 - 32

SAAL / HALL LUGGER* 37 37 24 - -

RAUM / ROOM NORDKETTE 24 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM STAR 1* 27 - - - -

2. OG / 2ND FL. m²/sq.m.

KÜNSTLER FOYER 678 - - - -

CASINO FOYER 360 - - - -

SAAL / HALL INNSBRUCK 615 601 300 243 280

SAAL / HALL IGLS* 75 61 36 - 42

RAUM / ROOM STAR 2* 28 - - - -

RAUM / ROOM DOUBLE 2* 37 - - - -

3. OG / 3RD FL. m²/sq.m.

DIESNER FOYER 520 - - - -

SAAL / HALL FREIBURG 129 109 64 - 64teilbar / divisible

SAAL / HALL GRENOBLE 125 108 72 - 96

SAAL / HALL NEW ORLEANS 68 76 46 42 -

SAAL / HALL AALBORG 45 48 24 - 40

* inkl. WC & Dusche / incl. toilet & shower

CONGRESS INNSBRUCK

3. OG / 3RD FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYER*

FREIBURG DIESNER FOYER

GRENOBLES

NEW ORLEANS

AALBORG

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

2. OG / 2ND FLOOR

SÄLE/HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME/ROOMS*

IGLS CASINO FOYER DOUBLE 2

INNSBRUCK KÜNSTLER FOYER STAR 2

TIROL

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

EG / GROUND FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME / ROOMS*

ORANGERIE INN FOYER B/C/D

DOGANA STRASSBURG FOYER SERLES

STRASSBURG EUROPA FOYER 1

BRÜSSEL DOGANA FOYER 1

BRÜSSEL FOYER 1

1 (keine Einzelvermietung) + + = Teile des RENNWEG FOYERS1 (no individual rental) + + = Parts of the RENNWEG FOYER

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

1. OG / 1ST FLOOR

SÄLE / HALLS** FOYERS* RÄUME / ROOMS*

LUGGER KRISTALL FOYER STAR 1

MAXIMILIAN TIROL FOYER NORDKETTE

DOGANA

TIROL

** mit technischer Ausstattung, * ohne technische Ausstattung** with technical equipment, * without technical equipment

Konzertbestuhlung / Concert style seating

Schulbestuhlung / Classroom style seating

Bankettbestuhlung (runde Tische) / Banquet style seating (round tables)

Bankettbestuhlung (eckige Tische) / Banquet style seating (square tables)

GESAMTÜBERSICHT / OVERVIEW

EG / GROUND FLOOR

3. OG / 3RD FLOOR

1. OG / 1ST FLOOR

2. OG / 2ND FLOOR

FLOOR PLANS FLOOR PLANS

Registration: ground floor

Media Check:Room Serles ground floor

Session Halls:Hall Tirol (Plenary) 1st floor

Hall Innsbruck 2nd floor

Hall Brüssel ground floor

Meeting rooms: 3rd floor

Exhibition:Kristall Foyer 1st floor

Tirol Foyer 1st floor

Posters:Tirol Foyer 1st floor

Künstler Foyer 2nd floor

Meeting points for congress evening and excursions: Main entrance Congress Innsbruck

GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION

Page 54: 67 International Congress and Annual Meeting of the ...Dear Participants of the 67th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product

106 107

Sponsors

Pre-Congress Symposium Animal Health

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

We wish to acknowledge the generous financial support by the institutions and companies listed below:

Platinum Sponsor

Silver Sponsor

Bronze Sponsor

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Page 55: 67 International Congress and Annual Meeting of the ...Dear Participants of the 67th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product

2 Wagenlehner et al.: Non-antibiotic herbal therapy (BNO 1045) versus antibiotic therapy (fosfomycin trometamol) for the treatment of acute lower uncomplicated urinary tract infections in women: A double-blind, parallel-group, randomized, multicentre, non-inferiority Phase III trial. Urol Int. 2018; 101(3):327-336. doi:10.1159/000493368. Epub 2018 Sep 19. Canephron® forte Dragees: Qualitative und quantitative Zusammensetzung - 1 überzogene Tablette enthält: Liebstöckelwurzel (Levisti-ci radix) 36 mg; Rosmarinblätter (Rosmarini folium) 36 mg; Tausendgüldenkraut (Centaurii herba) 36 mg. Sonstige Bestandteile mit bekann-ter Wirkung: Glucose-Sirup 2,17 mg, Lactose-Monhydrat 90,00 mg, Sucrose (Saccharose) 120,86 mg, Lactose-Monohydrat, Magnesium-stearat, Maisstärke, Povidon K25, Hochdisperses Siliciumdioxid, Überzug: Calciumcarbonat, natives Rizinusöl, EisenOxid(E172), Dextrin, sprühgetrockneter Glucose-Sirup, Montanglycolwachs, Povidon K30, Sucrose (Saccharose), Schellack (wachsfrei), Talkum, Ribofl avin (E101), Titandi-oxid (E171) Anwendungsgebiete: Traditionelles pfl anzliches Arzneimittel zur unterstützenden Behandlung und zur Ergänzung spezifi scher Maßnah-men bei leichten Beschwerden (wie häufi ges Wasserlassen, Brennen beim Wasserlassen und häufi gem Harndrang) im Rahmen von entzündlichen Erkrankungen der ableitenden Harnwege; zur Durchspülung der Harnwege zur Verminderung der Ablagerung von Nierengrieß. Das Arzneimittel ist ein traditionelles pfl anzliches Arzneimittel, das ausschließlich auf Grund langjähriger Verwendung für die genannten Anwendungsgebiete regist-riert ist. Gegenanzeigen: Überempfi ndlichkeit gegen die Wirkstoffe, gegen andere Apiaceen (Umbelliferen, z. B. Anis, Fenchel), gegen Anethol (Be-standteil von ätherischen Ölen) oder gegen einen der sonstigen Bestandteile; Magengeschwür; Durchspülungstherapie bei Ödemen infolge einge-schränkter Herz- oder Nierenfunktion; ärztlich empfohlener Reduktion der Flüssigkeitsaufnahme ATC-Code: GO4BX. Stand der Information: 04/2018 Zulassungsinhaber und Hersteller BIONORICA SE, Kerschensteiner Str. 11-15, 92318 Neumarkt, Deutschland. Abgabe: Rezeptfrei, apothekenpfl ichtig. Weitere Angaben zu Warnhinweisen und Vorsichtsmaßnahmen für die Anwendung, Wechselwirkungen, Schwangerschaft und Stillzeit und Nebenwir-kungen entnehmen Sie bitte der veröffentlichten Fachinformation. BNO-AT_CAN-29_8_2019

Weitere Studieninformationen auf www.canephron.de/studie

Unkomplizierter Harnwegsinfekt?Canephron® auf Augenhöhe mit Antibiotikum!

lindert Brennen und Schmerzenlöst die Krämpfeunterstützt die Ausspülung der Bakterien

∆=-6,3 %; untere Grenze des 95 %-Konfidenzintervalls: -11,99 %; p=0,0014

Canephron® Fosfomycin

Nicht-Unter-legenheitsgrenze(-15 %)

100 %

90 %

80 %

70 %

60 %

50 %

40 %

30 %

20 %

10 %

0 %

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83,5 % 89,8 % Neue Studie belegt:Canephron®1 ist Fosfomycinhinsichtlich des Therapieerfolgsnicht unterlegen.2

Studiendesign: randomisierte, kontrollierte, doppelblinde, doppel-dummy, Phase-III-Studie zur Nicht-Unterlegenheit, n=659 Patientinnen mit akuter, unkomplizierter Blasenentzündung 1 Die Studie wurde mit Canephron® N Dragees durchgeführt. Die eingenommene Wirkstoff-menge pro Tag von Canephron® N Dragees im Vergleich zu Canephron® forte ist äquivalent.

Weitere Studieninformationen auf www.canephron.de/studie

unterstützt die Ausspülung der Bakterien

zur Nicht-Unterlegenheit, n=659 Patientinnen mit akuter, unkomplizierter Blasenentzündung

NEU: Nur 3x1 Dragee täglich

Canephron® forte

DD-2-Inserat Hauptprogramm GA 2019 Canephron Uno 2019-2019 08 02-CW.indd 1 02.08.19 11:49