Advances in Natural Product Extraction: Established and Emerging Technologies

Molecules. 2026 Mar 30;31(7):1136. doi: 10.3390/molecules31071136.

Abstract

Natural product research has experienced substantial growth over the past two decades, driven by a renewed appreciation for the structural complexity and biological relevance of compounds derived from nature. Technological advances in separation science, spectroscopic characterization, and high-sensitivity bioassays have collectively restored natural products to a position of prominence in modern drug discovery efforts. Nature remains the most prolific source of bioactive molecular diversity, drawing from microorganisms, plants, and marine life to offer a vast reservoir of structurally novel scaffolds whose pharmacological potential remains largely unexplored. Effective extraction and isolation remain foundational to natural product research, as the quality and purity of isolated compounds directly govern the reliability of downstream biological evaluation. Recent years have witnessed remarkable innovation in this space, spanning green and designer solvent systems, pressurized and ultrasound-assisted extraction platforms, supercritical fluid techniques, and integrated purification workflows that dramatically reduce processing time while improving compound recovery and analytical throughput. Particularly noteworthy is the growing application of artificial intelligence and machine learning tools for solvent selection, extraction optimization, and metabolite dereplication, which in combination with advanced phase-separation strategies and informatic platforms have substantially expanded the scope of detectable and characterizable metabolites within complex biological matrices. This review summarizes recent progress in extraction and isolation methodologies supporting natural product research, with particular emphasis on combinatorial extraction strategies, next-generation solvent systems, and AI-driven applications that have collectively improved operational efficiency, selectivity, and analytical output over the past five years.

Keywords: bioactivity; extraction; natural products.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biological Products* / chemistry
  • Biological Products* / isolation & purification
  • Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid / methods
  • Drug Discovery
  • Machine Learning
  • Solvents / chemistry

Substances

  • Biological Products
  • Solvents