199729-82-3Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Argicyclamides A-C Unveil Enzymatic Basis for Guanidine Bis-prenylation
Balloo, Nandani,Fujita, Kei,Matsuda, Kenichi,Okino, Tatsufumi,Phan, Chin-Soon,Wakimoto, Toshiyuki
, p. 10083 - 10087 (2021)
Guanidine prenylation is an outstanding modification in alkaloid and peptide biosynthesis, but its enzymatic basis has remained elusive. We report the isolation of argicyclamides, a new class of cyanobactins with unique mono- and bis-prenylations on guanidine moieties, from Microcystis aeruginosa NIES-88. The genetic basis of argicyclamide biosynthesis was established by the heterologous expression and in vitro characterization of biosynthetic enzymes including AgcF, a new guanidine prenyltransferase. This study provides important insight into the biosynthesis of prenylated guanidines and offers a new toolkit for peptide modification.
Melicopteline A-E, Unusual Cyclopeptide Alkaloids with Antiviral Activity against Influenza A Virus from Melicope pteleifolia
Lee, Ba Wool,Quy Ha, Thi Kim,Park, Eun Jin,Cho, Hyo Moon,Ryu, Byeol,Doan, Thi Phuong,Lee, Hee Ju,Oh, Won Keun
, p. 1437 - 1447 (2021/01/13)
In the search for antiviral cyclopeptides against influenza A virus, five unprecedented Caryophyllaceae-type cyclopeptides (1-5) were isolated from the leaves of Melicope pteleifolia. Their chemical structures and absolute configurations were unambiguousl
Octaminomycins A and B, cyclic octadepsipeptides active against Plasmodium falciparum
Jang, Jun-Pil,Nogawa, Toshihiko,Futamura, Yushi,Shimizu, Takeshi,Hashizume, Daisuke,Takahashi, Shunji,Jang, Jae-Hyuk,Ahn, Jong Seog,Osada, Hiroyuki
, p. 134 - 140 (2017/02/05)
Two new cyclic octadepsipeptides, octaminomycins A (1) and B (2), were isolated from a microbial metabolite fraction library of Streptomyces sp. RK85-270 based on Natural Products Plot screening. Their structures were elucidated on the basis of HRESIMS, 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopic data, and MS/MS experiments for sequence analysis. The absolute configurations of the constituent amino acid residues were determined by a combination of single-crystal X-ray diffraction and Marfey's methodology. Notably, octaminomycins A (1) and B (2) showed good in vitro antiplasmodial activity against chloroquine-sensitive as well as chloroquine-resistant strains with no cytotoxicity up to 30 μM. (Chemical Equation Presented).
Urumamide, a novel chymotrypsin inhibitor with a β-amino acid from a marine cyanobacterium Okeania sp.
Kanamori, Yuki,Iwasaki, Arihiro,Sumimoto, Shinpei,Suenaga, Kiyotake
supporting information, p. 4213 - 4216 (2016/08/25)
Urumamide, a novel cyclic depsipeptide that contains a β-amino acid, was isolated from a marine cyanobacterium Okeania sp. Its gross structure was determined by spectroscopic analyses, and the absolute configuration was established based on Marfey's analyses and chiral HPLC analyses of hydrolysis products. Biologically, urumamide inhibited the growth of human cancer cells. In addition, urumamide inhibited chymotrypsin.
Application of 3D NMR for Structure Determination of Peptide Natural Products
Zhang, Fan,Adnani, Navid,Vazquez-Rivera, Emmanuel,Braun, Doug R.,Tonelli, Marco,Andes, David R.,Bugni, Tim S.
, p. 8713 - 8719 (2015/09/15)
Despite the advances in NMR, structure determination is often slow and constitutes a bottleneck in natural products discovery. Removal of this bottleneck would greatly improve the throughput for antibiotic discovery as well as other therapeutic areas. Overall, faster structure methods for structure determination will serve the natural products community in a broad manner. This report describes the first application of 3D NMR for elucidation of two microbially produced peptide natural products with novel structures. The methods are cost-effective and greatly improve the confidence in a proposed structure.
Cyclic depsipeptides, grassypeptolides D and e and Ibu- epidemethoxylyngbyastatin 3, from a Red Sea Leptolyngbya cyanobacterium
Thornburg, Christopher C.,Thimmaiah, Muralidhara,Shaala, Lamiaa A.,Hau, Andrew M.,Malmo, Jay M.,Ishmael, Jane E.,Youssef, Diaa T. A.,McPhail, Kerry L.
experimental part, p. 1677 - 1685 (2011/11/04)
Two new grassypeptolides and a lyngbyastatin analogue, together with the known dolastatin 12, have been isolated from field collections and laboratory cultures of the marine cyanobacterium Leptolyngbya sp. collected from the SS Thistlegorm shipwreck in the Red Sea. The overall stereostructures of grassypeptolides D (1) and E (2) and Ibu-epidemethoxylyngbyastatin 3 (3) were determined by a combination of 1D and 2D NMR experiments, MS analysis, Marfey's methodology, and HPLC-MS. Compounds 1 and 2 contain 2-methyl-3-aminobutyric acid and 2-aminobutyric acid, while biosynthetically distinct 3 contains 3-amino-2-methylhexanoic acid and the β-keto amino acid 4-amino-2,2-dimethyl-3-oxopentanoic acid (Ibu). Grassypeptolides D (1) and E (2) showed significant cytotoxicity to HeLa (IC50 = 335 and 192 nM, respectively) and mouse neuro-2a blastoma cells (IC50 = 599 and 407 nM, respectively), in contrast to Ibu-epidemethoxylyngbyastatin 3 (neuro-2a cells, IC50 > 10 μM) and dolastatin 12 (neuro-2a cells, IC 50 > 1 μM).
Callyaerins A-F and H, new cytotoxic cyclic peptides from the Indonesian marine sponge Callyspongia aerizusa
Ibrahim, Sabrin R.M.,Min, Cho Cho,Teuscher, Franka,Ebel, Rainer,Kakoschke, Christel,Lin, Wenhan,Wray, Victor,Edrada-Ebel, Ruangelie,Proksch, Peter
supporting information; experimental part, p. 4947 - 4956 (2010/09/10)
Bioassay guided fractionation of the EtOAc fraction of the sponge Callyspongia aerizusa yielded seven new cytotoxic cyclic peptides callyaerins A-F (1-6) and H (8). Their structures were determined using extensive 1D ( 1H, 13C and DEPT) and 2D (COSY, HMQC, HMBC, TOCSY, and ROESY) NMR and mass spectral (ESI and HRESI-TOF) data. All compounds were cyclic peptides containing ring systems of 5-9 amino acids and side chains of 2-5 amino acids in length. An unusual (Z)-2,3-diaminoacrylic acid unit provided the template for ring closure and afforded the linkage to the peptidic side chain which was always initiated with a proline moiety. All peptides contained three or more proline residues and the remaining residues were predominantly hydrophobic residues with all amino acids present in the l form. Callyaerins A-F (1-6) and H (8) showed biological activity in antibacterial assays and in various cytotoxicity assays employing different tumour cell-lines (L5178Y, HeLa, and PC12). Callyaerins E (5) and H (8) exhibited strong activity against the L5178Y cell line with ED50 values of 0.39 and 0.48 μM, respectively. On the other hand, callyaerin A (1) showed strong inhibitory properties towards C. albicans.
