| Literature DB >> 24394406 |
Deepak Kumar Gupta1, Parveen Kaur2, See Ting Leong3, Lik Tong Tan4, Michèle R Prinsep5, Justin Jang Hann Chu6.
Abstract
Tropical filamentous marine cyanobacteria have emerged as a viable source of novel bioactive natural products for drug discovery and development. In the present study, aplysiatoxin (1), debromoaplysiatoxin (2) and anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin (3), as well as two new analogues, 3-methoxyaplysiatoxin (4) and 3-methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5), are reported for the first time from the marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium erythraeum. The identification of the bloom-forming cyanobacterial strain was confirmed based on phylogenetic analysis of its 16S rRNA sequences. Structural determination of the new analogues was achieved by extensive NMR spectroscopic analysis and comparison with NMR spectral data of known compounds. In addition, the antiviral activities of these marine toxins were assessed using Chikungunya virus (CHIKV)-infected cells. Post-treatment experiments using the debrominated analogues, namely compounds 2, 3 and 5, displayed dose-dependent inhibition of CHIKV when tested at concentrations ranging from 0.1 µM to 10.0 µM. Furthermore, debromoaplysiatoxin (2) and 3-methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5) exhibited significant anti-CHIKV activities with EC50 values of 1.3 μM and 2.7 μM, respectively, and selectivity indices of 10.9 and 9.2, respectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24394406 PMCID: PMC3917264 DOI: 10.3390/md12010115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Aplysiatoxin-related compounds from Trichodesmium erythraeum.
1D NMR spectral data for 3-methoxyaplysiatoxin (4) and 3-methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5) measured at 400 MHz (1H) and 100 MHz (13C) in CDCl3.
| 3-Methoxyaplysiatoxin (4) | 3-Methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Position | δH mult ( | δC | δH mult ( | δC | |
| 1 | 170.17 s | 170.24 s | |||
| 2 | 2.84 m | 45.65 t | 2.82 m | 45.65 t | |
| 3 | 99.81 s | 99.70 s | |||
| 4 | 1.63 m | 34.19 d | 1.69 m | 34.04 d | |
| 5 | 1.53 m | 40.36 t | 1.52 m | 40.26 t | |
| 6 | 36.95 s | 36.88 s | |||
| 7 | 102.07 s | 102.02 s | |||
| 8 | 1.25 m | 30.72 t | 1.38 m | 31.43 t | |
| 9 | 4.78 d (2.8) | 74.67 d | 4.76 d (2.5) | 74.63 d | |
| 10 | 2.31 m | 36.91 d | 2.30 m | 36.84 d | |
| 11 | 3.87 m | 72.49 d | 3.79 m | 72.34 d | |
| 12 | 1.54 m | 33.93 d | 1.54 m | 33.71 d | |
| 13 | 2.72 m | 36.22 t | 2.76 m | 35.98 t | |
| 14 | 1.83 m | 34.76 t | 1.95 m | 35.92 t | |
| 15 | 4.58 t (6.4) | 82.89 d | 4.06 t (6.9) | 85.31 d | |
| 16 | 142.88 s | 144.29 s | |||
| 17 | 114.02 s | 6.85 d (7.5) | 119.10 d | ||
| 18 | 7.35 d (8.8) | 133.75 d | 7.19 t (7.8) | 129.86 d | |
| 19 | 6.65 dd (3.0, 8.6) | 115.52 d | 6.75 dd (1.5, 8.0) | 115.02 d | |
| 20 | 156.05 s | 156.55 s | |||
| 21 | 6.99 d (2.8) | 116.80 d | 6.91 s | 114.30 d | |
| 22 | 0.83 d (3.2) | 16.06 q | 0.86 d (6.7) | 16.00 q | |
| 23 | 0.94 s | 29.08 q | 0.94 s | 29.13 q | |
| 24 | 0.93 s | 27.44 q | 0.93 s | 27.40 q | |
| 25 | 0.79 d (3.7) | 14.00 q | 0.72 d (1.2) | 13.77 q | |
| 26 | 0.81 d (4.6) | 11.94 q | 0.75 d (5.2) | 12.81 q | |
| 27 | 3.27 s | 49.40 q | 3.27 s | 49.28 q | |
| 28 | 170.42 s | 170.60 s | |||
| 29 | 2.31 m | 32.46 t | 2.31 m | 32.35 t | |
| 30 | 5.42 ddd (2.4, 4.0, 12.4) | 73.09 d | 5.43 ddd (2.5, 4.5, 10.8) | 73.24 d | |
| 31 | 3.82 m | 69.15 d | 3.82 m | 68.81 d | |
| 32 | 1.19 d (6.4) | 19.42 q | 1.19 d (6.4) | 19.11 q | |
| 33 | 3.25 s | 57.23 q | 3.24 s | 56.93 q | |
Figure 2Dose-dependent studies of antiviral activities of (A) debromoaplysiatoxin (2); (B) anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin (3); and (C) 3-methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5). SJCRH30 cells were treated with marine toxins either before (pre-treatment) or after (post-treatment) infection with CHIKV. Cell culture supernatants were harvested at 24 hpi (h postinfection) for titration via plaque assays. All compounds displayed statistically significant dose-dependent inhibition of CHIKV titres upon post-treatment and minimal cytotoxicity was observed upon treatment of SJCRH30 cells with marine compounds for 24 h. Statistical significance was analyzed by one-way ANOVA and Dunnett’s post-test (*, p ≤ 0.05; ***, p < 0.001; ****, p < 0.0001). (Error bars for dose-dependent and cell viability studies represent standard errors of means from three independent and from at least two independent experiments, respectively.)
Anti-Chikungunya viral activities of debromoaplysiatoxin (2), anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin (3), and 3-methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin (5).
| Compounds | EC50 (μM) | CC50 (μM) | SI (CC50/EC50) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Debromoaplysiatoxin ( | 1.3 | 13.9 | 10.9 |
| Anhydrodebromoaplysiatoxin ( | 22.3 | 255.5 | 11.4 |
| 3-Methoxydebromoaplysiatoxin ( | 2.7 | 24.8 | 9.2 |