| Literature DB >> 27350338 |
Komal Anjum1, Syed Qamar Abbas2, Sayed Asmat Ali Shah1, Najeeb Akhter1, Sundas Batool3, Syed Shams Ul Hassan1.
Abstract
Marine sponges have been considered as a drug treasure house with respect to great potential regarding their secondary metabolites. Most of the studies have been conducted on sponge's derived compounds to examine its pharmacological properties. Such compounds proved to have antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal, antimalarial, antitumor, immunosuppressive, and cardiovascular activity. Although, the mode of action of many compounds by which they interfere with human pathogenesis have not been clear till now, in this review not only the capability of the medicinal substances have been examined in vitro and in vivo against serious pathogenic microbes but, the mode of actions of medicinal compounds were explained with diagrammatic illustrations. This knowledge is one of the basic components to be known especially for transforming medicinal molecules to medicines. Sponges produce a different kind of chemical substances with numerous carbon skeletons, which have been found to be the main component interfering with human pathogenesis at different sites. The fact that different diseases have the capability to fight at different sites inside the body can increase the chances to produce targeted medicines.Entities:
Keywords: Antitumor; Antiviral; Microbes; Pathogenesis; Pharmacokinetics; Sponges
Year: 2016 PMID: 27350338 PMCID: PMC4930278 DOI: 10.4062/biomolther.2016.067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomol Ther (Seoul) ISSN: 1976-9148 Impact factor: 4.634
Fig. 1.The chemical structure of sponge derived molecules. (A) Xestospongin C (Xestospongia sp./macrocyclic bis-oxaquinolizidine. (B) Ara-A (Cryptotethia crypta/unusal nucleoside). (C) Contignasterol (Petrosia contignata/oxygenated sterol). (D) Jaspamide (Hemiastrella minor/macrocyclic lactam/lactone). (E) Manolide (Sesterterpenoids/Luffariella variabilis sp). (F) Agelasphin (Agelas mauritianus/agalactosy-ceramide).
Examples of antibacterial compounds
| Substance | Chemistry | Species | Activity Spectrum | MIC Value | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discodermins B, C and D | Cyclic peptide | Antibacterial ( | 3 μg/ml | ||
| Arenosclerins A–C | Alkyl pepridine alkaloid | 16 μg/ml | |||
| Haliclona cyclamine E | Alkylpiperidine alkaloids | 8 μg/ml | |||
| CvL | Lectine | 16 μg/ml | |||
| Axinellamines B–D | Imidazo-azolo-imidazole alkaloid | 16.7 μg/ml | |||
| Caminosides A–D | Glycolipids | 16 μg/ml | |||
| 6-hydroxymanzamine E | Alkaloid | 0.9 μg/ml | |||
| Cribrostatin 3 | Alkaloid | - | |||
| Cribrostatin 6 | Alkaloid | ≤2 | |||
| Isojaspic acid, cacospongin D and jaspaquinol | Meroditerpenes | 20 μg/ml | |||
| Isoaaptamine | Alkaloid | 3.7 μg/ml | |||
| (−)-Microcionin-1 | Terpenoid | 6 μg/ml |
S. aureus
M. tuberculosis,
M. luetus
Examples of antiviral compounds
| Substances | Chemistry | Species | Action spectrum | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-Methylaaptamine | Alkaloid | Anti-viral (HSV-1) | ||
| Papuamides A–D | Cyclic depsipeptides | Anti-viral (HIV-1) | ||
| Ara-A | Nucleoside | HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV | ||
| Avarol | Sesquiterpene hydroquinone | HIV-1,UAG suppressor Glutamine tRNA inhibitor | ||
| Haplosamates A and B | Sulfamated steroid | Xestospongia sp./Haplosclerida | Anti-viral (HIV-1Integrase inhibitor) | |
| Dragmacidin F | Alkaloid | HIV-1 | ||
| Hamigeran B | Phenolic Macrolide | Anti-viral (herpes and polio virus) | ||
| Mycalamide A–B | Nucleosides | A59 coronavirus, (HSV-1) | ||
| Mirabamides A, C and D | Peptide | Antiviral (HIV-1) | ||
| Oroidin | Alkaloid | Antiviral (HIV-1) |
Fig. 2.Molecular structures of avarol (a: R1 = H) and 6¢- hydroxy avarol (A: R1 = OH) and avarone (B: R1 = H) and 3¢- hydroxy avarone (B: R1 = OH).
Fig. 3.Molecular structure of Acyclovir and Ara-c (Acyclovir is a drug of choice for Herpes virus).
Examples of antiviral compounds
| Substances | Chemistry | Species | Action spectrum | MIC value | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jaspamide | Macrocyclic depsipeptide | 25 μg/ml | |||
| Eurysterols A–B | Sterols | 62.5 μg/ml | |||
| Naamine D | Imidazole alkaloid | 6.25 μg/ml | |||
| Mirabilin B | Tricyclic guanidine alkaloid | 7.0 μg/ml | |||
| Hamacanthin A | Indole alkaloid | 6.25 μg/ml | |||
| Macanthins A–B | Indole alkaloid | 1.6 μg/ml | |||
| Agelasines and agelasimines | Purine derivative | 15.6 μg/ml |
MIC: Minimum Inhibitory Concentration,
C. albicans,
C. neoformans.
Examples of anti-malarial compounds
| Substances | Chemistry | Species | Action spectrum | IC50 value | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monamphilectine A | Antimalarial β-lactam | 0.6 μM | |||
| Manzamine A | Alkaloids | 4.5 ng/ml | |||
| Kalihinol A | Isonitril-containing kalihinane diterpenoid | 0.0005 μg/ml | |||
| Diisocyanoadociane | Tetracyclic diterpene | 0.005 μg/ml | |||
| Halichondramide | Macrolides | 0.002 μg/ml | |||
| Sigmosceptrellin-B | Norsesterterpene acid | 1200 ng/ml | |||
| (E)-Oroidin | Alkaloids | 0.30 μg/ml | |||
| Plakortin and dihydroplakortin | Cycloperoxidase | 1263-1117 nM |
IC50: Inhibitory Concentration,
P. falciparum (D10),
P. falciparum (D6 clone),
Chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum (W2). [h] Fattorusso et al., 2002.
Fig. 4.Structure of Antimalarial compounds; Manzamine A; Monamphilectine A; Kalihinol A.
Fig. 5.Diagrammatic process of Inflammatory cascade inside the cell. Phospholipase A2 (PLA2) catalyzes the release of membrane-bound arachidonic acid (AA) to free arachidonic acid. Arachidonic acid is then converted to leukotrienes and prostaglandins by lipoxygenase (LOX) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), respectively. Sponge derived anti-inflammatory substances are mainly inhibitors of PLA2 or LOX, while nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) inhibit COX-2, but also the constitutive COX-1.
Examples of anti-tumor compounds
| Compound | Chemistry | Species/order | Mode of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isoaaptamine | Benzonaphthyridine alkaloid | Protein kinase C inhibitor | ||
| Debromohymenialdisine | Pyrrole-guanidine alkaloid, prenylhydroquinone derivative | Protein kinase C inhibitor | ||
| Adociasulfates | Triterpenoid hydroquinones | A1, 3-fucosyltransferase inhibitor Kinesin motor protein inhibitors | ||
| Discodermolide | Linear tetraene lactone | Stabilization of microtubules | ||
| Peloruside A | Macrocyclic lactone | Stabilization of microtubules | ||
| Elenic acid | Alkylphenol | Topoisomerase II inhibitor | ||
| Naamine D | Imidazole alkaloid | Nitric oxide synthetase inhibitor | ||
| Agelasphin (KRN7000) | a-Galactosylceramide | NKT cell activator | ||
| Crambescidins 1–4 | Pentacyclic guanidine derivative | Ca2+/channel blocker | ||
| Discorhabdin D | Fused pyrrolophenanthroline alkaloid | Unknown | ||
| Glaciasterols A and B | 9, 11-Secosterol | Unknown | ||
| Durumolides A–C | Terpenoid | Inducible NOS and COX-2 inhibition | ||
| Plakortide P | Polyketide | TXB2 inhibition | ||
| 24-methoxypetrosaspongia C | Sesterterpenes | Unknown |
Fig. 6.Diagrammatic representation of body immune response towards antigen capturing by Macrophages. The macrophages and T-helper cells secrete many interleukins (IL-x) or macrophage activation factor (MAF), to trigger primary immune response with the help of neutrophils, or the secondary immune response by activating the B and resting T-cells. The activated B cells secrete antibodies which bind to macrophages that already have phagocytized an antigen, and then killed by T-killer cells. The sign shows the sponge derived substances.
Examples of immunosuppressive compounds
| Compounds | Chemistry | Species/ order | Mode of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simplexides | Glycolopids | Inhibitors of T cell proliferation | ||
| Polyoxygenated sterols | Sterol | IL 8 inhibitor | ||
| Contignasterol | Oxygenated sterol | Histamine release inhibitor | ||
| Pateamine A | Thiazole macrolide | IL-2 inhibitor | ||
| Iso-iantheran A | Polyketide | Ionotropic P2Y11 receptor activation |
Cardiovascular compound examples
| Compounds | Chemistry | Species/ order | Mode of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyclotheonamide A | Cyclic pentapeptide | Serine protease inhibitor | ||
| Eryloside F | Penasterol disaccharide | Thrombin receptor antagonist | ||
| Halichlorine | Cyclic aza Polyketide | VCAM 1 |
VCAM: vascular cell adhesion molecule.
Fig. 7.Blood coagulation (Thrombosis) and atherosclerosis (arterial disease characterized by the deposition of plaques of fatty material on their inner walls) pathway in vivo showing central role played by Thrombin. X111 represent fibrin stabilizing factor (enzyme responsible for blood coagulation). The Sign shows the sponge derived compounds.
Fig. 8.The mechanism of adrenergic receptors. A represent α-receptors and trigger the IP3 (Inositol triphosphate) which then increase the Ca2+ level in cytoplasm and causing muscles contraction. B represents β-adrenoreceptors. The represents Marine compounds. Xestospongin C inhibit the phospholipase enzyme which play a key role in activation of IP3 (Inositol triphosphate) and block Ca2+ channels. S1319 B-2 receptor agonist resulting Bronchodilation and uterus relaxation.