| Literature DB >> 30680548 |
Ahmed Tawfike1,2, Eman Zekry Attia3, Samar Yehia Desoukey3, Dina Hajjar4, Arwa A Makki4, Peter J Schupp5, RuAngelie Edrada-Ebel1, Usama Ramadan Abdelmohsen6.
Abstract
Several approaches have been dedicated to activate the cryptic gene clusters in the genomes of actinomycetes for the targeted discovery of new fascinating biomedical lead structures. In the current study, N-acetylglucosamine was used to maximize the chemical diversity of sponge-derived actinomycete Actinokineospora spheciospongiae sp. nov. HR-ESI-MS was employed for dereplication study and orthogonal partial least square-discriminant analysis was applied to evaluate the HR-ESI-MS data of the different fractions. As a result, two new fridamycins H (1) and I (2), along with three known compounds actinosporin C (3), D (4), and G (5) were isolated from the solid culture of sponge-associated actinomycete Actinokineospora spheciospongiae sp. nov., elicited with N-acetylglucosamine. Characterization of the isolated compounds was pursued using mass spectrometry and NMR spectral data. Fridamycin H (1) exhibited significant growth inhibitory activity towards Trypanosoma brucei strain TC221. These results highlight the potential of elicitation in sponge-associated actinomycetes as an effective strategy for the discovery of new anti-infective natural products.Entities:
Keywords: Actinokineospora; Actinomycetes; Antitrypanosomal; Elicitation; Fridamycin; Sponges
Year: 2019 PMID: 30680548 PMCID: PMC6345950 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-018-0730-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
1H and 13C NMR data (DMSO-d6, 600 and 150 MHz) of 1
| Position | δH, mult ( | δC, type | COSY | HMBC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7.95, d (7.8) | 120.6, CH | H-2 | C-3, 10 |
| 2 | 7.86, dd (7.8, 8.4) | 135.4, CH | H-1, 3 | C-4, 10a |
| 3 | 7.70, d (8.4) | 123.6, CH | H-2 | C-1, 4a |
| 4 | – | 156.8, C | – | – |
| 4a | – | 122.3, C | – | – |
| 5 | – | 181.2, C | – | – |
| 5a | – | 133.4, C | – | – |
| 6 | 7.61, d (7.8) | 118.2, CH | H-7 | C-8, 9a, 5 |
| 7 | 7.78, d (7.8) | 141.0, CH | H-6 | C-5a, 9 |
| 8 | – | 133.4, C | – | – |
| 9 | – | 160.3, C | – | – |
| 9a | – | 115.1, C | – | – |
| 10 | – | 188.9, C | – | – |
| 10a | – | 135.2, C | – | – |
| 11a | 2.88, d (13.2) | 40.1, CH2 | – | C-7, 9 |
| 12 | – | 71.5, C | – | – |
| 13 | 2.40, s | 46.7, CH2 | – | C-11 |
| 14 | – | 172.8, C | – | – |
| 15 | 1.19, s | 26.8, CH3 | – | C-11, 13 |
| 1′ | 5.64, d (1.8) | 99.3, CH | H-2′ | C-4′, 5′ |
| 2′ | 3.99, m | 70.5, CH | H-1′ | C-1′ |
| 3′ | 3.99, m | 70.5, CH | H-4′ | – |
| 4′ | 3.33, m | 72.0, CH | H-3′ | – |
| 5′ | 3.52, m | 70.4, CH | H-4′, 6′ | – |
| 6′ | 1.09, d (6) | 18.4, CH3 | H-5′ | C-5′, 4′ |
1H and 13C NMR data (DMSO-d6, 600 and 150 MHz) of 2
| Position | δH, mult ( | δC, type | COSY | HMBC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7.95, d (7.8) | 120.6, CH | H-2 | C-3, 4a, 10 |
| 2 | 7.85, dd (7.8, 8.4) | 135.5, CH | H-1, 3 | C-4, 10a |
| 3 | 7.70, d (8.4) | 123.8, CH | H-2 | C-1, 4a |
| 4 | – | 156.7, C | – | – |
| 4a | – | 122.1, C | – | – |
| 5 | – | 180.8, C | – | – |
| 5a | – | 133.35, C | – | – |
| 6 | 7.61, d (7.8) | 118.3, CH | H-7 | C-8, 9a, 5 |
| 7 | 7.79, d (7.8) | 140.3, CH | H-6 | C5a, 9, 11 |
| 8 | – | 133.2, C | – | – |
| 9 | – | 160.3, C | – | – |
| 9a | – | 115.1, C | – | – |
| 10 | – | 189.0, C | – | – |
| 10a | – | 135.3, C | – | – |
| 11a | 2.88, d (13.2) | 39.9, CH | – | C-7, 9, 13, 15 |
| 12 | – | 71.4, C | – | – |
| 13 | 2.39, s | 46.6, CH2 | – | C-11, 15 |
| 14 | – | 173.2, C | – | – |
| 15 | 1.18, s | 26.5, CH3 | – | C-11, 13 |
| 16 | 3.54, s | 40.9, CH2 | – | C-14, 1″, 2″, 6″ |
| 1′ | 5.64, d (1.8) | 99.0, CH | H-2′ | C-4, 5″ |
| 2′ | 3.99, m | 70.4, CH | H-1′ | C-1″ |
| 3′ | 3.99, m | 70.5, CH | H-4′ | – |
| 4′ | 3.33, m | 72.0, CH | H-3′ | – |
| 5′ | 3.52 m | 70.6, CH | H-4′, 6′ | – |
| 6′ | 1.08, d (6) | 18.2, CH3 | H-5′ | C-5″, 4″ |
| 1″ | – | 135.5, C | – | – |
| 2″, 6″ | 7.25, m | 129.7, CH | H-3″, 5″ | – |
| 3″, 5″ | 7.30, m | 128.7, CH | H-2″, 6″ | – |
| 4″ | 7.24 m | 127.0, CH | – | – |
| 14-NH | 8.17 br s | – | – | – |
The dereplication results of the active fractions against DNP database
| Polarity | m/z | Rt | Formula | Name | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [M−H]− | 387.0865 | 6.65 | C23H16O6 | G-2N | |
| [M+H]+ | 188.1279 | 7.69 | C9H17NO3 | Unknown | – |
| [M−H]− | 343.0952 | 8.67 | C18H12N6O2 | Unknown | – |
| [M+H]+ | 227.1753 | 9.00 | C12H22N2O2 | Isoleucyl isoleucine anhydride | |
| [M−H]− | 369.0751 | 9.84 | C19H10N6O3 | Unknown | – |
| [M−H]− | 1003.325 | 9.86 | – | Complex of 501.1586 and 501.1586 m/z | |
| [M−H]− | 501.1586 | 9.86 | C31H18N8 | Unknown | – |
| [M+H]+ | 357.097 | 9.88 | C19H16O7 | Fridamycin E | |
| [M−H]− | 401.1025 | 10.44 | C24H18O6 | Saptomycin-F | |
| [M+H]+ | 357.0968 | 15.66 | C16H8N10O | Unknown | – |
| [M−H]− | 355.0954 | 15.67 | C19H12N6O2 | Unknown | – |
Fig. 1Dereplicated structures from the active fractions: G-2N and saptomycin F
Fig. 2a OPLS-DA score plot of active (red circle) versus inactive fractions (yellow circle). b S-loading plot showing the putatively active metabolites
Fig. 3Structures of the isolated compounds: fridamycin H (1) and I (2), actinosprin C (3), D (4) and G (5)
Fig. 4Key COSY and HMBC correlations of fridamycin H (1) and I (2)