| Literature DB >> 35401071 |
Afra Khiralla1, Aisha Ohag Mohammed2, Sakina Yagi3.
Abstract
Perylenequinones (PQs) are aromatic polyketides with an oxidized pentacyclic core that make up a family of natural compounds. Naturally occurring PQs mostly are produced by phytopathogenic fungi, with few aphides, crinoids, and plants. PQs, also known as photosensitizers, absorb light energy which empowers them to produce reactive oxygen species that damage host cells. Therefore, PQs gained a considerable interest in pharmaceutical application notably in photodynamic therapy. This review presents a comprehensive overview of fungal PQs. Their occurrence, categorization, biosynthesis, structures, and bioactivities are all discussed in detail. After that, an analysis outlines their distribution across the kingdom of fungi. A total of 66 fungal PQs have been described from 22 ascomycete genera (Alternaria, Aspergillus, Bulgaria, Cenococcum, Cercospora, Cladosporium, Curvularia, Daldinia, Elsinoë, Hypocrella, Hypomyces, Parastagonospora, Phaeosphaeria, Phylacia, Pyrenochaeta, Rhopalostroma, Rubroshiraia, Setophoma, Shiraia, Stemphylium, Stagonospora, and Thamnomyces). Dothideomycetes account for the majority of documented fungal PQs (82%), followed by Sordariomycetes (14%), Leotiomycetes (3%), and Eurotiomycetes (1%). Herein, five families Pleosporaceae, Phaeosphaeriaceae, Cladosporiaceae, Shiraiaceae, and Hypoxylaceae are highlighted as potential sources of novel PQs due to their diversity. The review intends to pique bioprospectors' interest in fungal PQs. Indeed, the pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries might gain greatly by exploiting fungal perylenequinones. Graphical abstract. © German Mycological Society and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2022.Entities:
Keywords: Dothideomycetes; Fungal natural products; Perylenequinones; Photodynamic therapy; Sordariomycetes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35401071 PMCID: PMC8977438 DOI: 10.1007/s11557-022-01790-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycol Prog ISSN: 1617-416X Impact factor: 2.538
Fig. 1Classification of perylenequinones
List of PQ-producing genera
| Perylenequinone classes | Genera | References |
|---|---|---|
| Class A | (Idris et al. | |
| (Zhang et al. | ||
| (Xian et al. | ||
| (Peter et al. | ||
| (Cruz et al. | ||
| (Anderson and Murray | ||
(Wendt et al. (Stadler et al. | ||
| (Bazioli et al. | ||
| (Podlech et al. | ||
| (Wendt et al. | ||
| Class B | (Mastrangelopoulou et al. | |
| (Pettit | ||
| (Jiao et al. | ||
| (Li et al. | ||
| (Liu et al. | ||
| (Chooi et al. | ||
| (Li et al. | ||
| (Kurobane et al. | ||
| (Dai et al. | ||
| (Fang et al. | ||
| (Ahonsi et al. |
Fig. 2Axial chirality P and M of perylenequinones
Fig. 3The biosynthetic gene clusters of cercosporin CTB, elsinochrome A (45) elc, and hypocrellin A (50) HYP. Modified from Chooi et al. (2017) and Hu et al. (2019)
Fig. 4Proposed biosynthetic pathway for three perylenequinones of class B: cercosporin (30), elsinochrome A (45), and hypocrellin (50). Modified from Hu et al. (2019)
List of fungal PQs that have been discovered and their producers
| PQs’ class | Perylenequinone | Producer | Source | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class A | 1) 3,6,6a,9,10-pentahydroxy-7,8-epoxy-4-oxo-4,5,6,6a,6b,7,8,9-octahydroperylene | Endophytic fungus from | (Tantry et al. | |
| 2) 3,6,6a,7,10-pentahydroxy-4,9-dioxo-4,5,6,6a,6b,7,8,9-octahydroperylene | (Tantry et al. | |||
3) altertoxin I 4) altertoxin II 5) altertoxin III | – | (Stack and Prival | ||
6) 6-methoxy-3,6a,7,10-tetrahydroxy-4,9-dioxo-4,5,6,6a,6b,7,8,9-octahydroperylene 7) 3,6a,9,10-tetrahydroxy-7,8-epoxy-4-oxo-4,5,6,6a,6b,7,8,9-octahydroperylene 8) 6-methoxy-3,6a,9,10-tetrahydroxy-7,8-epoxy-4-oxo-4,5,6,6a,6b,7,8,9-octahydroperylene 9) dehydroaltertoxin I altertoxin I ( | Endophytic fungus from | (Idris et al. | ||
10) altertoxin VII 11) butyl xanalterate | Sponge-derived fungus | (Pang et al. | ||
12) alterlosin I 13) alterlosin II | Pathogenic fungus from | (Stierle et al. | ||
14) 8β-chloro-3,6aα,7β,9β,10-pentahydroxy-9,8,7,6 atetrahydroperylen-4(6aH)-one 15) alterperylenol 16) dihydroalterperylenol | Halotolerant fungus Endophytic of | (Zhang et al. (Zhang et al. | ||
17) , 7- 18) 6- 19) stemphyperylenol altertoxin I ( | Marine endophytic fungus from algal species of the genus | (Gao et al. | ||
| 20) alteichin | Phytopathogenic fungus | (Robeson et al. | ||
| 21) stemphyltoxin III | – | (Davis and Stack | ||
22) 1,4,6b,7,10-pentahydroxy-1,2,6b,7,8,12b-hexahydroperylene-3,9-dione 23) 1,4,9,12a-tetrahydroxy-12-methoxy-1,2,11,12,12a,12b-hexahydroperylene-3,10-dione | Endophytic fungus | (Chagas et al. | ||
| 24) 1,4,9-trihydroxy-1,2-dihydroperylene-3,10-dione | ||||
| 25) 4,9-dihydroxyperylene-3, l0-quinone | – | (Anderson and Murray | ||
| 26) 4,9-dihydroxy-1,2,11,12-tetrahydroperylene-3,10-quinone | – | (Xian et al. | ||
27) methylated 12- alterperylenol ( dihydroalterperylenol ( | – | (Cruz et al. | ||
28) stemphyltoxin I 29) stemphyltoxin IV altertoxin II ( stemphyltoxin III ( | – | (Podlech et al. | ||
| Class B | 30) cercosporin | – | (Kuyama and Tamura | |
| 31) phleichrome | Pathogenic fungus of | (Seto et al. | ||
32) 33) cladochrome A 34) cladochrome B | Pathogen | (Arnone et al. | ||
35) cladochrome C 36) cladochrome D 37) cladochrome E | – | (Arnone et al., | ||
38) cladochrome F 39) cladochrome G | – | (Williams et al. | ||
40) calphostin A 41) calphostin B 42) calphostin C 43) calphostin D 44) calphostin I | – | (Iida et al. (Li et al. | ||
45) elsinochrome A 46) elsinochrome B 47) elsinochrome C 48) elsinochrome D | Pathogen | (Weiss et al. | ||
49) hypocrellin 50) hypocrellin A 51) hypocrellin B 52) hypocrellin D | Pathogen | (Wu et al. | ||
53) hypomycin A 54) hypomycin B 55) hypomycin C 56) hypomycin E 57) hypomycin F 58) hypomycin D | – | (Liu et al. | ||
59) phaeosphaerin A 60) phaeosphaerin B 61) phaeosphaerin C 62) phaeosphaerin D 63) phaeosphaerin E 64) phaeosphaerin F | Endolichenic fungus from | (Li et al. | ||
65) shiraiachrome A 66) | Pathogenic fungus of bamboos | (Mulrooey et al. |
Fig. 5Perylenequinones described from the genera Alternaria and Setophoma
Fig. 6Reported perylenequinones from the genera Alternaria, Aspergillus, Bulgaria, Cenococcum, Curvularia, Daldinia, Phylacia, Rhopalostroma, Setophoma, Stemphylium, and Thamnomyces
Fig. 7Reported perylenequinones from the genera Cercospora and Cladosporium
Fig. 8Produced perylenequinones by the genera Elsinoë, Hypocrella, Hypomyces, Parastagonospora, Pyrenochaeta, and Stagonospora
Fig. 9Described perylenequinones from the genera Phaeosphaeria and Shiraia
Fig. 10Number of fungal PQs per genus
Fig. 11Distribution of PQs among fungal classes
List of families and number of PQ-producing genera
| Family | Number of genera* | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | (Zhang et al. | |
| 1 | (Arnone et al., | |
| 1 | (Wu et al. | |
| 1 | (Jiao et al. | |
| 1 | (Itoh et al. | |
| 1 | (Liu et al. | |
| 4 | (Anderson and Murray | |
| 1 | (Boss et al. | |
| 1 | (Mastrangelopoulou et al. | |
| 1 | (Weiss et al. | |
| 3 | (Li et al. | |
| 3 | (Kurobane et al. | |
| 2 | (Wu et al. |
*Pyrenochaeta (Pleosporales genus incertae sedis) is excluded from the table
Fig. 12Outline of PQ-producing fungi