| Literature DB >> 35736166 |
Alberto Falco1, Mikolaj Adamek2, Patricia Pereiro3, David Hoole4, José Antonio Encinar1, Beatriz Novoa3, Ricardo Mallavia1.
Abstract
The high proliferation of microorganisms in aquatic environments has allowed their coevolution for billions of years with other living beings that also inhabit these niches. Among the different existing types of interaction, the eternal competition for supremacy between the susceptible species and their pathogens has selected, as part of the effector division of the immune system of the former ones, a vast and varied arsenal of efficient antimicrobial molecules, which is highly amplified by the broad biodiversity radiated, above any others, at the marine habitats. At present, the great recent scientific and technological advances already allow the massive discovery and exploitation of these defense compounds for therapeutic purposes against infectious diseases of our interest. Among them, antimicrobial peptides and antimicrobial metabolites stand out because of the wide dimensions of their structural diversities, mechanisms of action, and target pathogen ranges. This revision work contextualizes the research in this field and serves as a presentation and scope identification of the Special Issue from Marine Drugs journal "The Immune System of Marine Organisms as Source for Drugs against Infectious Diseases".Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial drug discovery; antimicrobial metabolites; antimicrobial peptides; innate immune system
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35736166 PMCID: PMC9230875 DOI: 10.3390/md20060363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 6.085
Figure 1Examples of known molecular structures of some unique marine-AMP class members. The secondary and tertiary structure of various AMPs is presented, including their molecular surface colored according to a gradient of hydrophobicity of their surface amino acids. When present, disulfide bonds are shown in yellow. Amino acid side chains are shown as sticks. Adjacent to each AMP family name is the PDB ID of the structure used. The three-dimensional structure images were generated with PyMOL (The PyMOL Molecular Graphics System, Version 2.3 Schrödinger, LLC, New York, NY, USA).
Figure 2Chemical structures of some antimicrobial metabolites found in marine organisms. Nitrogen and oxygen atoms are colored in blue and red, respectively. (a) 25-hydroxycholesterol; (b) 2,5-DKP general scaffold; (c) tauramamide; and (d) plitidepsin.
Marine antimicrobial metabolites cited in this work classified into their main chemical families.
| Antimicrobial Metabolite | Source | Bioactivity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Aneurinifactin |
| Antibacterial a | [ |
| Tauramamide |
| Antibacterial | [ |
|
| |||
| (3Z,6Z)-3-(4-hydroxybenzylidene)-6- | Antiviral b | [ | |
| Bacillusamide A | Antibacterial, antifungal | [ | |
| Brevianamide S |
| Antibacterial | [ |
| Cristatumin A |
| Antibacterial | [ |
| Cyclo(d-6-Hyp-l-Phe), cyclo(l-6-Hyp-l-Phe), and cyclo(6,7-en-Pro-l-Phe) | Antibacterial | [ | |
| Cyclomarazine A, and cyclomarazine B |
| Antibacterial a | [ |
| Dehydroxybis(dethio)bis(methylthio)gliotoxin | Antibacterial | [ | |
| Etzionin | Unidentified Red Sea tunicate | Antifungal | [ |
|
| |||
| Callipeltin A | Antifungal, antiviral | [ | |
| Celebeside A |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Homophymine A | Antiviral | [ | |
| Koshikamides F–H | Antiviral | [ | |
| Microspinosamide |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Mirabamides A–D |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Mirabamides E–H |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Neamphamide A |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Papuamide A–D | Antiviral | [ | |
| Plitidepsin (dehydrodidemnin B) |
| Antiviral | [ |
| Stellettapeptins A–B | Antiviral | [ | |
| Theopapuamides A–D | Antifungal, antiviral | [ | |
a Reported as active against more than one species. b Reported as active against influenza A virus (IAV), any other antivirals here were just tested against HIV1.