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Structurally diverse hamigerans from the New Zealand marine sponge Hamigera tarangaensis: NMR-directed isolation, structure elucidation and antifungal activity
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Citations
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References
2013
Year
EngineeringHamigeran FChemical BiologyNmr-directed InvestigationBiosynthesisNmr-directed IsolationNatural Product BiosynthesisBiochemistryMarine BiotaBiomolecular EngineeringBiologyHamigeran FamilyIndustrial MycologyMarine BiotechnologyAntifungal AgentAntifungal ActivityNatural SciencesMicrobiologyMarine BiologySymbiosisDiverse Hamigerans
The NMR-directed investigation of the New Zealand marine sponge Hamigera tarangaensis has afforded ten new compounds of the hamigeran family, and a new 13-epi-verrucosane congener. Notably, hamigeran F (6) possesses an unusual carbon–carbon bond between C-12 and C-13, creating an unprecedented skeleton within this class. In particular, the structural features of 6, hamigeran H (10) and hamigeran J (12) imply a diterpenoid origin, which has allowed the putative biogenesis of three hamigeran carbon skeletons to be proposed based on geranyl geranyl pyrophosphate. All new hamigerans exhibited micromolar activity towards the HL-60 promyelocytic leukaemic cell line, and hamigeran G also selectively displayed antifungal activity in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Homozygous deletion profiling (HOP) analysis suggests Golgi apparatus function as a potential target of this unusual class of sponge-derived terpenoids.
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