Browsing by Author "Rezende de Castro, Roberta"
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- Bartolosides E–K from a Marine Coccoid CyanobacteriumPublication . Afonso, Tiago B.; Costa, M. Sofia; Rezende de Castro, Roberta; Freitas, Sara; Silva, Artur; Schneider, Maria Paula Cruz; Martins, Rosario; Leão, Pedro N.The glycosylated and halogenated dialkylresorcinol (DAR) compounds bartolosides A-D (1-4) were recently discovered from marine cyanobacteria and represent a novel family of glycolipids, encoded by the brt biosynthetic gene cluster. Here, we report the isolation and NMR- and MS-based structure elucidation of monoglycosylated bartolosides E-K (5-11), obtained from Synechocystis salina LEGE 06099, a strain closely related to the cyanobacterium that produces the diglycosylated 2-4. In addition, a genome region containing orthologues of brt genes was identified in this cyanobacterium. Interestingly, the major bartoloside in S. salina LEGE 06099 was 1 (above 0.5% dry wt), originally isolated from the phylogenetically distant filamentous cyanobacterium Nodosilinea sp. LEGE 06102. Compounds 5-11 are analogues of 1, with different alkyl chain lengths or halogenation patterns. Their structures and the organization of the brt genes suggest that the DAR-forming ketosynthase BrtD can generate structural diversity by accepting fatty acyl-derived substrates of varying length. Compound 9 features a rare midchain gem-dichloro moiety, indicating that the putative halogenase BrtJ is able to act twice on the same midchain carbon.
- Structure of Hierridin C, Synthesis of Hierridins B and C, and Evidence for Prevalent Alkylresorcinol Biosynthesis in PicocyanobacteriaPublication . Costa, Margarida; Sampaio-Dias, Ivo E.; Castelo-Branco, Raquel; Scharfenstein, Hugo; Rezende de Castro, Roberta; Silva, Artur; Schneider, Maria Paula C.; Araújo, Maria João; Martins, Rosario; Domingues, Valentina F.; Nogueira, Fátima; Camões, Vera; Vasconcelos, Vitor M.; Leão, Pedro N.Small, single-celled planktonic cyanobacteria are ubiquitous in the world's oceans yet tend not to be perceived as secondary metabolite-rich organisms. Here we report the isolation and structure elucidation of hierridin C, a minor metabolite obtained from the cultured picocyanobacterium Cyanobium sp. LEGE 06113. We describe a simple, straightforward synthetic route to the scarcely produced hierridins that relies on a key regioselective halogenation step. In addition, we show that these compounds originate from a type III PKS pathway and that similar biosynthetic gene clusters are found in a variety of bacterial genomes, most notably those of the globally distributed picocyanobacteria genera Prochlorococcus, Cyanobium and Synechococcus.
- Structure of Hierridin C, Synthesis of Hierridins B and C, and Evidence for Prevalent Alkylresorcinol Biosynthesis in PicocyanobacteriaPublication . Costa, Margarida; Sampaio-Dias, Ivo E.; Castelo-Branco, Raquel; Scharfenstein, Hugo; Rezende de Castro, Roberta; Silva, Artur; Schneider, Maria Paula C.; Araújo, Maria João; Martins, Rosário; Domingues, Valentina F.; Nogueira, Fátima; Camões, Vera; Vasconcelos, Vitor M.; Leão, Pedro N.Small, single-celled planktonic cyanobacteria are ubiquitous in the world's oceans yet tend not to be perceived as secondary metabolite-rich organisms. Here we report the isolation and structure elucidation of hierridin C, a minor metabolite obtained from the cultured picocyanobacterium Cyanobium sp. LEGE 06113. We describe a simple, straightforward synthetic route to the scarcely produced hierridins that relies on a key regioselective halogenation step. In addition, we show that these compounds originate from a type III PKS pathway and that similar biosynthetic gene clusters are found in a variety of bacterial genomes, most notably those of the globally distributed picocyanobacteria genera Prochlorococcus, Cyanobium and Synechococcus.