Glionitrin A, an Antibiotic-Antitumor Metabolite Derived from Competitive Interaction between Abandoned Mine Microbes

Authors
Park, Hyun BongKwon, Hak CheolLee, Chang-HoYang, Hyun Ok
Issue Date
2009-02
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Citation
JOURNAL OF NATURAL PRODUCTS, v.72, no.2, pp.248 - 252
Abstract
The nutrient conditions present in abandoned coal mine drainages create an extreme environment where defensive and offensive microbial interactions could be critical for survival and fitness. Coculture of a mine drainage-derived Sphingomonas bacterial strain, KMK-001, and a mine drainage-derived Aspergillus fumigatus fungal strain, KMC-901, resulted in isolation of a new diketopiperazine disulfide, glionitrin A (1). Compound I was not detected in monoculture broths of KMK-001 or KMC-901. The structure of 1, a (3S,10aS) diketopiperazine disulfide containing a nitro aromatic ring, was based on analysis of MS, NMR, and circular dichroism spectra and confirmed by X-ray crystal data. Glionitrin A displayed significant antibiotic activity against a series of microbes including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. An in vitro MTT cytotoxicity assay revealed that I had potent submicromolar cytotoxic activity against four human cancer cell lines: HCT-116, A549, AGS, and DU145. The results provide further evidence that microbial coculture can produce novel biologically relevant molecules.
Keywords
CELL CYCLE INHIBITORS; ASPERGILLUS-FUMIGATUS; BACTERIUM; FUNGUS; DEGRADATION; ACID; COCULTIVATION; SPORIDESMINS; INDUCTION; GLIOTOXIN; CELL CYCLE INHIBITORS; ASPERGILLUS-FUMIGATUS; BACTERIUM; FUNGUS; DEGRADATION; ACID; COCULTIVATION; SPORIDESMINS; INDUCTION; GLIOTOXIN; Co-Culture; Mine Microorganisms; Sphingomonas; Aspergillus; Novel Compound; anticancer; antibiotics; Glionitrin
ISSN
0163-3864
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/132768
DOI
10.1021/np800606e
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2009
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