4.7 Article

Feature-Based Molecular Networking Discovery of Bromopyrrole Alkaloids from the Marine Sponge Agelas dispar

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL PRODUCTS
Volume 85, Issue 5, Pages 1340-1350

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.2c00094

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FAPESP [141464/2017-8]
  2. CAPES [2013/50228-8]
  3. CNPq [1681546]
  4. FAPERJ [425839/2016-8]
  5. [2017/06014-4]
  6. [2020/03637-3]

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This study investigated the marine sponge Agelas dispar and discovered new bromopyrrole-derived metabolites using feature-based molecular networking, dereplication, and isolation techniques. The compounds were identified by analyzing spectroscopic data and MS/MS fragmentation. The antimicrobial activity of the isolated compounds was evaluated, and dibromoageliferin showed the strongest activity against multi-drug-resistant pathogenic bacteria.
Investigation of the marine sponge Agelas dispar MeOH fractions using feature-based molecular networking, dereplication, and isolation led to the discovery of new bromopyrrole-derived metabolites. An in-house library of bromopyrrole alkaloids previously isolated from A. dispar and Dictyonella sp. was utilized, along with the investigation of an MS/MS fragmentation of these compounds. Our strategy led to the isolation and identification of the disparamides A-C (1-3), with a novel carbon skeleton. Additionally, new dispyrins B-F (4-8) and nagelamides H2 and H3 (9 and 10) and known nagelamide H (11), citrinamine B (12), ageliferin (13), bromoageliferin (14), and dibromoageliferin (15) were also isolated and identified by analysis of spectroscopic data. Analysis of MS/MS fragmentation data and molecular networking analysis indicated the presence of hymenidin (16), oroidin (17), dispacamide (18), monobromodispacamide (19), keramadine (20), longamide B (21), methyl ester of longamide B (22), hanishin (23), methyl ester of 3-debromolongamide B (24), and 3-debromohanishin (25). Antibacterial activity of ageliferin (13), bromoageliferin (14), and dibromoageliferin (15) was evaluated against susceptible and multi-drug-resistant ESKAPE pathogenic bacteria Klabsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Enterococcus faecalis. Dibromoageliferin (15) displayed the most potent antimicrobial activity against all tested susceptible and MDR strains. Compounds 13-15 presented no significant hemolytic activity up to 100 mu M.

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