A search for bioactive compounds, inhibitors of Paenibacillus larvae, the causal agent of American foulbrood, a honeybees' disease, was carried on. Extracts of two fungal strains, Alternaria brassicicola and Alternaria raphani, isolated from pollen collected from beehives, exhibited a specific inhibitory activity against this bacterium. From these extracts and by means of chromatographic steps and bioassay-guided fractionation, three tetramic acids were isolated. The compounds were identified by spectroscopic methods and the absolute stereochemistry was chemically determined. L-Tenuazonic acid was shown to be responsible for the antibiotic activity. This compound showed a MIC of 32 lg/ml, comparable with that of oxytetracycline, an antibiotic currently used for the prevention of American foulbrood.q Dedicated to the memory of Dra Alicia M. Seldes.
Secondary metabolites from the cultures of the dark septate fungal endophyte (DSE) Drechslera sp., isolated from the roots of rye grass (Lollium sp.) and cultured under different experimental conditions, are described here for the first time. The use of suberoylanilidehydroxamic acid (SAHA) and other histone deacetylase inhibitors as epigenetic modifiers in the culture medium was evaluated by LC/MS and LC/MS/MS. Several differences in the metabolite production were detected by means of supervised principal component analysis (PCA) of LC/MS data. The presence of the compounds in the culture medium or in the mycelium was compared. In order to confirm their structure, many of these natural products were isolated from a larger scale culture. These metabolites were characterized as prenylhydroxybenzoic acids and chromans, two compounds, one of each class were previously undescribed, prenylquinoids, diketopiperazines and macrosphelides. Some of the compounds, which were released to the medium, showed good antifungal activity, suggesting that these compounds could protect Lollium from fungal phytopatogens. The use of SAHA as an additive of the cultures also induced the release of hexosylphytosphyngosine to the culture medium. The biotransformation of the inhibitors was observed in addition to the production of antifungal metabolites, showing the ability of this endophytic strain to control xenobiotics.
In a screening for antimicrobial metabolites, amides of D-allo- and L-isoleucine derivatives were isolated from the culture of a marine strain of Acremonium furcatum. Structural elucidation of these compounds was performed by analysis of spectroscopic data and confirmed by synthesis. All of the compounds, natural and synthetic intermediates, were bioassayed against bacteria and phytopathogenic fungi, with many showing remarkable antifungal activities.
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