Emmanuel A Makinde, Linlin Ma, George D Mellick, Merrick Ekins, Yunjiang Feng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in many neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson's disease, and mitoprotective metabolites may hold the key to potentially effective treatments. In this study, comprehensive chemical investigation of an Australian marine sponge, Aaptos lobata, led to the isolation of three new aaptamine-type 1H-benzo[de][1,6]-naphthyridine alkaloids, namely 3,6'-diaaptamine (2), aaptanone A (3) and 8-demethylaaptamine (4), alongside four known compounds, 8,8',9,9'-tetramethoxy-1H,1'H-3,3'-bibenzo[de][1,6]naphthyridine (5), aaptanone (6), 9-methoxy-N-demethylaaptanone (7) and aaptamine (1). The structures of these compounds were determined using an analysis of spectroscopic data. Biological evaluation in SH-SY5Y using 6-OHDA as neurotoxin revealed that compounds 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7 displayed potent mitoprotective activity, effectively attenuating cell death with apparent EC50 values ranging from 0.05 μM to 1.06 μM. These compounds also mitigated mitochondrial membrane depolarization with apparent EC50 values between 0.021 μM and 0.78 μM. These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of A. lobata-derived alkaloids as promising candidates for mitochondria-targeted drug development.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Natural Products invites and publishes papers that make substantial and scholarly contributions to the area of natural products research. Contributions may relate to the chemistry and/or biochemistry of naturally occurring compounds or the biology of living systems from which they are obtained.
Specifically, there may be articles that describe secondary metabolites of microorganisms, including antibiotics and mycotoxins; physiologically active compounds from terrestrial and marine plants and animals; biochemical studies, including biosynthesis and microbiological transformations; fermentation and plant tissue culture; the isolation, structure elucidation, and chemical synthesis of novel compounds from nature; and the pharmacology of compounds of natural origin.
When new compounds are reported, manuscripts describing their biological activity are much preferred.
Specifically, there may be articles that describe secondary metabolites of microorganisms, including antibiotics and mycotoxins; physiologically active compounds from terrestrial and marine plants and animals; biochemical studies, including biosynthesis and microbiological transformations; fermentation and plant tissue culture; the isolation, structure elucidation, and chemical synthesis of novel compounds from nature; and the pharmacology of compounds of natural origin.