Kabirimine, a new cyclic imine from an Okinawan dinoflagellate

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Abstract

On our quest for new bioactive molecules from marine sources, two cyclic imines (1, 2) were isolated from a dinoflagellate extract, inhibiting the growth of the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Compound 1 was identified as a known molecule portimine, while 2 was elucidated to be a new cyclic imine, named kabirimine. The absolute stereochemistry of 1 was determined by crystallographic work and chiral derivatization, whereas the structure of 2 was elucidated by means of spectroscopic analysis and computational study on all the possible isomers. Compound 1 showed potent cytotoxicity (CC50 < 0.097 µM) against HEp2 cells, while 2 exhibited moderate antiviral activity against RSV with IC50 = 4.20 µM (95% CI 3.31–5.33).

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Hermawan, I., Higa, M., Hutabarat, P. U. B., Fujiwara, T., Akiyama, K., Kanamoto, A., … Tanaka, J. (2019). Kabirimine, a new cyclic imine from an Okinawan dinoflagellate. Marine Drugs, 17(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/md17060353

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