Mutation, Chemoprofiling, Dereplication, and Isolation of Natural Products from Penicillium oxalicum

6Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Diethyl sulfate (DES)-based chemical mutagenesis was applied on different fungal strains with the aim of diversifying the secondary metabolites. The mutant strain (VRE-MT1) of Penicillium oxalicum was subjected to dereplication (LCMS-based) and isolation of natural products, resulting in obtaining 10 molecules of bioactive potential. Metabolites, viz. tuckolide, methylpenicinoline, 2-acetyl-3,5-dihydroxy-4,6-dimethylbenzeneacetic acid, penicillixanthone A, brefeldin A 7-ketone, and antibiotic FD 549, were observed for the first time from P. oxalicum. The results of antimicrobial activity reveal that the compounds N-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]formamide, methylpenicinoline, and penipanoid A have potent antibacterial activity against Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 6633) with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of 16, 64, and 16 μM, respectively, and the compounds N-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]formamide, methylpenicinoline, and penipanoid A were found active against Escherichia coli (ATCC 25922), with MIC values of 16, 64, and 16 μM, respectively. Also, the metabolites N-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]formamide and tuckolide showed effective antioxidant activity in 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl and 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline)-6-sulfonic acid scavenging assays. The mutant VRE-MT1 was found to have 8.34 times higher quantity of N-[2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]formamide as compared to the mother strain. The DES-based mutagenesis strategy has been found to be a potent tool to diversify the secondary metabolites in fungi.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Abrol, V., Kushwaha, M., Arora, D., Mallubhotla, S., & Jaglan, S. (2021). Mutation, Chemoprofiling, Dereplication, and Isolation of Natural Products from Penicillium oxalicum. ACS Omega. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c00141

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free