Abstract
The first chemical investigation of the Mediterranean deep-sea sponge Poecillastra compressa (Bowerbank, 1866) led to the identification of seven new steroidal saponins named poecillastrosides A–G (1–7). All saponins feature an oxidized methyl at C-18 into a primary alcohol or a carboxylic acid. While poecillastrosides A–D (1–4) all contain an exo double bond at C-24 of the side-chain and two osidic residues connected at O-2, poecillastrosides E–G (5–7) are characterized by a cyclopropane on the side-chain and a connection at O-3 between both sugar units. The chemical structures were elucidated through extensive spectroscopic analysis (High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry (HRESIMS), 1D and 2D NMR) and the absolute configurations of the sugar residues were assigned after acidic hydrolysis and cysteine derivatization followed by LC-HRMS analyses. Poecillastrosides D and E, bearing a carboxylic acid at C-18, were shown to exhibit antifungal activity against Aspergillus fumigatus.
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Calabro, K., Kalahroodi, E. L., Rodrigues, D., Díaz, C., De La Cruz, M., Cautain, B., … Thomas, O. P. (2017). Poecillastrosides, steroidal saponins from the Mediterranean deep-sea sponge Poecillastra compressa (Bowerbank, 1866). Marine Drugs, 15(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/md15070199
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