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Microviridin 1777: A Toxic Chymotrypsin Inhibitor Discovered by a Metabologenomic Approach

Simon Sieber, Simone M. Grendelmeier, Lonnie A. Harris, Douglas A. Mitchell, Karl Gademann

2020Journal of Natural Products39 citationsDOI

Abstract

, and the extract possessed strong activity. To investigate the compounds responsible for cytotoxicity, a series of peptides from this cyanobacterium were studied using a combined genomic and molecular networking approach. The results led to the isolation, structure elucidation, and biological evaluation of microviridin 1777, which represents the most potent chymotrypsin inhibitor characterized from this family of peptides to date. Furthermore, the biosynthetic gene clusters of microviridin, anabaenopeptin, aeruginosin, and piricyclamide were located in the producing organism, and six additional natural products were identified by tandem mass spectrometry analyses. These results highlight the potential of modern techniques for the identification of natural products, demonstrate the ecological role of protease inhibitors produced by cyanobacteria, and raise ramifications concerning the presence of novel, yet uncharacterized, toxin families in cyanobacteria beyond microcystin.

Topics & Concepts

CyanobacteriaBiologyMicrocystisMicrocystis aeruginosaCytotoxicityComputational biologyOrganismChymotrypsinBiochemistryGeneticsEnzymeBacteriaTrypsinIn vitroMicrobial Natural Products and BiosynthesisMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry StudiesAquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton Dynamics
Microviridin 1777: A Toxic Chymotrypsin Inhibitor Discovered by a Metabologenomic Approach | Litcius