Acremocholone, an Anti‐<i>Vibrio</i> Steroid from the Marine Mesophotic Zone <i>Ciocalypta</i> Sponge‐Associated Fungus <i>Acremonium</i> sp. NBUF150
Yunping Feng, Hong‐Kun Wang, Jialing Wu, Peng Shao, Wenli Zhou, Qiliang Lai, Hou‐Wen Lin, C. Benjamin Naman, Tingting Wang, Shan He
Abstract
Mesophotic coral ecosystems (MCEs) represent an underexplored source of intriguing natural products. Efforts to discover bioactive metabolites from sponge-associated fungi in MCEs identified a new steroid, acremocholone (1) and its three known analogs (2-4), from Acremonium sp. NBUF150. The Acremonium sp. NBUF150 was isolated from a Ciocalypta sponge located 70 m deep within the South China Sea. The planar structures and absolute configuration of 1-4 were determined from NMR-derived spectroscopic data, HR-ESI-MS, and X-ray crystallography. Compound 1 exhibited antimicrobial inhibition against Vibrio scophthalmi, V. shilonii and V. brasiliensis at minimum inhibitory concentrations of 8 μg/mL; compound 2 inhibited V. shilonii and V. brasiliensis at 8 and 32 μg/mL, respectively, and compound 4 inhibited growth of V. brasiliensis at 16 μg/mL. Sponge associated fungi from MCEs represent a promising resource of anti-Vibrio drug leads for aquaculture use.