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Pullenvalenes A-D: Nitric Oxide-Mediated Transcriptional Activation (NOMETA) Enables Discovery of Triterpene Aminoglycosides from Australian Termite Nest-Derived Fungi

  • Amila Agampodi Dewa
  • , Zeinab G. Khalil
  • , Waleed M. Hussein
  • , Shengbin Jin
  • , Yanan Wang
  • , Pablo Cruz-Morales
  • , Robert J. Capon*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Queensland

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

We report on the use of nitric oxide-mediated transcriptional activation (NOMETA) as an innovative means to detect and access new classes of microbial natural products encoded within silent biosynthetic gene clusters. A small library of termite nest- and mangrove-derived fungi and actinomyces was subjected to cultivation profiling using a miniaturized 24-well format approach (MATRIX) in the presence and absence of nitric oxide, with the resulting metabolomes subjected to comparative chemical analysis using UPLC-DAD and GNPS molecular networking. This strategy prompted study of Talaromyces sp. CMB-TN6F and Coccidiodes sp. CMB-TN39F, leading to discovery of the triterpene glycoside pullenvalenes A-D (1-4), featuring an unprecedented triterpene carbon skeleton and rare 6-O-methyl-N-acetyl-d-glucosaminyl glycoside residues. Structure elucidation of 1-4 was achieved by a combination of detailed spectroscopic analysis, chemical degradation, derivatization and synthesis, and biosynthetic considerations.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Natural Products
Volume87
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)935–947
ISSN0163-3864
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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