Publications by authors named "Peadar A Cremin"

One new (1) and four known (2-5) ursene triterpenes with potent inhibition of the formation of the bacterial biofilm Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA01 were obtained from Diospyros dendo using a high-throughput natural products chemistry procedure. These compounds were isolated as mass-limited samples. The miniaturization of the structure elucidation and dereplication was performed primarily utilizing a capillary-scale NMR probe.

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Two 2,7'-cyclolignans, ocholignans A and B, were obtained as mass-limited samples from Scyphocephalium ochocoa via high-throughput natural products chemistry methods. The rapid structure elucidation of each compound was primarily facilitated by NMR data acquisition using a capillary-scale NMR probe, CapNMR probe. Ocholignan A was found to possess significant in vitro antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 33591 and S.

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Employing a capillary-scale NMR probe enables the miniaturisation of structure determination and de-replication of purified natural products from plants using only 5-100 microg of material. Approximately 5 microg are required to perform one-dimensional proton and two-dimensional homonuclear (COSY and NOESY) NMR experiments; some 30 microg are needed to acquire HMQC- or HSQC-NMR spectra; ca. 75-100 microg are necessary to measure HMBC-NMR spectra; and around 200 microg of a compound are needed to perform 13C- and DEPT-NMR experiments.

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High-throughput isolation, purification and analysis methods applied to natural products libraries from plants gave rise to the discovery of two novel acylated caprylic alcohol glycosides (1, 2) produced by Arctostaphylos pumila. The NMR spectra were acquired using the CapNMR probe and performed on mass-limited samples, which enabled us to elucidate the structures of 2,6-diacetyl-3,4-diisobutyl-1- O-octylglucopyranoside (1, 200 microg) and 2,6-diacetyl-3,4-dimethylbutyl-1- O-octylglucopyranosid (2, 70 microg). Compounds 1 and 2 exhibited antibacterial activity against Gram-positive methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus with an MIC of 128 microg/mL and 64 microg/mL, respectively.

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Utilizing high-throughput isolation, purification, and analysis methods applied to a natural products library, a new mass-limited antibacterial indolosesquiterpene, suaveolindole (1), was obtained from Greenwayodendron suaveolens. The miniaturization of the structure elucidation of 1 was performed primarily using the CapNMR probe. Compound 1 was found to possess significant in vitro antibacterial activity against the Gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 43223), Staphylococcus aureus (ATTC 6538P), and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (ATTC 33591), with MIC values of 4, 8, and 8 microg/mL, respectively.

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The application of an 8-way fully automated parallel LC-MS-ELSD system to the analysis of a library of 96 structurally diverse natural products is described. A 10-min separation incorporating a universal gradient allowed elution of 86 of these 96 compounds, all of which were detected by positive or negative mode electrospray ionization in conjunction with ELSD. This method is demonstrated to be one of the most universal means of detection for polar, nonvolatile, thermally labile natural products.

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High-throughput methods were applied to the production, analysis, and characterization of libraries of natural products in order to accelerate the drug discovery process for high-throughput screening in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Library production integrates automated flash chromatography, solid-phase extraction, filtration, and high-throughput parallel four-channel preparative high-performance liquid chromatography to obtain the libraries in 96- or 384-well plates. Libraries consist of purified fractions with approximately one to five compounds per well.

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