Intracolonial allocation of trisoxazole macrolides in the sponge Pachastrissa nux.

Chem Biodivers

Department of Pharmacognosy and Pharmaceutical Botany, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Prince of Songkla University, Hat-Yai, Songkhla, Thailand.

Published: December 2011

Pachastrissa nux has two distinctive growth forms in one colony, i.e., the protruding gorgonian-shaped capitum and the substratum-attached irregular-shaped base. The sponge has the ability to allocate specifically its major secondary metabolites to the two parts in different levels. Using two cytotoxic trisoxazole macrolides, kabiramides C (2) and G (3), as chemical markers, it was found that the capitum accumulated higher contents of either or both compounds than did the base. However, there were neither inductive nor suppressive correlations among the allocation profiles of either compound in either part of the sponge. The allocation of kabiramides was a trade-off with the structural materials involved in reinforcing the strength of the sponge. To date, this is the second report that provides evidence of the specific allocation of bioactive metabolites in two distinctively different organ-like structures in a single sponge colony.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.201100171DOI Listing

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