The oxidative cleavage of β-carotene in the Mucorales produces three fragments of 18, 15, and 7 carbons, respective heads of three families of apocarotenoids: the methylhexanoids, the trisporoids, and the cyclofarnesoids (named after their 1,6-cyclofarnesane skeleton). The apocarotenoids are easily recognized because they are absent in white mutants unable to produce β-carotene. In cultures of Phycomyces blakesleeanus we detected thirty-two apocarotenoids by LC, UV absorbance, and MS. With additional IR and NMR we identified two methylhexanoids and the eight most abundant cyclofarnesoids. Four of them were previously-unknown natural compounds, including 4-dihydrocyclofarnesine S, the most abundant cyclofarnesoid in young cultures. We arranged the apocarotenoids of the Mucorales in a scheme that helps classifying and naming them and suggests possible metabolites and biosynthetic pathways. We propose specific biosynthetic pathways for cyclofarnesoids and methylhexanoids based on structural comparisons, the time course of appearance of individual compounds, and the bioconversion of β-apo-12-carotenol, an early precursor, to three more oxygenated cyclofarnesoids by the white mutants. Some of the reactions occur spontaneously in the increasingly acidic culture media. Mating increased the contents of methylhexanoids and cyclofarnesoids by ca. threefold in young cultures and ca. twelvefold in old ones (five days); cyclofarnesine S, the most abundant cyclofarnesoid in old cultures, increased over one hundredfold. We found no differences between the sexes and no activity as sexual pheromones, but we suggest that methylhexanoids and cyclofarnesoids could mediate species-specific physiology and behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2016.01.013 | DOI Listing |
Microbiology (Reading)
April 2019
4Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Schaenzlestr. 1, 79104 Freiburg, Germany.
Mucor circinelloides exhibits the complex sexual behaviour that is induced in other Mucoromycotina by a family of apocarotenoids called trisporoids. The genome of M. circinelloides contains four genes encoding putative carotenoid cleavage dioxygenases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochemistry
April 2016
Departamento de Genética, Universidad de Sevilla, Apartado 1095, E-41080 Sevilla, Spain. Electronic address:
The oxidative cleavage of β-carotene in the Mucorales produces three fragments of 18, 15, and 7 carbons, respective heads of three families of apocarotenoids: the methylhexanoids, the trisporoids, and the cyclofarnesoids (named after their 1,6-cyclofarnesane skeleton). The apocarotenoids are easily recognized because they are absent in white mutants unable to produce β-carotene. In cultures of Phycomyces blakesleeanus we detected thirty-two apocarotenoids by LC, UV absorbance, and MS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Biomol Chem
April 2012
Division of Cell Biology and Biophysics, School of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City, MO 64110, USA.
A simple genetic test allowed us to carry out the first systematic study of the apocarotenoids in the Mucorales. We have identified 13 apocarotenoids in the culture media of the fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus (Mucoromycota, Mucorales). Three of these compounds were novel apocarotenoids: (2S,8R,E)-8,14-epoxycyclofarnesa-4,6,9-triene-2,11-diol (6), (2S,6E,8E)-cyclofarnesa-4,6,8-triene-2,10,11-triol (7), and its 6Z isomer (8).
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