Radiosumins are a structurally diverse family of low molecular weight natural products that are produced by cyanobacteria and exhibit potent serine protease inhibition. Members of this family are dipeptides characterized by the presence of two similar non-proteinogenic amino acids. Here we used a comparative bioinformatic analysis to identify radiosumin biosynthetic gene clusters from the genomes of 13 filamentous cyanobacteria. We used direct pathway cloning to capture and express the entire 16.8 kb radiosumin biosynthetic gene cluster from UHCC 0167 in . Bioinformatic analysis demonstrates that radiosumins represent a new group of chorismate-derived non-aromatic secondary metabolites. High-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and chemical degradation analysis revealed that cyanobacteria produce a cocktail of novel radiosumins. We report the chemical structure of radiosumin D, an -methyl dipeptide, containing a special Aayp (2-amino-3-(4-amino-2-cyclohexen-1-ylidene) propionic acid) with configuration that differs from radiosumin A-C, an -Me derivative of Aayp (Amyp) and two acetyl groups. Radiosumin C inhibits all three human trypsin isoforms at micromolar concentrations with preference for trypsin-1 and -3 (IC values from 1.7 μM to >7.2 μM). These results provide a biosynthetic logic to explore the genetic and chemical diversity of the radiosumin family and suggest that these natural products may be a source of drug leads for selective human serine proteases inhibitors.
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Sci Total Environ
September 2023
Université de Pau, CNRS, E2S UPPA, Institute of Analytical and Physical Chemistry for the Environment and Materials (IPREM-UMR 5254), 64000 Pau, France; Chair of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, Warsaw University of Technology, 00-664 Warszawa, Poland. Electronic address:
Harmful algal blooms events have been reported worldwide and during the last decades are occurred with increasing frequency and intensity due to the climate change and the high inputs of nutrients in freshwaters from anthropogenic activities. During blooms cyanobacteria release in water their toxic secondary metabolites, known as cyanotoxins, along with other bioactive metabolites. Due to the negative impacts of these compounds on aquatic ecosystems and public health, there is an urgent need to detect and identify known and unknown cyanobacterial metabolites in surface waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Biomol Chem
June 2023
Department of Microbiology, University of Helsinki, Viikinkaari 9, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
Toxins (Basel)
August 2020
Laboratory of Algal Biotechnology-Centre Algatech, Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, 37901 Třeboň, Czech Republic.
Man-made shallow fishponds in the Czech Republic have been facing high eutrophication since the 1950s. Anthropogenic eutrophication and feeding of fish have strongly affected the physicochemical properties of water and its aquatic community composition, leading to harmful algal bloom formation. In our current study, we characterized the phytoplankton community across three eutrophic ponds to assess the phytoplankton dynamics during the vegetation season.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nat Prod
May 2001
Institute for Marine Biosciences, National Research Council of Canada, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3Z1, Canada.
Radiosumin B (1), an N-methyl dipeptide containing two unusual amino acid residues, was isolated from the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa Kützing. The structure and stereochemical details were elucidated on the basis of 1D and 2D NMR data, MS data, and chemical degradation.
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