Almiramide D, cytotoxic peptide from the marine cyanobacterium Oscillatoria nigroviridis
Autor
Quinta, Jairo
Bayona, Lina M.
Castellanos, Leonardo
Puyana, Mónica
Camargo, Paola
Aristizábal, Fabio
Edwards, Christine
Tabudravu, Jioji N.
Jaspars, Marcel
Ramos, Freddy A.
Institución
Resumen
Marine benthic cyanobacteria are widely known as a source of toxic and potentially useful
compounds. These microorganisms have been studied from many Caribbean locations, which
recently include locations in the Colombian Caribbean Sea. In the present study, six lipopeptides
named almiramides D to H, together with the known almiramide B are identified from a mat
characterized as Oscillatoria nigroviridis collected at the Island of Providence (Colombia, S.W.
Caribbean Sea).The most abundant compounds, almiramides B and D were characterized by
NMR and HRESIMS, while the structures of the minor compounds almiramides E to H were
proposed by the analysis of their HRESIMS and MS2 spectra. Almiramides B and D were
tested against six human cell lines including a gingival fibroblast cell line and five human tumor
cell lines (A549, MDA-MB231, MCF-7, HeLa and PC3) showing a strong but not selective