A short review concerning new polar steroids isolated from starfish with 75 citations is given. This review covers the literature published from 2001 through 2007. The emphasis is on new structures, together with their relevant biological activities, source organisms, and localities of collections.
Ten new polyhydroxysteroidal glycosides, anthenosides L-U (1-10), with rare positions of carbohydrate fragment attachments, were isolated from the starfish Anthenea aspera. The structures of 1-10 were established by NMR and ESIMS techniques as well as by chemical transformations. The unoxidized Δ-24-nor-cholestane (1), (24S)-Δ-24-methylcholestane (2-5), and Δ-cholestane (7) side chains of the steroidal aglycons, 3-O-methyl-β-d-galactofuranosyl residue (2, 8), and 5α-cholest-8(14)-ene-3α,7β,16α-trihydroxysteroidal nucleus (9, 10) have not been found previously in starfish polar steroidal compounds. The mixture of glycosides 9 and 10 showed hemolytic activity with an EC = 8 μM. Compound 4 at a dose of 10 μM exhibited a potential immunomodulatory action, decreasing by 24% the intracellular ROS content in RAW 264.7 murine macrophages, induced by pro-inflammatory endotoxic lipopolysaccharide from E. coli.
Five new steroid glycosides, luzonicosides B-E (2-5), belonging to a rare structure group of marine glycosides, containing carbohydrate moieties incorporated into a macrocycle, and a related open carbohydrate chain steroid glycoside, luzonicoside F (6), were isolated from the starfish Echinaster luzonicus along with the previously known cyclic steroid glycoside luzonicoside A (1). The structures of compounds 2-6 were established by extensive NMR and ESIMS techniques as well as chemical transformations. Luzonicoside A (1) at concentrations of 0.01-0.1 μM was shown to be potent in lysosomal activity stimulation, intracellular ROS level elevation, and NO synthesis up-regulation in RAW 264.7 murine macrophages. Luzonicoside D (4) was less active in these biotests.
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