The chemical composition of the essential oil obtained from the leaves of Pulicaria undulata Gamal Ed Din (syn P. orientalis sensu Schwartz and P. jaubertii Gamal Ed Din) was analyzed by GC-MS. Major compounds of P. undulata oil were the oxygenated monoterpenenes, carvotanacetone (91.4%) and 2,5-dimethoxy-p-cymene (2.6.%). The antimicrobial activity of the essential oil was evaluated against six microorganisms, Escherichia coli Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, methicillin-resistant S. aureus, Bacillus subtilis, and Candida albicans, using disc diffusion and broth microdilution methods. The oil showed the strongest bactericidal activity against Staphylococcus aureus and methicillin-resistant S. aureus, as well as Candida albicans. The essential oil showed moderate cytotoxic activity against MCF-7 breast tumor cells, with an IC 50 of 64.6 13.7 μg/mL. Bioautographic assays were used to evaluate the acetylcholinesterase inhibitory effect as well as antifungal activity of the oil against Cladosporium cucumerinum.
Peptide
stapling is traditionally used to lock peptide conformations
into α-helical structures using a variety of macrocyclization
chemistries. In an endeavor to add a diversity-generating tool to
this repertoire, we introduce a multicomponent stapling approach enabling
the simultaneous stabilization of helical secondary structures and
the exocyclic N-functionalization of the side chain-tethering
lactam bridge. This is accomplished by means of a novel solid-phase
methodology comprising, for the first time, the on-resin Ugi reaction-based
macrocyclization of peptide side chains bearing amino and carboxylic
acid groups. The exocyclic diversity elements arise from the isocyanide
component used in the Ugi multicomponent stapling protocol, which
allows for the incorporation of relevant fragments such as lipids,
sugars, polyethylene glycol, fluorescent labels, and reactive handles.
We prove the utility of such exocyclic reactive groups in the bioconjugation
of a maleimide-armed lactam-bridged peptide to a carrier protein.
The on-resin multicomponent stapling proved efficient for the installation
of not only one, but also two consecutive lactam bridges having either
identical or dissimilar N-functionalities. The easy access to helical
peptides with a diverse set of exocyclic functionalities shows prospect
for applications in peptide drug discovery and chemical biology.
NMR is a widely used analytical technique
with a growing number of repositories available. As a result, demands
for a vendor-agnostic, open data format for long-term archiving of
NMR data have emerged with the aim to ease and encourage sharing, comparison, and reuse of NMR data. Here we present nmrML, an open XML-based exchange and storage format for NMR spectral data. The nmrML format is intended to be fully compatible with existing NMR data for chemical, biochemical, and metabolomics experiments. nmrML can capture raw NMR data, spectral data acquisition parameters, and where available spectral metadata, such as chemical structures associated with spectral assignments. The nmrML format is compatible with pure-compound NMR data for reference spectral libraries as well as NMR data from complex biomixtures, i.e., metabolomics experiments. To facilitate format conversions, we provide nmrML converters for Bruker, JEOL and Agilent/Varian vendor formats. In addition, easy-to-use Web-based spectral viewing, processing, and spectral assignment tools that read and write nmrML have been developed. Software libraries and Web services for data validation are available for tool developers and end-users. The nmrML format has already been adopted for capturing and disseminating NMR data for small molecules by several open source data processing tools and metabolomics reference spectral libraries, e.g., serving as storage format for the MetaboLights data repository. The nmrML open access data standard has been endorsed by the Metabolomics Standards Initiative (MSI), and we here encourage user participation and feedback to increase usability and make it a successful standard.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.