Seven new arylpyrrole alkaloids (1–7), along with four known compounds, were isolated from an extract
of a Dactylia sp. nov. marine sponge, and their structures
were elucidated by interpretation of NMR and MS spectroscopic data.
Denigrins D–G (1–4) have highly
substituted pyrrole or pyrrolone rings in their core structures, while
dactylpyrroles A–C (5–7) have
tricyclic phenanthrene cores. Due to the proton-deficient nature of
these scaffolds, key heteronuclear correlations from 1H–15N HMBC and LR-HSQMBC NMR experiments were used in the structure
assignment of denigrin D (1). Dictyodendrin F (8), a previously described co-metabolite, inhibited transcription
driven by the oncogenic PAX3-FOXO1 fusion gene with an IC50 value of 13 μM.
Until now only two species ofCladorhizahave been reported from the SW Atlantic, namelyC. diminutaandC. inversa, despite a total of 39 species reported from various parts of the globe. Here we describe a new species,C. nicoleaesp. nov., dredged from 750 m depth on the continental slope off SE Brazil during the French RV ‘Marion Dufresne’ expedition in 1987. It is an erect, pedunculated and club-shaped sponge, 26 mm high and with 12 radially arranged whip-like projections (each up to 3 mm long). The new species differs from its closest relative,C. inversa(redescribed here), by its possession of sigmas and sigmancistras. The holotype ofCladorhiza inversais also a pedunculated sponge, 1.9 cm tall, with a cup-shaped body with an apical spur-like continuation of the stem and a crown of 16 projections (up to 8 mm long) radiating from the rim of the body.
This article describes or redescribes four hexactinellid sponges, namely Poliopogon amadou, Euplectella sanctipauli sp. nov., Bolosoma perezi sp. nov. and Advhena magnifica gen. et sp. nov. P. amadou, E. sanctipauli sp. nov. and B. perezi sp. nov. represent new findings for the South Atlantic deep-sea fauna, including the first record of Bolosoma for this ocean. Advhena magnifica gen. et sp. nov., on the other hand, was collected by NOAA oceanographic expeditions in the North Pacific (Pigafetta Guyot).
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