Pityriasis versicolor is the most common skin mycosis in humans worldwide. Yeasts of the genus Malassezia, particularly M. furfur, a saprophyte occurring widely on human skin, are generally regarded as the causative agents. Pityriasis versicolor is often accompanied by a long-lasting depigmentation that persists even after successful antimycotic therapy. M. furfur is able to convert tryptophan into a variety of indole alkaloids, some of them showing biological properties that correlate well with certain clinical features of pityriasis versicolor. This suggests a possible role for these compounds in the depigmentation process. We now report that human melanocytes undergo apoptosis when exposed to the crude mixture of tryptophan metabolites from M. furfur. The active compound was identified as malassezin, previously isolated by us from the same source and characterized as an agonist of the aryl hydrocarbon (Ah) receptor. The compound could, therefore, contribute to the marked depigmentation observed during the course of pityriasis versicolor.
As the main nitrogen source in Malassezia (M.) furfur, tryptophan induces the formation of fluorochromes and pigments, which makes the yeast less sensitive towards UV light. For the investigation of the fluorochromes, M. furfur (CBS1878) was incubated at 32 degrees C for 14 days on a pigment-inducing medium, and the agar extract was purified by column chromatography, preparative TLC and HPLC. The structures of the pure metabolites were determined by mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy. A pale yellow compound eluting from the column with 22% acetonitrile was found to exhibit a strong green-yellow fluorescence. The fluorochrome is a new bisindolyl compound (C(20)H(12)N(2)O(3), MW 328.33) named pityrialactone because of its furan-2,3-dione structure. The UV protective properties (lambda(max) 352, 292, 276, 224 nm) of this metabolite were confirmed in a yeast model. As shown by the fluorescence spectrum, pityrialactone appears to be responsible for the green-yellow fluorescence of pityriasis versicolor lesions under Wood light. Pityrialactone is accompanied by the isomeric bisindolylmaleic anhydride (pityriaanhydride), which has not yet been described as a natural product but is a known intermediate in the total synthesis of bisindolylmaleimides.
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