The (polyenoyl)tetramic
acid militarinone C (1) heads
a family of seven members. Before our work, the configuration of C-5
was unknown whereas the configurations of C-8′ and C-10′
were either (R,R) or (S,S). We synthesized the four stereoisomers of constitution 1, which conform with these insights. This included cross-coupling
both enantiomers of the western building block (8) with
both enantiomers of the eastern building block (9). The
specific rotations of the resulting 1 isomers suggested
that natural 1 is configured like the coupling partners
(S)-8 and (R,R)-9. This conclusion was corroborated by degrading natural 1 to alcohol 35 and by proving its configurational
identity with synthetic (R,R)-35.
The discovery of bioactive natural
products remains a time-consuming
and challenging task. The ability to link high-confidence metabolite
annotations in crude extracts with activity would be highly beneficial
to the drug discovery process. To address this challenge, HPLC-based
activity profiling and advanced UHPLC-HRMS/MS metabolite profiling
for annotation were combined to leverage the information obtained
from both approaches on a crude extract scaled down to the submilligram
level. This strategy was applied to a subset of an extract library
screening aiming to identify natural products inhibiting oncogenic
signaling in melanoma. Advanced annotation and data organization enabled
the identification of compounds that were likely responsible for the
activity in the extracts. These compounds belonged to two different
natural product scaffolds, namely, brevipolides from a Hyptis
brevipes extract and methoxylated flavonoids identified in
three different extracts of Hyptis and Artemisia spp. Targeted isolation of these prioritized compounds led to five
brevipolides and seven methoxylated flavonoids. Brevipolide A (1) and 6-methoxytricin (9) were the most potent
compounds from each chemical class and displayed AKT activity inhibition
with an IC50 of 17.6 ± 1.6 and 4.9 ± 0.2 μM,
respectively.
Corms are obtained as a byproduct during the cultivation of saffron (Crocus sativus). In a project aimed at the valorization of this waste product, we observed that a 70% EtOH extract of the corms and a sugardepleted MeOH fraction of the extract inhibited the TNF-α/IFN-γ-induced secretion and gene expression of the chemokines IL-8, MCP-1, and RANTES in human HaCaT cells. The effects were in part stronger than those of the positive control hydrocortisone. For preparative isolation, the 70% EtOH extract was partitioned between n-BuOH and water. Separation of the n-BuOH-soluble fraction by centrifugal partition chromatography, followed by preparative and semipreparative HPLC, afforded a series of bidesmosidic glycosides of echinocystic acid bearing a 3,16-dihydroxy-10-oxo-hexadecanoic acid residue attached to the glycosidic moiety at C-28. They include azafrines 1 and 2, previously reported in saffron, and eight new congeners named azafrines 3−10. Saffron saponins significantly inhibited TNF-α/IFN-γinduced secretion of RANTES in human HaCaT cells at 1 μM (p < 0.001). Some of them further lowered TNF-α/IFN-γinduced gene expression.
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