Reexamination of the marine sponge Suberea aff. praetensa, (Row) from the Gulf of Thailand furnished in addition to bromotyrosine derivatives found previously 5-bromo-and 5-chlorocavernicolin, cavernicolins 1 and 2, two other brominated tyrosine metabolites, a known bisoxazolidone and a new unusual rearranged tyrosine metabolite subereatensin. Several of the metabolites exhibited significant inhibitory effects against five human cancer cell lines.
Clionasterol (1a), clionasterol monoacetate (1b) and 5alpha,8alpha-epidioxy-24alpha-ethylcholest-6-en-3-ol (2), isolated from the marine sponge Xestospongia exigua, and beta-sitosterol (3) were tested for their influence on the classical (CP) and alternative (AP) pathways of activation of the human complement system in vitro. All the sterols inhibited the CP in a dose-dependent manner but no detectable effect was observed in the AP even at concentrations of 400 microM. Clionasterol was found to be a potent inhibitor of CP (IC50 = 4.1 microM) being ten-fold more active than beta-sitosterol. The presence of the epidioxy group on C-5 and C-8 of compound 2 caused a pronounced decrease of the inhibitory effect. Mechanistic studies on the anticomplementary effect of clionasterol revealed that it interferes with the complement component C1.
Extraction of the marine sponge Tetilla japonica from the Bay of Thailand furnished tetillapyrone and nortetillapyrone, two unusual tetrahydrofurylhydroxypyran-2-ones, whose structures were established by NMR spectrometry and an X-ray analysis of tetillapyrone.
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