Pyonitrins
A–D are recently isolated natural products from
the insect-associated
Pseudomonas protegens
strain,
which were isolated from complex fractions that exhibited antifungal
activity via an
in vivo
murine candidiasis assay.
Genomic studies of
Pseudomonas protegens
suggested
that pyonitrins A–D are formed via a spontaneous nonenzymatic
reaction between biosynthetic intermediates of two well-known natural
products pyochelin and pyrrolnitrin. Herein we have accomplished the
first biomimetic total synthesis of pyonitrins A–D in three
steps and studied the nonenzymatic formation of the pyonitrins using
15
N NMR spectroscopy.
Biofilms, the predominant growth mode of microorganisms, pose a significant risk to human health. The protective biofilm matrix, typically composed of exopolysaccharides, proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids, combined with biofilm-grown bacteria’s heterogenous physiology, leads to enhanced fitness and tolerance to traditional methods for treatment. There is a need to identify biofilm inhibitors using diverse approaches and targeting different stages of biofilm formation. This review discusses discovery strategies that successfully identified a wide range of inhibitors and the processes used to characterize their inhibition mechanism and further improvement. Additionally, we examine the structure–activity relationship (SAR) for some of these inhibitors to optimize inhibitor activity.
The first total synthesis of hunanamycin A, an antibiotic natural product with a pyrido[1,2,3-de]quinoxaline-2,3-dione core from a marine-derived Bacillus hunanensis, is disclosed. The present effort provides access to sufficient amounts of scarce hunanamycin A for further biological evaluation and confirmation of the assigned absolute configuration. In addition, four new analogues of the natural product are reported.
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