Stationary and slow-moving marine organisms regularly employ a
natural product chemical defense to prevent being colonized by marine
micro- and macroorganisms. While these natural antifoulants can be
structurally diverse, they often display highly conserved chemistries
and physicochemical properties, suggesting a natural marine antifouling
pharmacophore. In our current report, we investigate the marine natural
product phidianidine A, which displays several chemical properties
found in highly potent marine antifoulants. Phidianidine A and synthetic
analogues were screened against the settlement and metamorphosis of Amphibalanus improvisus cyprids, and several of the compounds
displayed inhibitory activities at low micromolar concentrations with
IC50 values down to 0.7 μg/mL observed. The settlement
study highlights that phidianidine A is a potent natural antifoulant
and that the scaffold can be tuned to generate simpler and improved
synthetic analogues. The bioactivity is closely linked to the size
of the compound and to its basicity. The study also illustrates that
active analogues can be prepared in the absence of the natural constrained
1,2,4-oxadiazole ring. A synthetic lead analogue of phidianidine A
was incorporated in a coating and included in antifouling field trials,
where it was shown that the coating induced potent inhibition of marine
bacteria and microalgae settlement.
Dibromohemibastadin-1 (DBHB) is an already known potent inhibitor of blue mussel phenoloxidase (which is a key enzyme involved in bioadhesion). Within this study, the potentiality of DBHB against microfouling has been investigated. The activity of DBHB was evaluated on key strains of bacteria and microalgae involved in marine biofilm formation and bioassays assessing impact on growth, adhesion and biofilm formation were used. To assess the efficiency of DBHB when included in a matrix, DBHB varnish was prepared and the anti-microfouling activity of coatings was assessed. Both in vitro and in situ immersions were carried out. Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy (CLSM) was principally used to determine the biovolume and average thickness of biofilms developed on the coatings. Results showed an evident efficiency of DBHB as compound and varnish to reduce the biofilm development. The mode of action seems to be based principally on a perturbation of biofilm formation rather than on a biocidal activity in the tested conditions.
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