“…Among the 16 genera reported, Hypoxylon with 14 species is largely distributed in various marine and terrestrial habitats, and producing a large variety of bioactive compounds among which cohaerins (Quang et al, 2005a;Surup et al, 2013), daldinins and daldinones (Quang et al, 2004;Gu et al, 2007), cytochalasin (Espada et al, 1997), fragiformin , mitorubrinols (Quang et al, 2005b), hypoxylonols (Fukai et al, 2012), hypoxylans (Kuhnert et al, 2015a), hypoxyvermelhotins , rickenyls (Kuhnert et al, 2015b), rutilins (Quang et al, 2005b), carneic acids , hymatoxins (Bodo et al, 1987;Borgschulte et al, 1991), malettinins (Angawi et al, 2005), hypoxysordarin (Daferner et al, 1999), lenormandins (Kuhnert et al, 2015c), nodulisporic acids (Bills et al, 2012), schweinitzin A (Linh et al, 2014), truncatones (Sudarman et al, 2016), macrocyclic polyesters 15G256 family (Schlingmann et al, 2002), and sporothriolide (Krohn et al, 1994;Surup et al, 2014;Cao et al, 2016).…”