Cargando…

Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations

Demosponges possess a skeleton made of a composite material with various organic constituents and/or siliceous spicules. Chitin is an integral part of the skeleton of different sponges of the order Verongida. Moreover, sponges of the order Verongida, such as Aplysina cavernicola or Ianthella basta,...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kunze, Kurt, Niemann, Hendrik, Ueberlein, Susanne, Schulze, Renate, Ehrlich, Hermann, Brunner, Eike, Proksch, Peter, van Pée, Karl-Heinz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3705403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23595055
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md11041271
_version_ 1782476435420610560
author Kunze, Kurt
Niemann, Hendrik
Ueberlein, Susanne
Schulze, Renate
Ehrlich, Hermann
Brunner, Eike
Proksch, Peter
van Pée, Karl-Heinz
author_facet Kunze, Kurt
Niemann, Hendrik
Ueberlein, Susanne
Schulze, Renate
Ehrlich, Hermann
Brunner, Eike
Proksch, Peter
van Pée, Karl-Heinz
author_sort Kunze, Kurt
collection PubMed
description Demosponges possess a skeleton made of a composite material with various organic constituents and/or siliceous spicules. Chitin is an integral part of the skeleton of different sponges of the order Verongida. Moreover, sponges of the order Verongida, such as Aplysina cavernicola or Ianthella basta, are well-known for the biosynthesis of brominated tyrosine derivates, characteristic bioactive natural products. It has been unknown so far whether these compounds are exclusively present in the cellular matrix or whether they may also be incorporated into the chitin-based skeletons. In the present study, we therefore examined the skeletons of A. cavernicola and I. basta with respect to the presence of bromotyrosine metabolites. The chitin-based-skeletons isolated from these sponges indeed contain significant amounts of brominated compounds, which are not easily extractable from the skeletons by common solvents, such as MeOH, as shown by HPLC analyses in combination with NMR and IR spectroscopic measurements. Quantitative potentiometric analyses confirm that the skeleton-associated bromine mainly withstands the MeOH-based extraction. This observation suggests that the respective, but yet unidentified, brominated compounds are strongly bound to the sponge skeletons, possibly by covalent bonding. Moreover, gene fragments of halogenases suggested to be responsible for the incorporation of bromine into organic molecules could be amplified from DNA isolated from sponge samples enriched for sponge-associated bacteria.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3705403
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37054032013-07-09 Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations Kunze, Kurt Niemann, Hendrik Ueberlein, Susanne Schulze, Renate Ehrlich, Hermann Brunner, Eike Proksch, Peter van Pée, Karl-Heinz Mar Drugs Article Demosponges possess a skeleton made of a composite material with various organic constituents and/or siliceous spicules. Chitin is an integral part of the skeleton of different sponges of the order Verongida. Moreover, sponges of the order Verongida, such as Aplysina cavernicola or Ianthella basta, are well-known for the biosynthesis of brominated tyrosine derivates, characteristic bioactive natural products. It has been unknown so far whether these compounds are exclusively present in the cellular matrix or whether they may also be incorporated into the chitin-based skeletons. In the present study, we therefore examined the skeletons of A. cavernicola and I. basta with respect to the presence of bromotyrosine metabolites. The chitin-based-skeletons isolated from these sponges indeed contain significant amounts of brominated compounds, which are not easily extractable from the skeletons by common solvents, such as MeOH, as shown by HPLC analyses in combination with NMR and IR spectroscopic measurements. Quantitative potentiometric analyses confirm that the skeleton-associated bromine mainly withstands the MeOH-based extraction. This observation suggests that the respective, but yet unidentified, brominated compounds are strongly bound to the sponge skeletons, possibly by covalent bonding. Moreover, gene fragments of halogenases suggested to be responsible for the incorporation of bromine into organic molecules could be amplified from DNA isolated from sponge samples enriched for sponge-associated bacteria. MDPI 2013-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3705403/ /pubmed/23595055 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md11041271 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kunze, Kurt
Niemann, Hendrik
Ueberlein, Susanne
Schulze, Renate
Ehrlich, Hermann
Brunner, Eike
Proksch, Peter
van Pée, Karl-Heinz
Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title_full Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title_fullStr Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title_full_unstemmed Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title_short Brominated Skeletal Components of the Marine Demosponges, Aplysina cavernicola and Ianthella basta: Analytical and Biochemical Investigations
title_sort brominated skeletal components of the marine demosponges, aplysina cavernicola and ianthella basta: analytical and biochemical investigations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3705403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23595055
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md11041271
work_keys_str_mv AT kunzekurt brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT niemannhendrik brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT ueberleinsusanne brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT schulzerenate brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT ehrlichhermann brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT brunnereike brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT prokschpeter brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations
AT vanpeekarlheinz brominatedskeletalcomponentsofthemarinedemospongesaplysinacavernicolaandianthellabastaanalyticalandbiochemicalinvestigations