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1.
Many grasses live in association with asymptomatic fungi (Neotyphodium spp. endophytes), which grow in the intercellular spaces of the grass. These endophytes produce a range of alkaloids that protect the grass against grazing by mammals and insects. One of these alkaloids is an unusual pyrrolopyrazine, peramine. Peramine appears to be continuously produced by the endophyte, but does not progressively accumulate. No mechanism for the removal of peramine by its further metabolism or any other process has been reported. Our aim was to detect peramine or peramine metabolites in plant fluids to determine if peramine is mobilized, metabolized or excreted by the plant. We also wanted to determine if other fungal metabolites are mobilized by the plant, as has been proposed for the loline alkaloids.We developed a highly sensitive method for the analysis of peramine, using a linear ion trap mass spectrometer. We studied the fragmentation pathway of peramine using ESI MSn and ESI FTICRMS. Based on these results we developed a single reaction monitoring method using the fragmentation of the guanidinium moiety. Cut leaf fluid and guttation fluid of different grass endophyte associations (Lolium perenne with Neotyphodium lolii, Festuca arundinacea with Neotyphodium coenophialum, and Elymus sp. with Epichloë sp.) were analysed. Peramine was detected in the cut leaf fluid of all grass-endophyte associations, but not in the guttation fluid of all associations. In some associations we also detected lolines and ergot peptide alkaloids. This is the first report showing the mobilization of fungal alkaloids into plant fluids by the host plant in grass-endophyte associations.  相似文献   

2.
A correlation was established between species specificity and synthesis of specific secondary metabolites by the Penicillium fungi. Strains of the subgenus Aspergilloides usually synthesize metabolites of polyketide nature. Most strains of the subgenus Furcatum produce clavine ergot alkaloids and metabolites of diketopiperazine nature. The only clavine ergot alkaloids and diketopiperazine alkaloids produced by strains of the subgenus Biverticillium are rugulovasines and rugulosuvines, respectively. Species designations of the strains of the subgenus Penicillium isolated from permafrost soil, the Mir orbital complex, and sites undergoing anthropogenic load were refined based on the marker secondary metabolites. Changes in the taxonomic position of some strains in the genus Penicillium are suggested.  相似文献   

3.
Srivastava  N.K.  Misra  A.  Srivastava  A.K.  Sharma  S. 《Photosynthetica》2004,42(3):469-472
Partitioning of current photosynthates towards primary metabolites and its simultaneous incorporation in leaf alkaloids was investigated in developing leaves of medicinally important Catharanthus roseus. Of the total 14CO2 assimilated, the leaves at positions 1–6 fixed 8, 22, 25, 19, 13, and 8 %, respectively, and stem 3 %. Leaf fresh mass, chlorophyll content, and CO2 exchange rate increased up to the third leaf. The total alkaloid content was highest in young actively growing leaves, which declined with age. Total 14C fixed and its content in ethanol soluble fraction increased up to the third leaf and then declined. The 14C content in primary metabolites such as sugars and organic acids was also highest in the 3rd leaf. The utilization of 14C assimilates into alkaloids was maximum in youngest leaf which declined with leaf age. Hence the capacity to synthesize alkaloids was highest in young growing leaves and metabolites from photosynthetic pathway were most efficiently utilized and incorporated into alkaloid biosynthetic pathway by young growing leaves.  相似文献   

4.
Lysine decarboxylase converts l ‐lysine to cadaverine as a branching point for the biosynthesis of plant Lys‐derived alkaloids. Although cadaverine contributes towards the biosynthesis of Lys‐derived alkaloids, its catabolism, including metabolic intermediates and the enzymes involved, is not known. Here, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis lines by expressing an exogenous lysine/ornithine decarboxylase gene from Lupinus angustifolius (La‐L/ODC) and identified cadaverine‐derived metabolites as the products of the emerged biosynthetic pathway. Through untargeted metabolic profiling, we observed the upregulation of polyamine metabolism, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis and the biosynthesis of several Lys‐derived alkaloids in the transgenic lines. Moreover, we found several cadaverine‐derived metabolites specifically detected in the transgenic lines compared with the non‐transformed control. Among these, three specific metabolites were identified and confirmed as 5‐aminopentanal, 5‐aminopentanoate and δ‐valerolactam. Cadaverine catabolism in a representative transgenic line (DC29) was traced by feeding stable isotope‐labeled [α‐15N]‐ or [ε‐15N]‐l ‐lysine. Our results show similar 15N incorporation ratios from both isotopomers for the specific metabolite features identified, indicating that these metabolites were synthesized via the symmetric structure of cadaverine. We propose biosynthetic pathways for the metabolites on the basis of metabolite chemistry and enzymes known or identified through catalyzing specific biochemical reactions in this study. Our study shows that this pool of enzymes with promiscuous activities is the driving force for metabolite diversification in plants. Thus, this study not only provides valuable information for understanding the catabolic mechanism of cadaverine but also demonstrates that cadaverine accumulation is one of the factors to expand plant chemodiversity, which may lead to the emergence of Lys‐derived alkaloid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

5.
WHEN she reported the chronic hepatotoxicity of the alkaloids senkirkine and hydroxysenkirkine, which are esters of the aminoalcohol otonecine, Schoental1 suggested that 1,2-epoxides rather than pyrrolic derivatives2,3 are the active metabolites of hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids. We have results which confirm the hepatotoxicity of otonecine esters but argue against the suggested involvement of 1,2-epoxides.  相似文献   

6.
Changes in growth parameters, carbon assimilation efficiency, and utilization of 14CO2 assimilate into alkaloids in plant parts were investigated at whole plant level by treatment of Catharanthus roseus with gibberellic acid (GA). Application of GA (1 000 g m−3) resulted in changes in leaf morphology, increase in stem elongation, leaf and internode length, plant height, and decrease in biomass content. Phenotypic changes were accompanied by decrease in contents of chlorophylls and in photosynthetic capacity. GA application resulted in higher % of total alkaloids accumulated in leaf, stem, and root. GA treatment produced negative phenotypic response in total biomass production but positive response in content of total alkaloids in leaf, stem, and roots. 14C assimilate partitioning revealed that 14C distribution in leaf, stem, and root of treated plants was higher than in untreated and variations were observed in contents of metabolites as sugars, amino acids, and organic acids. Capacity to utilize current fixed 14C derived assimilates for alkaloid production was high in leaves but low in roots of treated plants despite higher content of 14C metabolites such as sugars, amino acids, and organic acids. In spite of higher availability of metabolites, their utilization into alkaloid production is low in GA-treated roots.  相似文献   

7.
An analytical method of improved sensitivity has enabled measurements to be made of N-oxide as well as pyrrolic metabolites formed from a range of unsaturated pyrrolizidine alkaloids in hepatic microsome preparations. Using microsomes from livers of phenobarbitone-pretreated male Fischer rats, all 13 alkaloids tested were metabolised to both N-oxides and pyrroles. The most lipophilic alkaloids gave enhanced rates of metabolism. No consistent relationship existed between rates of N-oxide and of pyrrole formation. The two pathways appeared to be independent. The ratio of N-oxide to pyrrolic metabolites varied, depending on the type of ester: it was highest for ‘open’ diester alkaloids, lowest for 12 membered macrocyclic diesters and for monoesters. Steric hindrance by the acid moiety could account for these differences, by affecting the balance between microsomal oxidation of the amino alcohol moiety at the nitrogen and C8 positions respectively and could explain the high pyrrole yields given by some macrocyclic diesters. The levels of pyrrolic metabolites bound to liver tissues and responsible for hepatotoxicity in rats given pyrrolizidine alkaloids, did not necessarily reflect the rates of formation of such metabolites measured in vitro. In the animal additional factors could influence the formation and tissue binding of pyrrolic metabolites, including the detoxication of alkaloids by hydrolysis and the chemical reactivity and stability of the toxic metabolites. A comparison of heliotridine esters with retronecine esters showed that the 7-hydroxyl or -ester configuration had a relatively small influence on the balance between formation of pyrrolic metabolites and detoxication by N-oxidation. The results did not support any hypothesis that heliotridine esters should generally be more hepatotoxic than analogous retronecine esters. The structure of the acid moiety was likely to have at least as much influence on toxicity as the base configuration.  相似文献   

8.
Salvatore  Massimo  Francesco 《Phytochemistry》2009,70(9):1082-1091
N-Prenyl secondary metabolites (isopentenylazo-, geranylazo-, farnesylazo- and their biosynthetic derivatives) represent a family of extremely rare natural products. Only in recent years have these alkaloids been recognized as interesting and valuable biologically active secondary metabolites. To date about 35 alkaloids have been isolated from plants mainly belonging to the Rutaceae family, and from fungi, bacteria, and/or obtained by chemical synthesis. These metabolites comprise anthranilic acid derivatives, diazepinones, and indole, and xanthine alkaloids. Many of the isolated prenylazo secondary metabolites and their semisynthetic derivatives are shown to exert valuable in vitro and in vivo anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, anti-viral, and anti-fungal effects. The aim of this comprehensive review is to examine the different types of prenylazo natural products from a chemical, phytochemical and biological perspective.  相似文献   

9.
Cannabis sativa L. is an annual dioecious plant from Central Asia. Cannabinoids, flavonoids, stilbenoids, terpenoids, alkaloids and lignans are some of the secondary metabolites present in C. sativa. Earlier reviews were focused on isolation and identification of more than 480 chemical compounds; this review deals with the biosynthesis of the secondary metabolites present in this plant. Cannabinoid biosynthesis and some closely related pathways that involve the same precursors are disscused.  相似文献   

10.
Plants produce a high diversity of natural products or secondary metabolites which are important for the communication of plants with other organisms. A prominent function is the protection against herbivores and/or microbial pathogens. Some natural products are also involved in defence against abiotic stress, e.g. UV-B exposure. Many of the secondary metabolites have interesting biological properties and quite a number are of medicinal importance. Because the production of the valuable natural products, such as the anticancer drugs paclitaxel, vinblastine or camptothecin in plants is a costly process, biotechnological alternatives to produce these alkaloids more economically become increasingly important. This review provides an overview of the state of art to produce alkaloids in recombinant microorganisms, such as bacteria or yeast. Some progress has been made in metabolic engineering usually employing a single recombinant alkaloid gene. More importantly, for benzylisoquinoline, monoterpene indole and diterpene alkaloids (taxanes) as well as some terpenoids and phenolics the proof of concept for production of complex alkaloids in recombinant Escherichia coli and yeast has already been achieved. In a long-term perspective, it will probably be possible to generate gene cassettes for complete pathways, which could then be used for production of valuable natural products in bioreactors or for metabolic engineering of crop plants. This will improve their resistance against herbivores and/or microbial pathogens.  相似文献   

11.
Quaternary benzo[c]phenanthridine alkaloids are secondary metabolites of the plant families Papaveraceae, Rutaceae, and Ranunculaceae with anti-inflammatory, antifungal, antimicrobial and anticancer activities. Their spectral changes induced by the environment could be used to understand their interaction with biomolecules as well as for analytical purposes. Spectral shifts, quantum yield and changes in lifetime are presented for the free form of alkaloids in solvents of different polarity and for alkaloids bound to DNA. Quantum yields range from 0.098 to 0.345 for the alkanolamine form and are below 0.033 for the iminium form. Rise of fluorescence lifetimes (from 2–5 ns to 3–10 ns) and fluorescence intensity are observed after binding of the iminium form to the DNA for most studied alkaloids. The alkanolamine form does not bind to DNA. Acid-base equilibrium constant of macarpine is determined to be 8.2–8.3. Macarpine is found to have the highest increase of fluorescence upon DNA binding, even under unfavourable pH conditions. This is probably a result of its unique methoxy substitution at C12 a characteristic not shared with other studied alkaloids. Association constant for macarpine-DNA interaction is 700000 M-1.  相似文献   

12.
Partitioning of exogenously supplied U-14C-saccharose into primary metabolic pool as sugars, amino acids, and organic acids was analyzed and simultaneous utilization for production of alkaloid by leaf, stem, and root in twigs and rooted plants of Catharanthus roseus grown in hydroponic culture medium was determined. Twigs revealed comparable distribution of total 14C label in leaf and stem. Stems contained significantly higher 14C label in sugar fraction and in alkaloids [47 kBq kg−1(DM)] than leaf. In rooted plants, label in 14C in metabolic fractions in root such as ethanol-soluble, ethanol-insoluble, and chloroform-soluble fractions and in components such as sugars, amino acids, and organic acids were significantly higher than in stems and leaves. This was related with significantly higher content of 14C in alkaloids in stems and leaves. 14C contents in sugars, amino acids, and organic acids increased from leaf to stem and roots. Roots are the major accumulators of metabolites accompanied by higher biosynthetic utilization for alkaloid accumulation.  相似文献   

13.
Transformed roots of Lupinus mutabilis cv. Potosi induced by Agrobacterium rhizogenes strain R1601 were cultured on Murashige and Skoog-based medium lacking kanamycin sulphate, or with this antibiotic at 40 mg l−1. The neomycin phosphotransferase gene in the genome of transformed roots was confirmed by non-radioactive Southern hybridisation. Neomycin phosphotransferase protein was detected by ELISA. Transformed roots synthesised isoflavones, but not quinolizidine alkaloids; the latter are typical secondary metabolites of lupin normally produced in aerial parts of the plant. Genistein and 2′-hydroxygenistein, were the main secondary metabolites in cultured, transformed roots, whereas the glycoside genistin was more abundant in roots of non-transformed plants. Wighteone concentrations in transgenic roots were higher than those of non-transformed roots. Transformed roots produced twice the concentration of isoflavones compared with roots from non-transformed plants, indicating that Ri plasmid T-DNA genes modified isoflavone concentration and pattern of biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Representatives of eleven different classes of isoquinoline alkaloids inhibit Na+, K+-ATPase and Mg2+-ATPase in rat brain microsomal preparations. In most cases the Na+, K+-ATPase is more sensitive than Mg2+-ATPase to inhibition by the alkaloids. The classes of alkaloids can be ranked according to potency of inhibition of Na+, K+-ATPase. Protoberberines are most effective, followed in decreasing order by benzophenanthridines, benzylisoquinolines, aporphines, tetrahydroprotoberberines, pavines, protopines, isoquinolines, tetrahydrobenzylisoquinolines, morphinanes, and tetrahydroisoquinolines. As specific representatives of each of the first four classes of alkaloids, berberine, sanguinarine, papaveroline and 1,2,10,11-tetrahydroxyaporphine, respectively, prove most valuable in kinetic studies because they exhibit the greatest inhibitory action on brain Na+, K+-ATPase. Kinetic analyses plotted in double reciprocal form reveal that berberine and 1,2,10,11-tetrahydroxyaporphine are simple linear competitive inhibitors with respect to ATP, whereas sanguinarine and papaveroline are simple linear noncompetitive inhibitors. These four representative alkaloids exhibit nonlinear competitive inhibition with respect to Na+-activation. Additionally, these alkaloids significantly inhibit rat brain microsomal K+-activatedpNPPase. The results demonstrate that certain members of several classes of isoquinoline alkaloids markedly affect various cation-dependent phosphohydrolases in vitro.  相似文献   

15.
The Aconitum alkaloids aconitine, mesaconitine, and hypaconitine are the main toxic components in a commonly used traditional Chinese herbal medicine Fu Zi. To provide guidelines for the safe use of this medicine, metabolic changes in Wistar rats caused by these compounds were investigated by means of integrated analysis of two metabonomic approaches: 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and gas chromatography/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC/TOF–MS). Rats were given a single dose of aconitine, mesaconitine, hypaconitine, or vehicle. The largest metabolic changes were observed 6 h after treatment. Every group receiving a dose had higher urine concentrations of glucose, acetate, dimethylglycine, succinate, and alanine and had lower concentrations of creatinine, citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, N-acetylated metabolites, and trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) than did the control group. These results may reflect the perturbation of renal tubular function within the first 24 h after treatment. The results also revealed a larger perturbation of metabolic profiles in the aconitine group than in the mesaconitine and hypaconitine groups, illustrating how these alkaloids exhibit different toxicities. An analysis of plasma samples collected 7 days postdose showed that there were higher levels of lactate, alanine, and lipids along with lower levels of glucose, β-hydroxybutyrate, and creatine in the plasma of the aconitine and mesaconitine groups than there were in the control and hypaconitine groups. The GC/TOF–MS data from the plasma samples showed that the number of metabolites, with significant changes or with a tendency to change, in the aconitine and mesaconitine groups were dissimilar, suggesting a possible difference in the acute toxicity mechanisms of these alkaloids.  相似文献   

16.
This is a comprehensive review, with 114 references, of the chemical diversity found in the fungus Penicillium roqueforti. Secondary metabolites of an alkaloidal nature are described, for example, ergot alkaloids such as festuclavine, isofumigaclavines A and B, and diketopiperazine alkaloids such as roquefortines A–D, which are derived from imidazole. Other metabolites are marcfortines A–C, PR‐toxin, eremofortines A–E, mycophenolic and penicillic acids, and some γ‐lactones. Also, recent developments related to the structural characteristics of botryodiplodin and andrastin are studied—the latter has anticancer properties. Finally, we discuss the enzymes of P. roqueforti, which can participate in the biotechnological production of high value‐added molecules, as well as the use of secondary metabolite profiles for taxonomic purposes.  相似文献   

17.
Several Longitarsus flea beetle species sequester pyrrolizidine alkaloids acquired from their Asteraceae and Boraginaceae host plants. We carried out feeding and injection experiments using radioactively labeled pyrrolizidine alkaloids to investigate the physiological mechanisms of uptake, metabolism and storage of alkaloids in adult beetles. We examined six Longitarsus species belonging to different phylogenetic clades in a comparative approach. All species that accepted pyrrolizidine alkaloids in a preceding food choice study showed the ability both to store pyrrolizidine alkaloid N-oxides and to metabolize tertiary pyrrolizidine alkaloids into their N-oxides. Regardless of whether the beetles' natural host plants contain pyrrolizidine alkaloids or not, these species were found to possess an oxidizing enzyme. This oxygenase appears to be specific to pyrrolizidine alkaloids: [3H]Atropine and [14C]nicotine, two alkaloids not related to pyrrolizidine alkaloids, were neither stored nor N-oxidized by any of the tested species. One species, L. australis, that strictly avoids pyrrolizidine alkaloids behaviorally, exhibited a lack of adaptations to pyrrolizidine alkaloids on a physiological level as well. After injection of tertiary [14C]senecionine, beetles of this species neither N-oxidized nor stored the compounds, in contrast to L. jacobaeae, an adapted species that underwent the same treatment. L. jacobaeae demonstrated the same efficiency in N-oxidation and storage when fed or injected with tertiary [14C]senecionine.Communicated by G. Heldmaier  相似文献   

18.
Plants of the Amaryllidaceae family have been under intense scrutiny for the presence of the specific metabolites responsible for the medicinal properties associated with them. The study began in 1877 with the isolation of alkaloid lycorine from Narcissus pseudonarcissus and since then more than 100 alkaloids, exhibiting diverse biological activities, have been isolated from the Amaryllidaceae plants. Based on the present scientific evidence, it is likely that isocarbostyril constituents of the Amaryllidaceae, such as narciclasine, pancratistatin and their congeners, are the most important metabolites responsible for the therapeutic benefits of these plant species in the folk medical treatment of cancer. Notably, Narcissus poeticus L., used by the ancient Greek physicians, is now known to contain about 0.12 g of narciclasine per kg of fresh bulbs. The focus of the present research work is the chemistry and biology of these compounds as specifically relevant to their potential use in medicine. In particular, the anticancer evaluation of lycorine, narciclasine as well as of other Amaryllidaceae alkaloids and their synthetic derivatives are presented in this paper. The structure–activity relationships among some groups of Amaryllidaceae alkaloids will be discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The occurrence of indole alkaloids among secondary fungal metabolites was studied in species of the genus Aspergillus, isolated from soils that were sampled in various regions of Russia (a total of 102 isolates of the species A. niger, A. phoenicis, A. fumigatus, A. flavus, A. versicolor, A. ustus, A. clavatus, and A. ochraceus). Clavine alkaloids were represented by fumigaclavine B, which was formed by A. fumigatus. -Cyclopiazonic acid was formed by isolates of A. fumigatus, A. flavus, A. versicolor, A. phoenicis, and A. clavatus. The occurrence of indole-containing diketopiperazine alkaloids was documented for isolates of A. flavus, A. fumigatus, A. clavatus, and A. ochraceus. No indole-containing metabolites were found among the metabolites of A. ustus or A. niger.  相似文献   

20.
Legumes produce a high diversity of secondary metabolites which serve as defence compounds against herbivores and microbes, but also as signal compounds to attract pollinating and fruit-dispersing animals. As nitrogen-fixing organisms, legumes produce more nitrogen containing secondary metabolites than other plant families. Compounds with nitrogen include alkaloids and amines (quinolizidine, pyrrolizidine, indolizidine, piperidine, pyridine, pyrrolidine, simple indole, Erythrina, simple isoquinoline, and imidazole alkaloids; polyamines, phenylethylamine, tyramine, and tryptamine derivatives), non-protein amino acids (NPAA), cyanogenic glucosides, and peptides (lectins, trypsin inhibitors, antimicrobial peptides, cyclotides). Secondary metabolites without nitrogen are phenolics (phenylpropanoids, flavonoids, isoflavones, catechins, anthocyanins, tannins, lignans, coumarins and furanocoumarins), polyketides (anthraquinones), and terpenoids (especially triterpenoid, steroidal saponins, tetraterpenes). While some secondary metabolites have a wide distribution (flavonoids, triterpenes, pinitol), however, others occur in a limited number of taxa. The distributions of secondary metabolites with an irregular occurrence are mapped on a molecular phylogeny of the Fabaceae, reconstructed from a combined data set of nucleotide sequences from rbcL, matK and ITS genes. In most cases, the distribution patterns of secondary metabolites do not agree with the phylogeny of the plants producing them. In contrary, the distribution of many secondary metabolites is patchy and irregular. Thus, the use of phytochemical data to reconstruct a phylogeny of plants is often not informative and can be misleading. The patchy distribution may be due to convergent evolution, a contribution of endophytic fungi or more likely, to an early acquisition of the key genes of secondary metabolism in the evolution of land plants among others by horizontal gene transfer from bacteria. Thus it would be a matter of gene regulation whether these genes are active in some but not all taxa.  相似文献   

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