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Mariculture and Natural Production of the Antitumoural (+)-Discodermolide by the Caribbean Marine Sponge Discodermia dissoluta
Authors:Cesar Ruiz  Katherine Valderrama  Sven Zea  Leonardo Castellanos
Affiliation:1. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras-INVEMAR, Calle 25 2-55, Rodadero Sur - Playa Salguero, Santa Marta, Colombia
4. Centre D′Océanologie de Marseille, Université de la Méditerranée, Campus Universitaire de Luminy, Marseille, France
3. Departamento de Química, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Bogotá, Ciudad Universitaria, Bogotá, Colombia
2. Centro de Estudios en Ciencias del Mar-CECIMAR, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Caribe, c/o INVEMAR, Calle 25 2-55, Rodadero Sur - Playa Salguero, Santa Marta, Colombia
Abstract:Biotechnological research on marine organisms, such as ex situ or in situ aquaculture and in vitro cell culture, is being conducted to produce bioactive metabolites for biomedical and industrial uses. The Caribbean marine sponge Discodermia dissoluta is the source of (+)-discodermolide, a potent antitumoural polyketide that has reached clinical trials. This sponge usually lives at depths greater than 30 m, but at Santa Marta (Colombia) there is a shallower population, which has made it logistically possible to investigate for the first time, on ways to supply discodermolide. We thus performed in situ, 6-month fragment culture trials to assess the performance of this sponge in terms of growth and additional discodermolide production and studied possible factors that influence the variability of discodermolide concentrations in the wild. Sponge fragments cultured in soft mesh bags suspended from horizontal lines showed high survivorship (93 %), moderate growth (28 % increase in volume) and an overall rise (33 %) in the discodermolide concentration, equivalent to average additional production of 8 μg of compound per millilitre of sponge. The concentration of discodermolide in wild sponges ranged from 8 to 40 μg mL?1. Locality was the only factor related to discodermolide variation in the wild, and there were greater concentrations in peripheral vs. basal portions of the sponge, and in clean vs. fouled individuals. As natural growth and regeneration rates can be higher than culture growth rates, there is room for improving techniques to sustainably produce discodermolide.
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