Antiproliferative and Cytotoxic Cytochalasins from Sparticola triseptata Inhibit Actin Polymerization and Aggregation

J Fungi (Basel). 2022 May 25;8(6):560. doi: 10.3390/jof8060560.

Abstract

Laying the groundwork on preliminary structure-activity relationship study relating to the disruptive activity of cytochalasan derivatives on mammalian cell actin cytoskeleton, we furthered our study on the cytochalasans of the Dothideomycetes fungus, Sparticola triseptata. A new cytochalasan analog triseptatin (1), along with the previously described cytochalasans deoxaphomin B (2) and cytochalasin B (3), and polyketide derivatives cis-4-hydroxy-6-deoxyscytalone (4) and 6-hydroxymellein (5) were isolated from the rice culture of S. triseptata. The structure of 1 was elucidated through NMR spectroscopic analysis and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HR-ESI-MS). The relative and absolute configurations were established through analysis of NOESY spectroscopic data and later correlated with experimental electronic circular dichroism and time-dependent density functional theory (ECD-TDDFT) computational analysis. Compounds 1 and 2 showed cytotoxic activities against seven mammalian cell lines (L929, KB3.1, MCF-7, A549, PC-3, SKOV-3, and A431) and antiproliferative effects against the myeloid leukemia K-562 cancer cell line. Both 1 and 2 were shown to possess properties inhibiting the F-actin network, prompting further hypotheses that should to be tested in the future to enable a well-resolved concept of the structural implications determining the bioactivity of the cytochalasin backbone against F-actin.

Keywords: ECD–TDDFT; Sparticola triseptata; actin inhibitors; antiproliferative; cytotoxic; structure elucidation.

Grants and funding

K.Y.M.G. acknowledges a scholarship grant from the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) through its Accelerated Science and Technology Human Resource Development Program (ASTHRDP). C.L. is grateful for a stipend from the Life Science Foundation, Braunschweig, Germany. G.P. is grateful for a PhD stipend from the German Academic Exchange Service. T.E.B.S., K.S., and M.S. are grateful for funding from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Research Unit CytoLabs; FOR 5170). A.P.G.M and M.S. are also indebted to the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation for a Digital Cooperation Fellowship.