Carbohydrate-Containing Low Molecular Weight Metabolites of Microalgae

Mar Drugs. 2023 Jul 28;21(8):427. doi: 10.3390/md21080427.

Abstract

Microalgae are abundant components of the biosphere rich in low molecular weight carbohydrate-containing natural products (glycoconjugates). Glycoconjugates take part in the processes of photosynthesis, provide producers with important biological molecules, influence other organisms and are known by their biological activities. Some of them, for example, glycosylated toxins and arsenicals, are detrimental and can be transferred via food chains into higher organisms, including humans. So far, the studies on a series of particular groups of microalgal glycoconjugates were not comprehensively discussed in special reviews. In this review, a special focus is given to glycoconjugates' isolation, structure determination, properties and approaches to search for new bioactive metabolites. Analysis of literature data concerning structures, functions and biological activities of ribosylated arsenicals, galactosylated and sulfoquinovosylated lipids, phosphoglycolipids, glycoside derivatives of toxins, and other groups of glycoconjugates was carried out and discussed. Recent studies were fundamental in the discovery of a great variety of new carbohydrate-containing metabolites and their biological activities in defining the role of microalgal viral infections in regulating microalgal blooms as well as in the detection of glycoconjugates with potent immunomodulatory properties. Those discoveries support growing interest in these molecules.

Keywords: arsenicals; galactolipids; glycoconjugates; microalgae; prymnesins; steryl glycosides.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Arsenicals*
  • Glycosides
  • Humans
  • Microalgae*
  • Molecular Weight
  • Photosynthesis

Substances

  • Glycosides
  • Arsenicals

Grants and funding

This review was carried out with the partial support of the Grant of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Russian Federation 13.1902.21.0012 (contract No 075-15-2020-796). The study of biological peculiarities of organisms known as producers of phytotoxins was partially supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Russian Federation, the project “Study of organisms- producers of phycotoxins in Kamchatka” (FWFE-2023-0001).