Kosinostatin

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Category Antibiotics
Catalog number BBF-01554
CAS
Molecular Weight 616.61
Molecular Formula C33H32N2O10

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Description

Kosinostatin is originally isolated from Paecilomyces sp. FO-3184. It showed strong anti-gram-positive bacterial activity (MIC of 0.039 μg/mL) and moderate anti-gram-negative bacterial and yeast activity (MIC of 1.56-12.5 μg/mL). It is also poisonous to the cells of a wide variety of tumor cells with the IC50 of 0.02-0.6 μmol/L. And the IC50 of inhibition of DNA topoisomerase IIα is 3-10 μmol/L.

Specification

Synonyms Isoquinocycline B
IUPAC Name (1S,16R,17R,19R)-16-[(2S,4R,5S,6S)-5-acetyl-4,5-dihydroxy-6-methyloxan-2-yl]oxy-3,10-dihydroxy-17-methylspiro[18-oxapentacyclo[15.2.1.02,15.04,13.06,11]icosa-2,4(13),6(11),7,9,14-hexaene-19,5'-3,6-dihydro-2H-pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyrrole]-5,12-dione
Canonical SMILES CC1C(C(CC(O1)OC2C3=CC4=C(C(=C3C5CC2(OC56C=C7CCN=C7N6)C)O)C(=O)C8=C(C4=O)C(=CC=C8)O)O)(C(=O)C)O
InChI InChI=1S/C33H32N2O10/c1-13(36)33(42)14(2)43-22(10-21(33)38)44-29-18-9-17-25(26(39)16-5-4-6-20(37)24(16)27(17)40)28(41)23(18)19-12-31(29,3)45-32(19)11-15-7-8-34-30(15)35-32/h4-6,9,11,14,19,21-22,29,37-38,41-42H,7-8,10,12H2,1-3H3,(H,34,35)/t14-,19-,21+,22-,29+,31+,32+,33+/m0/s1
InChI Key IWQFYWITNQDEGF-LXJOWWJISA-N

Properties

Appearance Dark Yellow Powder
Antibiotic Activity Spectrum Gram-positive bacteria; Gram-negative bacteria; yeast; neoplastics (Tumor)
Melting Point >155°C

Reference Reading

1. In Silico Analysis of PKS and NRPS Gene Clusters in Arisostatin- and Kosinostatin-Producers and Description of Micromonospora okii sp. nov
Hisayuki Komaki, Natsuko Ichikawa, Akira Hosoyama, Moriyuki Hamada, Yasuhiro Igarashi Antibiotics (Basel). 2021 Nov 25;10(12):1447. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics10121447.
Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 and Micromonospora sp. TP-A0468 are producers of arisostatin and kosinostatin, respectively. Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 showed a 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity of 100% to Micromonosporaoryzae CP2R9-1T whereas Micromonospora sp. TP-A0468 showed a 99.3% similarity to Micromonospora haikouensis 232617T. A phylogenetic analysis based on gyrB sequences suggested that Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 is closely related to Micromonospora oryzae whereas Micromonospora TP-A0468 is an independent genomospecies. As Micromonospora sp. TP-A0468 showed some phenotypic differences to its closely related species, it was classified as a novel species, for which the name Micromonospora okii sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is TP-A0468T (= NBRC 110461T). Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 and M. okii TP-A0468T were both found to harbor 15 gene clusters for secondary metabolites such as polyketides and nonribosomal peptides in their genomes. Arisostatin-biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) of Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 closely resembled tetrocarcin A-BGC of Micromonospora chalcea NRRL 11289. A large type-I polyketide synthase gene cluster was present in each genome of Micromonospora sp. TP-A0316 and M. okii TP-A0468T. It was an ortholog of quinolidomicin-BGC of M. chalcea AK-AN57 and widely distributed in the genus Micromonospora.
2. Discovery of 16-Demethylrifamycins by Removing the Predominant Polyketide Biosynthesis Pathway in Micromonospora sp. Strain TP-A0468
Qiang Zhou, Guang-Cai Luo, Huizhan Zhang, Gong-Li Tang Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019 Feb 6;85(4):e02597-18. doi: 10.1128/AEM.02597-18. Print 2019 Feb 15.
A number of strategies have been developed to mine novel natural products based on biosynthetic gene clusters and there have been dozens of successful cases facilitated by the development of genomic sequencing. During our study on biosynthesis of the antitumor polyketide kosinostatin (KST), we found that the genome of Micromonospora sp. strain TP-A0468, the producer of KST, contains other potential polyketide gene clusters, with no encoded products detected. Deletion of kst cluster led to abolishment of KST and the enrichment of several new compounds, which were isolated and characterized as 16-demethylrifamycins (referred to here as compounds 3 to 6). Transcriptional analysis demonstrated that the expression of the essential genes related to the biosynthesis of compounds 3 to 6 was comparable to the level in the wild-type and in the kst cluster deletion strain. This indicates that the accumulation of these compounds was due to the redirection of metabolic flux rather than transcriptional activation. Genetic disruption, chemical complementation, and bioinformatic analysis revealed that the production of compounds 3 to 6 was accomplished by cross talk between the two distantly placed polyketide gene clusters pks3 and M-rif This finding not only enriches the analogue pool and the biosynthetic diversity of rifamycins but also provides an auxiliary strategy for natural product discovery through genome mining in polyketide-producing microorganisms.IMPORTANCE Natural products are essential in the development of novel clinically used drugs. Discovering new natural products and modifying known compounds are still the two main ways to generate new candidates. Here, we have discovered several rifamycins with varied skeleton structures by redirecting the metabolic flux from the predominant polyketide biosynthetic pathway to the rifamycin pathway in the marine actinomycetes species Micromonospora sp. strain TP-A0468. Rifamycins are indispensable chemotherapeutics in the treatment of various diseases such as tuberculosis, leprosy, and AIDS-related mycobacterial infections. This study exemplifies a useful method for the discovery of cryptic natural products in genome-sequenced microbes. Moreover, the 16-demethylrifamycins and their genetically manipulable producer provide a new opportunity in the construction of novel rifamycin derivates to aid in the defense against the ever-growing drug resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
3. A New Micromonospora Strain with Antibiotic Activity Isolated from the Microbiome of a Mid-Atlantic Deep-Sea Sponge
Catherine R Back, Henry L Stennett, Sam E Williams, Luoyi Wang, Jorge Ojeda Gomez, Omar M Abdulle, Thomas Duffy, Christopher Neal, Judith Mantell, Mark A Jepson, Katharine R Hendry, David Powell, James E M Stach, Angela E Essex-Lopresti, Christine L Willis, Paul Curnow, Paul R Race Mar Drugs. 2021 Feb 11;19(2):105. doi: 10.3390/md19020105.
To tackle the growing problem of antibiotic resistance, it is essential to identify new bioactive compounds that are effective against resistant microbes and safe to use. Natural products and their derivatives are, and will continue to be, an important source of these molecules. Sea sponges harbour a diverse microbiome that co-exists with the sponge, and these bacterial communities produce a rich array of bioactive metabolites for protection and resource competition. For these reasons, the sponge microbiota constitutes a potential source of clinically relevant natural products. To date, efforts in bioprospecting for these compounds have focused predominantly on sponge specimens isolated from shallow water, with much still to be learned about samples from the deep sea. Here we report the isolation of a new Micromonospora strain, designated 28ISP2-46T, recovered from the microbiome of a mid-Atlantic deep-sea sponge. Whole-genome sequencing reveals the capacity of this bacterium to produce a diverse array of natural products, including kosinostatin and isoquinocycline B, which exhibit both antibiotic and antitumour properties. Both compounds were isolated from 28ISP2-46T fermentation broths and were found to be effective against a plethora of multidrug-resistant clinical isolates. This study suggests that the marine production of isoquinocyclines may be more widespread than previously supposed and demonstrates the value of targeting the deep-sea sponge microbiome as a source of novel microbial life with exploitable biosynthetic potential.

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