Biological Characterization of Fusapyrone and Deoxyfusapyrone, Two Bioactive Secondary Metabolites of Fusarium semitectum

Journal of Natural Products
2000.0

Abstract

Fusapyrone (1) and deoxyfusapyrone (2), two alpha-pyrones originally isolated from rice cultures of Fusarium semitectum, were tested in several biological assays. Compounds 1 and 2 showed considerable antifungal activity against several plant pathogenic and/or mycotoxigenic filamentous fungi, although they were inactive toward yeasts isolated from plants and the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus megaterium in disk diffusion assays. Compound 1 was consistently more active than 2. Among the tested fungi, Fusarium species were the least sensitive to the two pyrones, while Alternaria alternata, Ascochyta rabiei, Aspergillusflavus, Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium cucumerinum, Phoma tracheiphila, and Penicillium verrucosum were the most sensitive. Compounds 1 and 2 also showed good inhibitory activity toward agents of human mycoses. Aspergilli were the most sensitive, while some species-specific variability was found among the Candida spp. In an Artemia salina larvae bioassay, 1 was not toxic at the highest concentration tested (500 microM), whereas the LC(50) of 2 was 37.1 microM (21.8 microg/mL). Neither 1 nor 2 was phytotoxic in a panel of assays that monitored plant-cell toxicity, as well as wilt-, chlorosis-, and necrosis-inducing activity. Moreover, 2 stimulated the root elongation of tomato seedlings at doses of 10 and 100 microM. In consideration of the biological activities evidenced in this study, 1 and 2 appear to be potential candidates for biotechnological applications, as well as good models for studies on mechanism(s) of action and structure-activity relationships.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

Biological Characterization of Fusapyrone and Deoxyfusapyrone, Two Bioactive Secondary Metabolites of <i>Fusarium semitectum</i>
Journal of Natural Products 2000.0
Structure−Activity Relationships of Derivatives of Fusapyrone, an Antifungal Metabolite of Fusarium semitectum
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2004.0
Metabolic products of Fusarium acuminatum: acuminatopyrone and chlamydosporol
Journal of the Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 1 1991.0
Banchromene and other secondary metabolites from the endophytic fungus Fusarium sp. obtained from Piper guineense inhibit the motility of phytopathogenic Plasmopara viticola zoospores
Tetrahedron Letters 2014.0
<i>N</i>-Methyl-4-hydroxy-2-pyridinone Analogues from <i>Fusarium oxysporum</i>
Journal of Natural Products 2006.0
<i>N</i>-Methyl-4-hydroxy-2-pyridinone Analogues from <i>Fusarium oxysporum</i>
Journal of Natural Products 2006.0
Isolation, Identification, and Activity Evaluation of Chemical Constituents from Soil Fungus Fusarium avenaceum SF-1502 and Endophytic Fungus Fusarium proliferatum AF-04
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2019.0
Isolation, Identification, and Activity Evaluation of Chemical Constituents from Soil Fungus <i>Fusarium avenaceum</i> SF-1502 and Endophytic Fungus <i>Fusarium proliferatum</i> AF-04
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2019.0
Fusaripyridines A and B; Highly Oxygenated Antimicrobial Alkaloid Dimers Featuring an Unprecedented 1,4-Bis(2-hydroxy-1,2-dihydropyridin-2-yl)butane-2,3-dione Core from the Marine Fungus Fusarium sp. LY019
Marine Drugs 2021.0
Fusapyridons A and B, Novel Pyridone Alkaloids from an Endophytic Fungus, Fusarium sp. YG-45
Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B 2007.0