Abstract

Luquilloamides A-G (1-7) were isolated from a small environmental collection of a marine cyanobacterium found growing on eelgrass (Zostera sp.) near Luquillo, Puerto Rico. Structure elucidation of the luquilloamides was accomplished via detailed NMR and MS analyses, and absolute configurations were determined using a combination of advanced Mosher's method, J-based configuration analysis, semisynthetic fragment analysis derived from ozonolysis, methylation, Baeyer-Villiger oxidation, Mosher's esterification, specific rotations, and ECD data. Except for 2, the luquilloamides share a characteristic tert-butyl-containing polyketide fragment, β-alanine, and a proposed highly modified polyketide extension. While compound 1 is a linear lipopeptide with two α-methyl branches and a vinyl chloride functionality in the polyketide portion, compounds 4, 6, and 7 possess a cyclohexanone structure with methylation on the α- or β-positions of the polyketide as well as an acetyl group. Interestingly, the absolute configuration at C-5 and C-6 on the cyclohexanone unit in 7 is opposite to that of 4-6. Compound 3 was revealed to have a tert-butyl-containing polyketide, β-alanine, and a PKS/NRPS-derived γ-isopropyl pyrrolinone. Compound 2 may be a hydrolysis product of 3. Of the seven new compounds, 1 showed the most potent cytotoxicity to human H-460 lung cancer cells.

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