Abstract

High-speed counter-current chromatography (HSCCC) was successively applied to the separation of three sulfur-containing diketopiperazines (DKPs) (including two new compounds cladosporin A (1) and cladosporin B (3), and a known compound haematocin (2)) from a marine fungus Cladosporium sp. The two-phase solvent system composed of n-hexane-ethyl acetate-methanol-water at (1:1:1:1, v/v) and (2:1:2:1, v/v), in stepwise elution mode, was used for HSCCC. The preparative HSCCC separation was performed on 300 mg of crude sample yielding 26.7 mg of compound 3 at a purity of over 95%, 53.6 mg of a mixture of compounds 1 and 2, which was further separated by preparative-HPLC yielding 14.3 mg of compound 1 and 25.4 mg of compound 2 each at a purity of over 95%. Their structures were established by spectroscopic methods. The sulfur-containing DKPs suppressed the proliferation of hepatocellular carcinoma cell line HepG2. The present work represents the first application of HSCCC in the efficient preparation of marine fungal natural products.

Highlights

  • The oceans are special environments with harsh conditions, such as high salinity, low-luminance, low temperature, high pressure, oligotrophic, etc

  • The two-phase solvent system was selected according to the KD values of each target compound

  • Dr Ito has demonstrated the golden rules in selecting optimum conditions for High-speed counter-current chromatography (HSCCC)

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Summary

Introduction

The oceans are special environments with harsh conditions, such as high salinity, low-luminance, low temperature, high pressure, oligotrophic, etc. Diketopiperazines (DKPs) constitute a large class of natural products that exhibit various biological properties. They were first discovered in 1880 and later studied by Emil Fischer [4]. High-speed counter-current chromatography (HSCCC), being a support-free liquid-liquid partition method, eliminates irreversible adsorption of sample on to the solid support [9,10]. Because of these advantages, HSCCC has been widely used in the preparative separation of natural products [11]. We can acquire compounds with high purity through one-step separation, while in other studies enrichment of sample were achieved

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