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1.
Anal Chem ; 96(11): 4359-4368, 2024 Mar 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38452345

ABSTRACT

Microorganisms are important sources of bioactive natural products. However, the complexity of microbial metabolites and the low abundance of active compounds render the isolation and purification process laborious and inefficient. During our search for active substances capable of inhibiting the newly discovered highly lethal Vibrio strain vp-HL, we found that the fermentation broth of multiple Bacillus strains exhibited antibacterial activity. However, the substances responsible for the activity remained unclear. Metabolomics, molecular networking (MN), and the Structural similarity Network Annotation Platform for Mass Spectrometry (SNAP-MS) were employed in conjunction with bioactivity screening to predict the antibacterial compounds from Bacillus strains. The analysis of fractions, and their isolation, NMR-based annotation, and bioactivity evaluation of an amicoumacin compound partially confirmed the prediction from these statistical analyses. This work presents the potential of marine Bacillus in producing active substances against Vibrio species. Additionally, it highlighted the significance and feasibility of metabolomics and MN in the dereplication of compounds and the determination of isolation targets.


Subject(s)
Bacillus , Vibrio , Bacillus/metabolism , Metabolomics/methods , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry
2.
Mar Drugs ; 20(9)2022 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36135730

ABSTRACT

The hyphenation of ion mobility spectrometry with high-resolution mass spectrometry has been widely used in the characterization of various metabolites. Nevertheless, such a powerful tool remains largely unexplored in natural products research, possibly mainly due to the lack of available compounds. To evaluate the ability of collision cross-sections (CCSs) in characterizing compounds, especially isomeric natural products, here we measured and compared the traveling-wave IMS-derived nitrogen CCS values for 75 marine-derived aphidicolanes. We established a CCS database for these compounds which contained 227 CCS values of different adducts. When comparing the CCS differences, 36 of 57 pairs (over 60%) of chromatographically neighboring compounds showed a ΔCCS over 2%. What is more, 64 of 104 isomeric pairs (over 60%) of aphidicolanes can be distinguished by their CCS values, and 13 of 18 pairs (over 70%) of chromatographically indistinguishable isomers can be differentiated from the mobility dimension. Our results strongly supported CCS as an important parameter with good orthogonality and complementarity with retention time. CCS is expected to play an important role in distinguishing complex and diverse marine natural products.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Ion Mobility Spectrometry , Ion Mobility Spectrometry/methods , Isomerism , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Nitrogen
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