α-Pyrones, secondary metabolites from fungus Cephalotrichum microsporum and their bioactivities.
Keywords
Coimriú
Cephalotrichum microsporum (SYP-F 7763) was a fungus isolated from the rhizosphere soil of traditional Chinese medicine Panax notoginseng. The EtOAc extract of Cephalotrichum microsporum cultivated on sterilized moistened-rice medium was separated by various chromatographic techniques, which yielded 11 metabolites (1-11) of this fungus. On the basis of the widely spectroscopic data, the chemical structures of isolated metabolites were determined, most of which were α-pyrones, including 5 compounds (4-7, and 10) unreported. In the anti-bacterial bioassay, compound 1 displayed significant inhibitory effects on three pathogenic bacteria, MR S. aureus, S. aureus, and B. cereus. α-Pyrones 2, 3, and 5-7 also displayed moderate inhibitory effects on MR S. aureus, S. aureus, and B. subtilis, which could be the major anti-bacterial constituents of Cephalotrichum microsporum. Additionally, compounds 1, 4, and 5 displayed significant cytotoxicity on five human cancer cell lines, with the IC50 values < 20 μM, which are more effective than positive control 5-fluorouracil. Therefore, α-pyrones were important secondary metabolites of Cephalotrichum microsporum, which displayed anti-bacterial and anti-tumor activities.