Zhoukilic2765
Social insects establish complex interactions with microorganisms, some of which play defensive roles in colony protection. The important role of pollinators such as the stingless bee Melipona scutellaris in nature encouraged us to pursue efforts to study its associated microbiota. Here we describe the discovery of two novel cyclic hexadepsipeptides, meliponamycin A (1) and meliponamycin B (2), from Streptomyces sp. ICBG1318 isolated from M. scutellaris nurse bees. Their structures were established by interpretation of NMR and MS data, and the absolute configuration of the constituent amino acids was determined by the advanced Marfey's method. Compounds 1 and 2 showed strong activity against the entomopathogen Paenibacillus larvae and human pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Leishmania infantum.Wickerols A and B are diterpene natural products that have a novel fused 6-5-6-6 ring framework and exhibit potent antiviral activity against the H1N1 type A influenza virus. Herein, we report a divergent synthesis of wickerols A and B in 16 and 15 steps, respectively, from commercial sitolactone. The key reactions of the synthesis are a SmI2-mediated intramolecular ketone-allylic acetate reductive cyclization, a Claisen rearrangement, and an intramolecular alkylation/aldol reaction that rapidly assembled the compact tetracyclic core framework in a stereocontrolled manner. The work described herein allowed us to confirm the absolute configurations of wickerols A and B.Force field parametrization involves a complex set of linked optimization problems, with the goal of describing complex molecular interactions by using simple classical potential-energy functions that model Coulomb interactions, dispersion, and exchange repulsion. These functions comprise a set of atomic (and molecular) parameters and together with the bonded terms they constitute the molecular mechanics force field. Traditionally, many of these parameters have been fitted in a calibration approach in which experimental measures for thermodynamic and other relevant properties of small-molecule compounds are used for fitting and validation. As these approaches are laborious and time-consuming and represent an underdetermined optimization problem, we study methods to fit and derive an increasing number of parameters directly from electronic structure calculations, in order to greatly reduce possible parameter space for the remaining free parameters. In the current work we investigate a polarizable model with a higher order dispersion term for use in biomolecular simulation. Results for 49 biochemically relevant molecules are presented including updated parameters for hydrocarbon side chains. We show that our recently presented set of QM/MM derived atomic polarizabilities can be used in direct conjunction with partial charges and a higher order dispersion model that are quantum-mechanically determined, to freeze nearly all (i.e., 132 out of 138) nonbonded parameters to their quantum determined values.The cultivation of a Streptomyces sp. SD53 strain isolated from the gut of the silkworm Bombyx mori produced two macrolactam natural products, piceamycin (1) and bombyxamycin C (2). The planar structures of 1 and 2 were identified by a combination of NMR, MS, and UV spectroscopic analyses. The absolute configurations were assigned based on chemical and chromatographic methods as well as ECD calculations. A new chromatography-based experimental method for determining the configurations of stereogenic centers β to nitrogen atoms in macrolactams was established and successfully applied in this report. These compounds exhibited significant bioactivities against the silkworm entomopathogen Bacillus thuringiensis and various human pathogens as well as human cancer cell lines. In particular, piceamycin potently inhibited Salmonella enterica and Proteus hauseri with MIC values of 0.083 μg/mL and 0.025 μg/mL, respectively. The biosynthetic pathway involved in the formation of the cyclopentenone moiety in piceamycin is discussed.In this study, the low-frequency vibrational dynamics of polystyrene (PS) in CCl4 was investigated by femtosecond Raman-induced Kerr effect spectroscopy. Ethylbenzene (EBz) was also investigated as a model monomer of the polymer to elucidate the unique dynamical features of PS in solution. The broadened low-frequency spectrum of the PS/CCl4 in the frequency region below 150 cm-1 is significantly different from that of the EBz/CCl4. Difference spectra between the PS or EBz solutions and neat CCl4, normalized to an internal vibrational mode of CCl4, clearly show a much lower spectral intensity for the PS/CCl4 than the EBz/CCl4 in the low-frequency region below ca. 20 cm-1. read more This indicates that translational motions are suppressed in the PS/CCl4 compared to the EBz/CCl4. Moreover, the high-frequency motion at ca. 70 cm-1, mainly due to phenyl ring librations, occurs at higher frequency in PS (78 cm-1) than EBz (65 cm-1). In addition, the results of concentration-dependent experiments show that the first moment (M1) of the low-frequency difference spectra of both PS/CCl4 and EBz/CCl4 is almost independent of the concentration. The molecular weight dependence of the low-frequency spectrum in the PS/CCl4 shows that the M1 value of the low-frequency spectral band of PS shifts to higher frequencies when the molecular weight of PS increases up to Mw = ∼1000, which corresponds approximately to the decamer, and then remains constant upon further increasing the molecular weight.Boranephosphonate diesters react with heteroaromatic and certain tertiary amines in the presence of an oxidant (I2) to afford the boron-modified phosphodiester analogues containing a P-B-N structural motif. Our multinuclear 31P and 11B NMR spectroscopy studies lend support for a two-step mechanism involving generation of a λ3-boranephosphonate intermediate that immediately coordinates an amine in the solvent cage, leading to B-pyridinium or B-ammonium boranephosphonate betaine derivatives. We found that the type of the solvent used (e.g., dichloromethane vs acetonitrile) significantly affected the course of the reaction, resulting in either formation of boron-modified derivatives or loss of the boron group with a subsequent oxidation of the phosphorus atom. In aprotic, electron-donating, polar solvents., e.g., acetonitrile (ACN) and tetrahydrofuran (THF), a λ3-boranephosphonate intermediate can also coordinate solvent molecules forming P-B-ACN or P-B-THF complexes that may influence the type of the products formed.