Structure Revision of Aspergillides A and B, Cytotoxic 14-Membered Macrolides fromAspergillus ostianus, by X-ray Crystallography

2009 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 384-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryuhei Ookura ◽  
Keijiro Kito ◽  
Yota Saito ◽  
Takenori Kusumi ◽  
Takashi Ooi
2008 ◽  
Vol 73 (11) ◽  
pp. 4245-4247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryuhei Ookura ◽  
Keijiro Kito ◽  
Takashi Ooi ◽  
Michio Namikoshi ◽  
Takenori Kusumi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee Joon Kim ◽  
Mengzhao Xue ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Zhi Xu ◽  
Eric Paulson ◽  
...  

The lomaiviticins are dimeric genotoxic bacterial metabolites that contain unusual diazocyclopentadiene functional groups and 2–4 deoxyglycoside residues. Because only 6 of 19 carbon atoms in the monomeric aglycon unit are proton-attached, their structure determination by NMR spectroscopic analysis is non-trivial. Prior structure elucidation efforts established that the two halves of the lomaiviticins are joined by a single carbon–carbon bond appended to an oxidized cyclohexenone ring. This ring was believed to comprise a 4,5-dihydroxycyclohex-2-en-1-one. The bridging bond was positioned at C6. This structure proposal has not been tested because none of the lomaiviticins have been prepared by total chemical synthesis or (to the best of our knowledge) successfully analyzed by X-ray crystallography. Here we disclose microED studies which establish that (–)-lomaiviticin C contains a 4,6-dihydroxy-cyclohex-2-en-1-one residue, that the bridging carbon–carbon bond is located at C5, and that the orientation of the cyclohexenone ring and configuration of the secondary glycoside are reversed, relative to their original assignment. High-field (800 MHz) NMR analysis supports the revised assignment and suggests earlier efforts were misled by a fortuitous combination of a nearzero 3JH4,H5 coupling constant and a 4-bond HMBC correlation that was interpreted as a 3-bond coupling. DFT calculations of the expected 13C chemical shifts of the original and revised structures of the aglycon and (–)-lomaiviticin B provide further robust support for the structure revision. Because the interconversion of lomaiviticins A, B, and C has been demonstrated, these findings apply to each isolate. These studies clarify the structures of this family of metabolites and underscore the power of microED analysis in natural products structure determination.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee Joon Kim ◽  
Mengzhao Xue ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Zhi Xu ◽  
Eric Paulson ◽  
...  

The lomaiviticins are dimeric genotoxic bacterial metabolites that contain unusual diazocyclopentadiene functional groups and 2–4 deoxyglycoside residues. Because only 6 of 19 carbon atoms in the monomeric aglycon unit are proton-attached, their structure determination by NMR spectroscopic analysis is non-trivial. Prior structure elucidation efforts established that the two halves of the lomaiviticins are joined by a single carbon–carbon bond appended to an oxidized cyclohexenone ring. This ring was believed to comprise a 4,5-dihydroxycyclohex-2-en-1-one. The bridging bond was positioned at C6. This structure proposal has not been tested because none of the lomaiviticins have been prepared by total chemical synthesis or (to the best of our knowledge) successfully analyzed by X-ray crystallography. Here we disclose microED studies which establish that (–)-lomaiviticin C contains a 4,6-dihydroxy-cyclohex-2-en-1-one residue, that the bridging carbon–carbon bond is located at C5, and that the orientation of the cyclohexenone ring and configuration of the secondary glycoside are reversed, relative to their original assignment. High-field (800 MHz) NMR analysis supports the revised assignment and suggests earlier efforts were misled by a fortuitous combination of a nearzero 3JH4,H5 coupling constant and a 4-bond HMBC correlation that was interpreted as a 3-bond coupling. DFT calculations of the expected 13C chemical shifts of the original and revised structures of the aglycon and (–)-lomaiviticin B provide further robust support for the structure revision. Because the interconversion of lomaiviticins A, B, and C has been demonstrated, these findings apply to each isolate. These studies clarify the structures of this family of metabolites and underscore the power of microED analysis in natural products structure determination.


Author(s):  
Jules S. Jaffe ◽  
Robert M. Glaeser

Although difference Fourier techniques are standard in X-ray crystallography it has only been very recently that electron crystallographers have been able to take advantage of this method. We have combined a high resolution data set for frozen glucose embedded Purple Membrane (PM) with a data set collected from PM prepared in the frozen hydrated state in order to visualize any differences in structure due to the different methods of preparation. The increased contrast between protein-ice versus protein-glucose may prove to be an advantage of the frozen hydrated technique for visualizing those parts of bacteriorhodopsin that are embedded in glucose. In addition, surface groups of the protein may be disordered in glucose and ordered in the frozen state. The sensitivity of the difference Fourier technique to small changes in structure provides an ideal method for testing this hypothesis.


Author(s):  
S. Cusack ◽  
J.-C. Jésior

Three-dimensional reconstruction techniques using electron microscopy have been principally developed for application to 2-D arrays (i.e. monolayers) of biological molecules and symmetrical single particles (e.g. helical viruses). However many biological molecules that crystallise form multilayered microcrystals which are unsuitable for study by either the standard methods of 3-D reconstruction or, because of their size, by X-ray crystallography. The grid sectioning technique enables a number of different projections of such microcrystals to be obtained in well defined directions (e.g. parallel to crystal axes) and poses the problem of how best these projections can be used to reconstruct the packing and shape of the molecules forming the microcrystal.Given sufficient projections there may be enough information to do a crystallographic reconstruction in Fourier space. We however have considered the situation where only a limited number of projections are available, as for example in the case of catalase platelets where three orthogonal and two diagonal projections have been obtained (Fig. 1).


Author(s):  
Robert A. Grant ◽  
Laura L. Degn ◽  
Wah Chiu ◽  
John Robinson

Proteolytic digestion of the immunoglobulin IgG with papain cleaves the molecule into an antigen binding fragment, Fab, and a compliment binding fragment, Fc. Structures of intact immunoglobulin, Fab and Fc from various sources have been solved by X-ray crystallography. Rabbit Fc can be crystallized as thin platelets suitable for high resolution electron microscopy. The structure of rabbit Fc can be expected to be similar to the known structure of human Fc, making it an ideal specimen for comparing the X-ray and electron crystallographic techniques and for the application of the molecular replacement technique to electron crystallography. Thin protein crystals embedded in ice diffract to high resolution. A low resolution image of a frozen, hydrated crystal can be expected to have a better contrast than a glucose embedded crystal due to the larger density difference between protein and ice compared to protein and glucose. For these reasons we are using an ice embedding technique to prepare the rabbit Fc crystals for molecular structure analysis by electron microscopy.


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