scholarly journals Oxygenated Sesquiterpenes From the Indo-Pacific Nudibranch Ardeadoris rubroannulata: Structure Revision of Pu’ulenal

2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 1934578X2110550
Author(s):  
Patrick T. Narbutas ◽  
Gregory K. Pierens ◽  
Jack K. Clegg ◽  
Mary J. Garson

Seven oxygenated sesquiterpenes 1 to 7 each with a drimane framework were isolated from an organic extract of the nudibranch Ardeadoris rubroannulata collected from Eastern Australia. The structure of pu’ulenal 2 was revised by 1D NOESY, providing a 9Z configuration, while isopu’ulenal 3 has the 9 E configuration previously ascribed to pu’ulenal.

2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1934578X1601100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew M. White ◽  
Ariyanti S. Dewi ◽  
Karen L. Cheney ◽  
Anne E. Winters ◽  
Joanne T. Blanchfield ◽  
...  

Five new diterpenes (1-5), each with a highly oxygenated spongian framework, were characterized from an organic extract of a specimen of the nudibranch Goniobranchus splendidus collected from Eastern Australia. The new diterpene 7α-hydroxydendrillol-3 (6) was identified from specimens of Ardeodoris egretta. The structures and relative configurations of the six new metabolites have been elucidated by analysis of their spectroscopic data.


Planta Medica ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Kavutcu ◽  
M Arhan ◽  
B Aytaç ◽  
R Çetin ◽  
I Durak
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raku Irie ◽  
Kei Miyako ◽  
Satoko Matsunaga ◽  
Ryuichi Sakai ◽  
Masato Oikawa

<div>Here, we newly propose the structure of protoaculeine B, an N-terminal moiety of the marine peptide toxin aculeine B, as possessing the cis-disubstituted tetrahydro-beta-carboline framework. We prepared two truncated model compounds that lack long-chain polyamine by one-step Pictet-Spengler reaction of tryptophan, and compared the NMR and mass spectra and chemical reactivity with those of natural protoaculeine B. The synthetic models reproduced the profiles of the natural product well, which was conclusive for the structural revision.</div>


1994 ◽  
Vol 6 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 77-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
KERRY Gallagher ◽  
TREVOR A. Dumitru ◽  
ANDREW J. W. Gleadow

Coral Reefs ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liam Lachs ◽  
Brigitte Sommer ◽  
James Cant ◽  
Jessica M. Hodge ◽  
Hamish A. Malcolm ◽  
...  

AbstractAnthropocene coral reefs are faced with increasingly severe marine heatwaves and mass coral bleaching mortality events. The ensuing demographic changes to coral assemblages can have long-term impacts on reef community organisation. Thus, understanding the dynamics of subtropical scleractinian coral populations is essential to predict their recovery or extinction post-disturbance. Here we present a 10-yr demographic assessment of a subtropical endemic coral, Pocillopora aliciae (Schmidt-Roach et al. in Zootaxa 3626:576–582, 2013) from the Solitary Islands Marine Park, eastern Australia, paired with long-term temperature records. These coral populations are regularly affected by storms, undergo seasonal thermal variability, and are increasingly impacted by severe marine heatwaves. We examined the demographic processes governing the persistence of these populations using inference from size-frequency distributions based on log-transformed planar area measurements of 7196 coral colonies. Specifically, the size-frequency distribution mean, coefficient of variation, skewness, kurtosis, and coral density were applied to describe population dynamics. Generalised Linear Mixed Effects Models were used to determine temporal trends and test demographic responses to heat stress. Temporal variation in size-frequency distributions revealed various population processes, from recruitment pulses and cohort growth, to bleaching impacts and temperature dependencies. Sporadic recruitment pulses likely support population persistence, illustrated in 2010 by strong positively skewed size-frequency distributions and the highest density of juvenile corals measured during the study. Increasing mean colony size over the following 6 yr indicates further cohort growth of these recruits. Severe heat stress in 2016 resulted in mass bleaching mortality and a 51% decline in coral density. Moderate heat stress in the following years was associated with suppressed P. aliciae recruitment and a lack of early recovery, marked by an exponential decrease of juvenile density (i.e. recruitment) with increasing heat stress. Here, population reliance on sporadic recruitment and susceptibility to heat stress underpin the vulnerability of subtropical coral assemblages to climate change.


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