Precursor-Directed Biosynthesis of Antialgal Fluorinated Bacillamide Derivatives in Bacillus atrophaeus

J Nat Prod. 2024 Feb 23;87(2):388-395. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.3c01178. Epub 2024 Feb 6.

Abstract

The bacillamides are a class of indole alkaloids produced by the Bacillus genus that possess significant antialgal activity. Incorporation of fluorine into the bacillamides was carried out using a precursor-directed biosynthesis approach, with 4-, 5-, and 6-fluorotryptophan added to growing cultures of Bacillus atrophaeus IMG-11. This yielded the corresponding fluorinated analogues of bacillamides A and C, in addition to new derivatives of the related metabolite N-acetyltryptamine, thus demonstrating a degree of plasticity in the bacillamide biosynthetic pathway. The bacillamide derivatives were tested for activity against bloom-forming algae, which revealed that fluorination could improve the antialgal activity of these compounds in a site-specific manner, with fluorination at the 6-position consistently resulting in improved activity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Bacillus* / metabolism
  • Halogenation
  • Thiazoles* / chemistry
  • Tryptamines* / chemistry

Substances

  • bacillamide C
  • Tryptamines
  • Thiazoles

Supplementary concepts

  • Bacillus atrophaeus