4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-2(1H)-quinolone, originally discovered from a Brassicaceae plant, produced by a soil bacterium of the genus Burkholderia sp.: determination of a preferred tautomer and antioxidant activity.
Dandan LiNaoya OkuYukiko ShinozakiYoichi KurokawaYasuhiro IgarashiPublished in: Beilstein journal of organic chemistry (2020)
4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-2(1H)-quinolone (1), a molecule known for a long time and recently discovered from a Brassicaceae plant Isatis tinctoria without providing sufficient evidence to support the structure, was isolated from a fermentation extract of Burkholderia sp. 3Y-MMP isolated from a soil by a Zn2+ enrichment culture. Detailed spectroscopic analyses by MS and NMR, combined with 13C chemical shift comparison with literature values of the related compounds and a synthetic preparation of 1, allowed its first full NMR characterization and identification of 2-quinolone but not 2-quinolinol (2) as the preferred tautomer for this heterocyclic system. While the metal-chelating activity was negligible, compound 1 at 10 μM, a concentration lower than that in liquid production cultures, quenched hydroxy radical-induced chemiluminescence emitted by luminol by 86%. Because some Burkholderia species are pathogenic to plants and animals, the above result suggests that 1 is a potential antioxidant to counteract reactive oxygen species-based immune response in the host organisms.
Keyphrases
- reactive oxygen species
- immune response
- molecularly imprinted
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- plant growth
- oxidative stress
- solid state
- anti inflammatory
- mass spectrometry
- systematic review
- diabetic rats
- multiple sclerosis
- high glucose
- ms ms
- molecular docking
- solid phase extraction
- drug induced
- heavy metals
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- ionic liquid
- dendritic cells
- cell wall
- risk assessment
- human health
- endothelial cells
- quantum dots
- molecular dynamics simulations