Title Molecular Characterization and Anti-inflammatory Activity of Galactosylglycerides and Galactosylceramides from the Microalga Isochrysis galbana
Authors de los Reyes, Carolina , Ortega, Maria J. , RODRÍGUEZ LUNA, AZAHARA MARÍA, Talero, Elena , Motilva, Virginia , Zubia, Eva
External publication No
Means JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 1
SJR Quartile 1
JCR Impact 3.154
SJR Impact 1.305
Publication date 23/11/2016
ISI 000388913400009
DOI 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b03931
Abstract Isochrysis galbana is a marine microalga rich in PUFAs that is widely used as feed in aquaculture and more recently investigated for its potential in food applications and as source of bioactive compounds. In this study, the biomass obtained from cultures of I. galbana has been investigated to determine its content in glycosylglycerides and glycosylceramides. By using NMR, UPLC-MS/MS, and fatty acid profiles, the structures of ten monogalactosyldiacylglycerols (MGDGs 1-10) and nine digalactosyldiacylglycerols (DGDGs 11-19) have been established. Two distinctive features of the galactosylglycerides from I. galbana are the wide presence of highly unsaturated aryl chains derived from stearidonic acid (18:4 Delta(6z,9z,12z,15z)) and octadecapentaenoic acid (18:5 Delta(3z,6z,9z,12z,15z)) as well as the unusual coexistence of alpha beta-DGDGs and beta beta-DGDGs. Three new galactosylceramides, isogalbamides A-C (20-22), have also been isolated and characterized by NMR and MS/MS. These metabolites, which are the first galactosylceramides described from microalgae, derive from unprecedented tetraolefinic sphingoid bases. In anti-inflammatory assays, the MGDG and DGDG mixtures and the isolated DGDGs 11 and 12 showed significant activity as inhibitors of the production of the pro -inflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated human THP-1 macrophages, while the galactosylceramides showed moderated activity.
Keywords microalgae; Isochrysis galbana; galactosylglycerides; MGDG; DGDG; galactosylceramides; anti-inflammatory activity; TNF-alpha inhibition
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