Next Article in Journal
Processing of Biomass Prior to Hydrogen Fermentation and Post-Fermentative Broth Management
Next Article in Special Issue
A Study on the Chemistry and Biological Activity of 26-Sulfur Analogs of Diosgenin: Synthesis of 26-Thiodiosgenin S-Mono- and Dioxides, and Their Alkyl Derivatives
Previous Article in Journal
Sonication-Free Dispersion of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes for High-Sorption-Capacity Aerogel Fabrication
Previous Article in Special Issue
Novel 4-Azapregnene Derivatives as Potential Anticancer Agents: Synthesis, Antiproliferative Activity and Molecular Docking Studies
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

The Isolation, Structure Elucidation and Bioactivity Study of Chilensosides A, A1, B, C, and D, Holostane Triterpene Di-, Tri- and Tetrasulfated Pentaosides from the Sea Cucumber Paracaudina chilensis (Caudinidae, Molpadida)

by
Alexandra S. Silchenko
*,
Sergey A. Avilov
,
Pelageya V. Andrijaschenko
,
Roman S. Popov
,
Ekaterina A. Chingizova
,
Boris B. Grebnev
,
Anton B. Rasin
and
Vladimir I. Kalinin
G.B. Elyakov Pacific Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Pr. 100-letya Vladivostoka 159, 690022 Vladivostok, Russia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Molecules 2022, 27(21), 7655; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27217655
Submission received: 4 October 2022 / Revised: 27 October 2022 / Accepted: 2 November 2022 / Published: 7 November 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Steroid Compounds with Potential Biological Activity)

Abstract

:
Five new triterpene (4,4,14-trimethylsterol) di-, tri- and tetrasulfated pentaosides, chilensosides A (1), A1 (2), B (3), C (4), and D (5) were isolated from the Far-Eastern sea cucumber Paracaudina chilensis. The structures were established on the basis of extensive analysis of 1D and 2D NMR spectra and confirmed by HR-ESI-MS data. The structural variability of the glycosides concerned the pentasaccharide chains. Their architecture was characterized by the upper semi-chain consisting of three sugar units and the bottom semi-chain of two sugars. Carbohydrate chains of compounds 25 differed in the quantity and positions of sulfate groups. The interesting structural features of the glycosides were: the presence of two sulfate groups at C-4 and C-6 of the same glucose residue in the upper semi-chain of 1, 2, 4, and 5 and the sulfation at C-3 of terminal glucose residue in the bottom semi-chain of 4 that makes its further elongation impossible. Chilensoside D (5) was the sixth tetrasulfated glycoside found in sea cucumbers. The architecture of the sugar chains of chilensosides A–D (15), the positions of sulfation, the quantity of sulfate groups, as well as the aglycone structures, demonstrate their similarity to the glycosides of the representatives of the order Dendrochirotida, confirming the phylogenetic closeness of the orders Molpadida and Dendrochirotida. The cytotoxic activities of the compounds 15 against human erythrocytes and some cancer cell lines are presented. Disulfated chilensosides A1 (2) and B (3) and trisulfated chilensoside C (4) showed significant cytotoxic activity against human cancer cells.

1. Introduction

Despite triterpene glycosides from sea cucumbers having a rather long history of investigations, there are some systematic groups, including the order Molpadida, comprising the studied species Paracaudina chilensis, which are poorly studied or unexplored chemically. The majority of recent research concerning the sea cucumber triterpene glycosides deals with the structure elucidation of the compounds isolated from representatives of the orders Dendrochirotida, Synallactida, and Holothuriida [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. The use of mass-spectrometry-based metabolomics for the solving of diverse chemical and biological issues concerning secondary metabolites has become very popular and has provided some significant results in the exploration of triterpene glycoside chemical diversity, their content and composition in different body parts [10,11,12,13], and their chemotaxonomy [14,15]. The application of this approach in combination with molecular phylogenetic analysis allowed to clarify the evolution of the Holothuroidea taxons [16]. Different investigations have also confirmed the defensive role of glycosides [17,18]. The biosynthetic studies of triterpene glycosides are very difficult to conduct. They began in the 1970s through the introduction of radioactively labeled precursors to the organisms-producers and showed some contradictory results [19,20,21]. However, it has been established that precursors of triterpenoids can be either lanosterol or parkeol depending on the intranuclear double bond position in the biosynthesizing aglycones [22,23,24,25]. Oxydosqualenecyclases (OSCs) are the enzymes processing the cyclization of 2,3-oxidosqualene, making diverse triterpene alcohols. This stage is the branchpoint of steroids and triterpenoids biosynthesis. In the process of steroidogenesis, the triterpene precursors are enzymatically demethylated at positions C-4, C-14, double bond positions are changed and side chains are modified. The sea cucumbers are characterized by the presence of steroids with uncommon chemical features (Δ9(11)- and Δ7-derivatives) instead of Δ5-sterols characteristic for other animals. This is explained by the presence of the membranolytic triterpene glycosides targeting the Δ5-steroids. Therefore, to protect their own membranes from the action of these toxins, the steroid composition has been evolutionary changed. It was supposed that Δ7-steroids are formed as result of modification of dietary Δ5-sterols, while Δ9(11)-steroid compounds are biosynthesized from parkeol, formed de novo by OSCs in the sea cucumbers. Noticeably, some sea cucumber species contain 14α-methylated and 4α,14α-dimethylated Δ9(11)-sterols [23]. The recent genetic studies of Apostichopus japonicus explained this phenomenon by the absence of the gene for 14-sterol-demethylase in its genome [26]. There is little molecular/genetic research on genes and corresponding enzymes participating in triterpenoid biosynthesis in sea cucumbers. They only concerned transcriptomic analysis of tissues of Holothuria scabra and Stichopus horrens and have led to identification of the sequences corresponding to some genes of the mevalonate pathway [27,28]. The decoding of sequences of OSCs from Apostichopus japonicus followed by the expression of the genes integrated into the yeast genome allowed for the identification of parkeol and 9βН-lanosta-7,24-dien-3β-ol as the products [26].
Finally, there exists a large number of investigations devoted to the biological activity, including anticancer activity, of sea cucumber glycosides, which are valuable sources of new drug candidates [29,30,31,32,33,34,35].
Only preliminary research on the glycosidic composition of Paracaudina ransonetii (=Paracaudina chilensis) has been previously published [36]. The taxonomic status of the order Molpadida raises questions for biologists dealing with the systematics of Holothuroidea. Some support the idea of closeness of Molpadida and Dendrochirotida, while others consider molpadiids as being near to Aspidochirotida [37]. From this viewpoint, investigations on the glycosides of representatives of the order Molpadida are relevant for the searching for new structural variants, which broaden our knowledge concerning chemical biodiversity and chemotaxonomy. Glycosides have been successfully used as chemotaxonomic markers of different sea cucumber systematic groups [38,39,40,41]. Therefore, the analysis of chemical peculiarities of the glycosides of P. chilensis can help to resolve this dilemma.
New triterpene glycosides, chilensosides A (1), A1 (2), B (3), C (4) and D (5), were isolated from the Far Eastern sea cucumber Paracaudina chilensis. The chemical structures of 15 were established by the analyses of the 1H, 13C NMR, 1D TOCSY and 2D NMR (1H, 1H-COSY, HMBC, HSQC, ROESY) spectra as well as HR-ESI mass spectra. All the original spectra are presented in Figures S1–S40 in the Supplementary Materials. The hemolytic activity against human erythrocytes and cytotoxic activities against human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y, adenocarcinoma HeLa, colorectal adenocarcinoma DLD-1, leukemia promyeloblast HL-60 and monocytic THP-1 cells were examined.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Structural Elucidation of the Glycosides

The crude glycosidic fraction of the sea cucumber Paracaudina chilensis was obtained as a result of hydrophobic chromatography of the concentrated ethanolic extract on a Polychrom-1 column (powdered Teflon, Biolar, Latvia). Its subsequent separation by chromatography on Si gel columns with the stepped gradient of the system of eluents CHCl3/EtOH/H2O used in ratios (100:100:17), (100:125:25), and (100:150:50) gave the fractions I–III. Each of the obtained fractions was additionally purified on a Si gel column with the solvent system CHCl3/EtOH/H2O (100:125:25), which resulted in the isolation of five subfractions I.0, I.1, II, III.1 and III.2. The individual compounds 15 (Figure 1) were isolated through HPLC of these subfractions on the silica-based column Supelcosil LC-Si (4.6 × 150 mm), and reversed-phase columns Supelco Discovery HS F5-5 (10 × 250 mm) and Diasfer 110 C-8 (4.6 × 250 mm).
The configurations of the monosaccharide residues in the glycosides 15 were assigned as D based on the biogenetic analogies with the monosaccharides from all other known sea cucumber triterpene glycosides.
The molecular formula of chilensoside A (1) was determined to be C60H92O34S2Na2 from the [M2Na–Na] ion peak at m/z 1443.4800 (calc. 1443.4815), and [M2Na–2Na]2− ion peak at m/z 710.2466 (calc. 710.2461) in the () HR-ESI-MS (Figure S8). The 13C NMR spectrum of the aglycone part of chilensoside A (1) demonstrated the signals of quaternary oxygen-bearing carbons at δC 176.8 (C-18) and 82.8 (C-20), corresponding to 18(20)-lactone and the signals of olefinic carbons at δC 151.1 (C-9), 111.2 (C-11) (Table 1, Figures S1–S7), indicating the presence of 9(11)-double bond, typical of many sea cucumber glycosides. An additional deshielded signal at δC 214.6 was assigned to C-16 oxo-group in the holostane nucleus, confirmed by the singlet signal of H-17 at δH 2.89 with a corresponding carbon signal at δC 61.2 (C-17). The protons of the side chain H-22/H-23/H-24 formed the isolated spin system deduced by the COSY spectrum, indicating the presence of an additional 23Z(24)-double bond (δH-23 5.90 (dd, J = 6.3; 11.8 Hz), δH-24 5.90 (d, J = 11.8 Hz)). The presence of the signal of quaternary oxygen-bearing carbon at δC 81.3 along with the coincidence of the signals of 26, 27-methyl groups to each other (δC 24.7 (C-26, C-27), δH 1.42 (s, H-26, H-27)) indicated the presence of hydroxyl at C-25. The side chain structure was confirmed by the HMBC correlations H-24/C-25; H-23/C-22; H-26(27)/C-24 (Table 1). The same aglycone was found only once earlier in cladoloside A5 from the sea cucumber Cladolabes schmeltzii [42].
The 1H and 13C NMR spectra of the carbohydrate chain of chilensosides A (1) (Table 2, Figures S1–S7) and A1 (2) (Table S1, Figures S9–S15) were coincident to each other, indicating the identity of sugar moieties of 1, 2. The spectra of 1 demonstrated five characteristic doublets of anomeric protons at δH 4.66–5.20 (J = 7.1–8.1 Hz) and the signals of anomeric carbons at δC 102.2–104.7, indicating the presence of a pentasaccharide chain and β-configurations of glycosidic bonds. The coherent analysis of the 1H, 1H-COSY, 1D TOCSY, HSQC and ROESY spectra of 1 indicated the presence of one xylose (Xyl1), one quinovose (Qui2), two glucose (Glc3 and Glc4), and 3-O-methylglucose (MeGlc5) residues. The ROE- and HMBC correlations showed the positions of glycosidic linkages (Table 2, Figures S1–S7), which indicated that the carbohydrate chain of 1 was branched by C-4 Xyl1 having bottom semi-chain composed of two sugar units and the upper semi-chain from three.
Noticeably, such architecture of carbohydrate chains is not common for the holothuroid glycosides, but similar sugar moieties have been found in some glycosides of recently studied species of sea cucumbers: Thyonidium kurilensis [43] and Psolus chitonoides [6] (order Dendrochirotida).
The availability of two sulfate groups in the sugar moiety of 1 was deduced on the basis of shifting effects observed in its 13C NMR spectrum. These were the signals of two hydroxy methylene groups of glucopyranose residues at δC 61.8 (C-6 Glc3) and 62.0 (C-6 MeGlc5), indicating the absence of sulfate groups in these positions and one signal at δC 68.2 (deshielded due to α-shifting effect of sulfate group) corresponding to sulfated at C-6 Glc4 residue. Additional shifting effects of the sulfate group became evident when the 13C NMR spectrum of 1 was compared with the spectrum of the carbohydrate part of kuriloside A1 [43]. The signals of all monosaccharides in the spectra of these glycosides were close to each other, with the exception of the signals of glucose residue in the upper semi-chain (Glc4). The signals of C-3 Glc4 and C-5 Glc4 were shielded in the spectrum of 1 (to δC 82.9 and 74.5, correspondingly) in comparison with the same signals in the spectrum of kuriloside A1C 86.9 and 75.7, correspondingly) due to the β-shifting effect of the sulfate group, which was attached to C-4 Glc4 of 1. This was confirmed by an α-shifting effect: the signal of C-4 Glc4 in the spectrum of chilensoside A (1) was deshielded (δC 75.6) when compared with the signal of C-4 Glc4 in the spectrum of kuriloside A1C 69.6). Therefore, two sulfate groups were attached to one monosaccharide unit (Glc4) in the sugar chain of 1. Such a structural feature was also recently found in psolusoside P from Psolus fabricii [44]. However, chilensoside A (1) is a new combination of some unusual structural features: aglycone side chain structure, carbohydrate chain architecture and the positions of sulfate groups.
The ()ESI-MS/MS of 1 (Figure S8) demonstrated the fragmentation of [M2Na−Na] ion at m/z 1443.5 with ion peaks observed at m/z 1179.5 [M2Na−Na−Glc–SO3Na+2H], 1135.5 [M2Na−Na−Glc–Qui+H], 1010.4 [M2Na−Na−MeGlc−2HSO4Na], 417.1 [M2Na−Na−MeGlc−Glc(OSO3Na)2−Agl], and 255.0 [M2Na−Na−MeGlc−Glc(OSO3Na)2−Glc−Agl], corroborating the sequence of monosaccharides and the aglycone structure of 1.
These data indicate that chilensoside A (1) is 3β-O-{β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-β-D-quinovopyranosyl-(1 → 2)-[3-O-methyl-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-4,6-O-sodium disulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)]-β-D-xylopyranosyl}-16-oxo,25-hydroxyholosta-9(11),23Z(24)-diene.
The aglycones of chilensosides A1 (2), B (3), C (4) and D (5) (Table 3, Tables S2–S4, Figures S9–S14, S17–S22, S25–S30 and S33–S38) were identical to each other and to those of cladoloside A4 [42] and psolusoside D1 [45]. This holostane aglycone has the same polycyclic system as 1 and differs in the side chain structure with a 24(25)-double bond.
The molecular formula of chilensoside A1 (2) was determined to be C60H92O33S2Na2 from the [M2Na−Na] ion peak at m/z 1427.4928 (calc. 1427.4865), and [M2Na–2Na]2− ion peak at m/z 702.2510 (calc. 702.2487) in the (−)HR-ESI-MS (Figure S16). The ()ESI-MS/MS of 2 (Figure S16) demonstrated the fragmentation of [M2Na−Na] ion at m/z 1427.5, m/z: 1120.5 [M2Na−Na−Glc−Qui+H], 915.4 [M2Na−Na−Glc−Qui−2SO3Na+3H], 667.1 [M2Na−Na−Glc−Qui–Agl], 417.1 [M2Na−Na−MeGlc−Glc(OSO3Na)2−Agl].
All these data indicate that chilensoside A1 (2) is 3β-O-{β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-β-D-quinovopyranosyl-(1 → 2)-[3-O-methyl-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-4,6-O-sodium disulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)]-β-D-xylopyranosyl}-16-oxoholosta-9(11),24(25)-diene.
The molecular formula of chilensoside B (3) was determined to be C60H92O33S2Na2 from the [M2Na–Na] ion peak at m/z 1427.4881 (calc. 1427.4865), and [M2Na–2Na]2− ion peak at m/z 702.2499 (calc. 702.2487) in the ()HR-ESI-MS (Figure S24). The 1H and 13C NMR spectra of the carbohydrate chain of chilensoside B (3) (Table 4, Figures S17–S23) demonstrated five characteristic doublets of anomeric protons at δH 4.66–5.18 (J = 7.1–8.1 Hz) and five signals of anomeric carbons at δC 102.3–104.7, indicating the presence of a pentasaccharide chain and β-configurations of glycosidic bonds. The extensive analysis of the 1H, 1H-COSY, 1D TOCSY, HSQC, ROESY and HMBC spectra (Table 4, Figures S17–S23) of 3 indicated the same monosaccharide composition, positions of glycosidic linkages, and architecture established for the glycosides 1, 2. The differences in the chemical shifts of carbon signals of chilensosides A (1) and B (3) were attributed to the diverse positions of sulfate groups. The signal of C-4 Glc4 in the 13C NMR spectrum of 3 was shielded to δC 68.9 instead of δC 75.6 in 1 due to the absence of a sulfate group in this position of 3. Additionally, the signal of C-3 Glc4 was deshielded to 85.9 due to the glycosylation effect and the absence of the β-shifting effect of sulfate group. The signal of C-6 Glc4 at δC 67.2 was characteristic for the sulfated hydroxy methylene group of the glucopyranose unit. Therefore, the glucose residue attached to C-4 Xyl1 of the carbohydrate chain of 3 bears one sulfate group at C-6. The comparison of the signals assigned to carbons of the 3-O-methylglucose unit of the compounds 3 (Table 4) and 1 (Table 2) showed that the signal of C-4 MeGlc5 of 3 was deshielded by 6.1 ppm (to δC 76.1) and the signals of C-3 and C-5 MeGlc5 were shielded by 1.7 and 1.0 ppm, corresponding to the shifting effects of the sulfate group attached to C-4 MeGlc5 of chilensoside B (3). Thus, the glycoside 3 is a new disulfated pentaoside having sulfate groups at C-6 Glc4 and C-4 MeGlc5. The compound with identical positions of sulfates but differing in the terminal xylose residue in the bottom semi-chain was chitonoidoside H, found recently in the sea cucumber Psolus chitonoides [6].
The ()ESI-MS/MS of 3 (Figure S24) demonstrated the fragmentation of [M2Na−Na] ion at m/z 1427.5, resulting in the ion peaks appearance at m/z 1307.5 [M2Na−Na−NaHSO4], 1149.5 [M2Na−Na−MeGlcOSO3Na+H], 987.4 [M2Na−Na−MeGlcOSO3Na−Glc+H], 841.4 [M2Na−Na−MeGlcOSO3Na−Glc−Qui+H], 667.1 [M2Na−Na−Agl−Glc−Qui−H]. The fragmentation of [M2Na−2Na]2− ion at m/z 702.2 led to the ion peak at m/z 621.7 [M2Na−2Na−Glc]2−, and 548.2 [M2Na−2Na−Glc−Qui]2−, confirming the structure of 3.
These data indicate that chilensoside B (3) is 3β-O-{β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-β-D-quinovopyranosyl-(1 → 2)-[4-O-sodium sulfate-3-O-methyl-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-6-O-sodium sulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)]-β-D-xylopyranosyl}-16-oxoholosta-9(11),24(25)-diene.
The molecular formula of chilensoside C (4) was determined to be C60H91O36S3Na3 from the [M3Na–Na] ion peak at m/z 1529.4300 (calc. 1529.4253), [M3Na–2Na]2− ion peak at m/z 753.2206 (calc. 753.2180) and [M3Na–3Na]3− ion peak at m/z 494.4839 (calc. 494.4823) in the ()HR-ESI-MS (Figure S32).
The 1H and 13C NMR spectra of the carbohydrate chain of chilensoside С (4) (Table 5, Figures S25–S31) demonstrated five characteristic doublets of anomeric protons at δH 4.65–5.21 (J = 6.5–8.5 Hz) and five signals of anomeric carbons at δC 102.4–104.7, indicating the presence of a pentasaccharide chain and β-configurations of glycosidic bonds.
The extensive analysis of the 1H, 1H-COSY, 1D TOCSY, HSQC, ROESY, and HMBC spectra of 4 indicated the same monosaccharide composition, glycosidic bond locations and architecture of carbohydrate chains as in the previously discussed glycosides 13. Differences were found in the quantity of sulfate groups, which was also confirmed by MS data, where three-charged ions were registered, indicating the presence of three sulfate groups.
The comparison of the 13C NMR spectra of sugar moieties of 4 and 1 showed the coincidence of all the signals except the signals of glucose residue in the bottom semi-chain. The signal of C-3 Glc3 was deshielded to δC 84.3 in the spectrum of 4, which could be explained by the α-shifting effect of the sulfate group as well as by the glycosylation effect. However, the latter was excluded due to the absence of the ROE- and HMBC correlations of H-3 Glc3 with any protons or carbons of neighboring monosaccharide residues (Table 5). Moreover, the signals of C-2 Glc3 and C-4 Glc3 in the spectrum of 4 were shielded to δC 73.1 and 69.8, respectively, in comparison with the corresponding signals in the spectrum of 1 due to β-shifting effect of sulfate group at C-3 Glc3. Therefore, the third sulfate group in chilensoside C (4) was unique for the glycosides position at C-3 Glc3 instead of the characteristic glycosidic bond position in the glycosides with normal (consisting of three monosaccharide units) bottom semi-chain. Such a location of the sulfate group makes further elongation of the carbohydrate chain of 4 impossible. The rest of the sulfate groups were attached to C-4 Glc4 and C-6 Glc4 in chilensoside C (4), by the same manner as in chilensosides A (1), and A1 (2).
The ()ESI-MS/MS of 4 (Figure S32) demonstrated the fragmentation of [M3Na−Na] ion at m/z 1529.5, which resulted in the ion peaks at m/z 1015.4 [M3Na−Na−GlcOSO3Na−Qui−SO3Na], 987.4 [M3Na−Na−MeGlc−Glc(OSO3Na)2], 605.2 [M3Na−Na−MeGlc−NaHSO4]. The fragmentation of [M3Na−2Na]2− ion at m/z 753.2 led to the presence of the ion peaks at m/z 702.2 [M3Na−2Na−SO3Na]2−, 605.2 [M3Na−2Na−MeGlc−NaHSO4]2−.
These data indicate that chilensoside C (4) is 3β-O-{3-O-sodium sulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-β-D-quinovopyranosyl-(1 → 2)-[3-O-methyl-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-4,6-O-sodium disulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)]-β-D-xylopyranosyl}-16-oxoholosta-9(11),24(25)-diene.
The molecular formula of chilensoside D (5) was determined to be C60H90O39S4Na4 from the [M4Na–Na] ion peak at m/z 1631.3667 (calc. 1631.3641), [M4Na–2Na]2− ion peak at m/z 804.1886 (calc. 804.1874), [M4Na–3Na]3− ion peak at m/z 528.4631 (calc. 528.4619) and [M4Na–4Na]4− ion peak at m/z 390.6005 (calc. 390.5991) in the (−) HR-ESI-MS (Figure S40). Chilensoside D (5), analogously to compounds 14, has a pentasaccharide branched by C-4 Xyl1 chain consisting of xylose, quinovose, two glucose and 3-O-methylglucose residues deduced from thorough analysis of its 1D and 2D NMR spectra (Table 6, Figures S33–S39). The availability of four-charged ion peaks in the ESI-MS spectra of 5 indicated four sulfate groups are present in its carbohydrate chain. The analysis of 1D TOCSY spectrum corresponding to Glc3 showed strongly deshielded signals of protons of the hydroxy methylene group at δH 4.61 (m) and 5.00 (d, J = 11.9 Hz), which were assigned to the corresponding carbon signal at δC 67.6. These data indicate that the glucose residue in the bottom semi-chain was sulfated by C-6. The glucose unit (Glc4) attached to C-4 Xyl1 in chilensoside D (5) had two sulfate groups at C-4 Glc4 and C-6 Glc4, deduced from the deshielding of its signals to δC 75.1 and 68.5, respectively. The fourth sulfate group was positioned at C-6 MeGlc5 because of the deshielding of the signals of hydroxy methylene group to δC 67.0 and δH 4.99 (brd, J = 11.9 Hz); 4.78 (dd, J = 5.1; 11.9 Hz). Therefore, chilensoside D (5) is a new, sixth tetrasulfated glycoside found in sea cucumbers [7,44].
The () ESI-MS/MS of chilensoside D (5) (Figure S40) demonstrated the fragmentation of [M4Na−Na] ion at m/z 1631.5, leading to the presence of the ion peak at m/ 987.4 [M4Na−Na−MeGlcOSO3Na−Glc(OSO3Na)2], of [M4Na−2Na]2− ion at m/z 804.2 leading to the ion peak at m/z 753.2 [M4Na−2Na−SO3Na+H]2−, and of [M4Na−3Na]3− ion at m/z 528.5 leading to the ion peak at m/z 494.3 [M4Na−3Na−SO3Na+H]3−.
These data indicate that chilensoside D (5) is 3β-O-{6-O-sodium sulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-β-D-quinovopyranosyl-(1 → 2)-[6-O-sodium sulfate-3-O-methyl-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 3)-4,6-O-sodium disulfate-β-D-glucopyranosyl-(1 → 4)]-β-D-xylopyranosyl}-16-oxoholosta-9(11),24(25)-diene.
The structural peculiarities of the glycosides of P. chilensis showed similarity to the compounds of the representatives of the order Dendrochirotida, i.e., sea cucumbers of the species Thyonidium kurilensis and Psolus chitonoides (the same architecture of the carbohydrate chains), Psolus fabricii (attachment of sulfates to C-4 Glc4 and C-6 Glc4) and Cladolabes schmeltzii (the same aglycones). All these data significantly support the phylogenetic closeness of the order Molpadida to the order Dendrochirotida, rather than to the order Aspidochirotida (in accordance with the system of Pawson and Fell). This order is absent in the last revision of the system of the class Holothuroidea, and the families, which were part of it, are now included in the orders Holothuriida, Persiculida and Synallactida [46]. The obtained structural data are in good agreement with the phylogenetic study of Holothuroidea using a multi-gene approach, which showed poor support of Molpadida as a sister group to Synallactida but demonstrated the close relationship of Molpadida to Dendrochirotida [46].

2.2. Bioactivity of the Glycosides

Cytotoxic activity of chilensosides A–D (15) against human cells, including erythrocytes and cancer cell lines SH-SY5Y, HeLa, DLD-1, HL-60, and THP-1, was studied. The earlier tested chitonoidoside L [7] was used as the positive control (Table 7).
The less active compounds in the series were chilensosides A (1) and D (5). The first of these substances has a hydroxyl group in the aglycone side chain, which is the cause of the decrease in its membranolytic activity [3]. In fact, its structural analog chilensoside A1 (2), with the same carbohydrate chain and aglycone without the OH-group, demonstrated high hemolytic and cytotoxic effects against all tested cell lines. Chilensoside D (5) is a tetrasulfated glycoside that itself is not the cause of activity depletion, because it is known that tetrasulfated hexaosides from P. chitonoides, chitonoidosides K and L, were significantly active [7]. The combination of sulfate group positions in 5, especially at C-6 Glc3 and C-6 MeGlc5, probably negatively affected the activity. Disulfated chilensosides A1 (2), B (3) and trisulfated chilensoside C (4) displayed similar cytotoxicity. The differing sulfate groups in these glycosides were attached to C-4 or C-3 of glucopyranose units while C-6 positions of terminal sugar residues were free from sulfation.
The differential sensitivity of the cell lines in relation to the cytotoxic action of sea cucumber glycosides depended both on the glycoside’s chemical structures and the composition of cellular membranes [47]. In the current tests, erythrocytes were, as usual, more sensitive than cancer cells to the action of the glycosides, but leukemia cells (promyeloblast HL-60 and monocytic THP-1) displayed increased sensitivity compared to the other cancer cells.
Therefore, three of the five glycosides isolated from P. chilensis demonstrated high hemolytic and moderate cytotoxic activities against cancer cells. These data, along with the previous investigations of highly polar tri- and tetrasulfated glycosides [7], indicate the possible potential of these water-soluble compounds to be used as anticancer drugs.

3. Materials and Methods

3.1. General Experimental Procedures

Specific rotation, PerkinElmer 343 Polarimeter (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA); NMR, Bruker AMX 500 (Bruker BioSpin GmbH, Rheinstetten, Germany) (500.12/125.67 MHz (1Н/13C) spectrometer; Bruker AVANCE III-700 spectrometer at 700.13 MHz/176.04 MHz (1H/13C); ESI MS (positive and negative ion modes), Agilent 6510 Q-TOF apparatus (Agilent Technology, Santa Clara, CA, USA), sample concentration 0.01 mg/mL; HPLC, Agilent 1260 Infinity II with a differential refractometer (Agilent Technology, Santa Clara, CA, USA); columns Supelcosil LC-Si (4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm) and Discovery HS F5-5 (10 × 250 mm, 5 µm) (Supelco, Bellefonte, PA, USA), Diasfer 110 C-8 (4.6 × 250 mm, 5 µm) (Biochemmack, Moscow, Russia).

3.2. Animals and Cells

Specimens of the sea cucumber Paracaudina chilensis (family Cuadinidae; order Molpadida) were collected in the Troitsa bay, Japan sea in August 2019 by scuba diving from 2–5 m depth. The animals were taxonomically determined by Boris B. Grebnev. Voucher specimens are kept in G.B. Elyakov PIBOC FEB RAS, Vladivostok, Russia.
Human erythrocytes were purchased from the Station of Blood Transfusion in Vladivostok. The cells of human adenocarcinoma line HeLa were provided by the N.N. Blokhin National Medicinal Research Center of Oncology of the Ministry of Health Care of the Russian Federation, (Moscow, Russia). The cells of human colorectal adenocarcinoma line DLD-1 CCL-221™, human promyeloblast cell line HL-60 CCL-240, human monocytic THP-1 TIB-202 cells and human neuroblastoma line SH-SY5Y CRL-2266 were received from ATCC (Manassas, VA, USA). HeLa cell line was cultured in DMEM (Gibco Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium) with 1% penicillin/streptomycin sulfate (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia) and 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia). The cells of DLD-1, HL-60, and THP-1 lines were cultured in RPMI medium with 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia) and 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia). All the cells were incubated at 37 °C in a humidified atmosphere with 5% (v/v) CO2. SH-SY5Y were cultured MEM (Minimum Essential Medium) with 1% penicillin /streptomycin sulfate (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia) and with fetal bovine serum (Biolot, St. Petersburg, Russia) to a final concentration of 10%.
This study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Pacific Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry (Protocol No. 0037.12.03.2021).

3.3. Extraction and Isolation

The sea cucumbers (36 specimens) were kept in EtOH at +4 °C. Then, they were minced by cutting into pieces and extracted with refluxing EtOH (2 L vol.) for 4 hrs. The extract was concentrated to dryness in vacuum, dissolved in H2O, and chromatographed on a Polychrom-1 column (powdered Teflon, Biolar, Latvia). We first eluted the inorganic salts and impurities with H2O and then the glycosides with 50% EtOH to give 1300 mg of crude glycoside fraction. This was subjected to column chromatography on Si gel using the stepwise gradient of solvent systems CHCl3/EtOH/H2O: 100:100:17 → 100:125:25 → 100:150:50 as mobile phase as the first stage of purification. Three fractions, I (377 mg), II (378 mg) and III (338 mg), were obtained. Each of them was subsequently rechromatographed on an Si gel column using the solvent system CHCl3/EtOH/H2O (100:125:25) as mobile phase, resulting in the isolation of subfractions: I.0 (22 mg), I.1 (120 mg), II (286 mg), III.1 (66 mg) and III.2 (177 mg). HPLC of the subfraction I.0 on silica-based column Supelcosil LC-Si (4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm) with CHCl3/MeOH/H2O (55/30/4) as mobile phase resulted in the isolation of three fractions (I.0.1–I.0.3). The subsequent HPLC of fraction I.0.3 on Supelco Discovery HS F5-5 (10 × 250 mm) column with MeOH/H2O/NH4OAc (1 M water solution), ratio (50/48.5/1.5), as mobile phase led to the isolation of 5.5 mg of chilensoside A (1). HPLC of the subfraction I.1 on the silica-based column Supelcosil LC-Si (4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm) in the same conditions used for the subtraction I.0 resulted in the isolation of three fractions (I.1.1–I.1.3). The HPLC of the fraction I.1.3 on Supelco Discovery HS F5-5 (10 × 250 mm) column with MeOH/H2O/NH4OAc (1 M water solution) (65/33.5/1.5) as mobile phase led to isolation of individual chilensosides A1 (2) (2.2 mg) and B (3) (4.8 mg) as well as the subfraction I.1.3.1. The repeated HPLC of the latter on the same column with MeOH/H2O/NH4OAc (1 M water solution) (55/43.5/1.5) as mobile phase resulted in the obtaining of 3.8 mg of chilensoside C (4). The HPLC of the subfraction III.1 on silica-based column Supelcosil LC-Si (4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm) with CHCl3/MeOH/H2O (55/25/3) as mobile phase followed by HPLC of the obtained fraction on Diasfer 110 C-8 (4.6 × 250 mm) column with MeOH/H2O/NH4OAc (1 M water solution) (49/49/2) as mobile phase gave three fractions III.1.1–III.1.3. The rechromatography of III.1.3 on Diasfer 110 C-8 (4.6 × 250 mm) column with MeOH/H2O/NH4OAc (1 M water solution) (50/48/2) led to isolation of 2.2 mg of chilensoside D (5).

3.3.1. Chilensoside A (1)

Colorless powder; [α]D2048° (c 0.1, 50% MeOH). NMR: See Table 1 and Table 2, Figures S1–S8. ()HR-ESI-MS m/z: 1443.4800 (calc. 1443.4815) [M2Na–Na], 710.2466 (calc. 710.2461) [M2Na–2Na]2−. ()ESI-MS/MS m/z: 1179.5 [M2Na−Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)–SO3Na+2H], 1135.5 [M2Na−Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)–C6H10O4 (Qui)+H], 1010.4 [M2Na−Na−C7H13O6 (MeGlc)−2HSO4Na], 417.1 [M2Na−Na−C7H13O6 (MeGlc)−C6H8O11S2Na2 (Glc(OSO3Na)2)−C30H43O4 (Agl)], and 255.0 [M2Na−Na−C7H13O6 (MeGlc)−C6H8O11S2Na2 (Glc(OSO3Na)2)−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C30H43O4 (Agl)].

3.3.2. Chilensoside A1 (2)

Colorless powder; [α]D2036° (c 0.1, 50% MeOH). NMR: See Table 3 and Table S1, Figures S9–S16. ()HR-ESI-MS m/z: 1427.4928 (calc. 1427.4865) [M2Na−Na], 702.2510 (calc. 702.2487) [M2Na–2Na]2−; ()ESI-MS/MS m/z: 1119.5 [M2Na−Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)+H], 915.4 [M2Na−Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)−2SO3Na+3H], 667.1 [M2Na−Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)–C30H43O3 (Agl)], 417.1 [M2Na−Na−C7H13O6 (MeGlc)−C6H8O11S2Na2 (Glc(OSO3Na)2)−C30H43O3 (Agl)].

3.3.3. Chilensoside B (3)

Colorless powder; [α]D2053° (c 0.1, 50% MeOH). NMR: See Table 4 and Table S2, Figures S17–S24. ()HR-ESI-MS m/z: 1427.4881 (calc. 1427.4865) [M2Na–Na], 702.2499 (calc. 702.2487) [M2Na–2Na]2−; ()ESI-MS/MS m/z: 1307.5 [M2Na−Na−NaHSO4], 1149.5 [M2Na−Na−C7H12O8SNa (MeGlcOSO3Na)+H], 987.4 [M2Na−Na−C7H12O8SNa (MeGlcOSO3Na)−C6H11O5 (Glc)+H], 841.4 [M2Na−Na−C7H12O8SNa (MeGlcOSO3Na)−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)+H], 667.1 [M2Na−Na−C30H43O3 (Agl)−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)−H], 621.7 [M2Na−2Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)]2−, and 548.2 [M2Na−2Na−C6H11O5 (Glc)−C6H10O4 (Qui)]2−

3.3.4. Chilensoside C (4)

Colorless powder; [α]D2056° (c 0.1, 50% MeOH). NMR: See Table 5 and Table S3, Figures S25–S32. ()HR-ESI-MS m/z: 1529.4300 (calc. 1529.4253) [M3Na–Na], 753.2206 (calc. 753.2180) [M3Na–2Na]2−, 494.4839 (calc. 494.4823) [M3Na–3Na]3−; ()ESI-MS/MS m/z: 1015.4 [M3Na−Na−C6H10O8SNa (GlcOSO3Na)−C6H10O4 (Qui)−SO3Na], 987.4 [M3Na−Na−C7H13O5 (MeGlc)−C6H8O11S2Na2 (Glc(OSO3Na)2)], 605.2 [M3Na−Na−C7H13O5 (MeGlc)−NaHSO4], 702.2 [M3Na−2Na−SO3Na]2−, 605.2 [M3Na−2Na−C7H13O5 (MeGlc)−NaHSO4]2−.

3.3.5. Chilensoside D (5)

Colorless powder; [α]D2061° (c 0.1, 50% MeOH). NMR: See Tables S4 and Table 6, Figures S33–S39. () HR-ESI-MS m/z: 1631.3667 (calc. 1631.3641) [M4Na–Na], 804.1886 (calc. 804.1874) [M4Na–2Na]2−, 528.4631 (calc. 528.4619) [M4Na–3Na]3−, 390.6005 (calc. 390.5991) [M4Na–4Na]4− (Figure S40); () ESI-MS/MS m/z 987.4 [M4Na−Na−C7H12O8SNa (MeGlcOSO3Na)−C6H7O11S2Na2 (Glc(OSO3Na)2)], 753.2 [M4Na−2Na−SO3Na+H]2−, 494.3 [M4Na−3Na−SO3Na+H]3−.

3.4. Cytotoxic Activity (MTT Assay) (for SH-SY5Y, HeLa and DLD-1 Cells)

All the studied substances (including chitonoidoside L used as positive control) were tested in concentrations between 0.1 µM to 100 µM using 2-fold dilution in d-H2O. The cell suspension (180 µL) and solutions (20 µL) of tested compounds in different concentrations were injected in wells of 96-well plates (SH-SY5Y, 1 × 104 cells/well, HeLa and DLD-1, 6 × 103/200 µL) and incubated at 37 °C for 24 h in atmosphere with 5% CO2. Then, 100 µL of fresh medium was added instead of the tested substances in the same volume of medium. After that, 10 µL of MTT (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide) (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) stock solution (5 mg/mL) was added to each well, and the microplate was incubated for 4 h. Next, each well was additionally incubated for 18 h with 100 µL of SDS-HCl solution (1 g SDS/10 mL d-H2O/17 µL 6 N HCl). Multiskan FC microplate photometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) was used to measure the absorbance of the converted dye formazan at 570 nm. Cytotoxic activity of the tested compounds was calculated as the concentration that caused 50% cell metabolic activity inhibition (IC50). The experiments were carried out in triplicate, p < 0.05.

3.5. Cytotoxic Activity (MTS Assay) (for HL-60 and THP-1 Cells)

The cells of HL-60 line (10 × 103/200 µL) and THP-1 (6 × 103/200 µL) were placed in 96-well plates at 37 °C for 24 h in a 5% CO2 incubator. The cells were treated with tested substances and chitonoidoside L as positive control at concentrations from 0 to 100 µM for an additional 24 h incubation. Then, the cells were incubated with 10 µL MTS ([3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-5-(3-carboxymethoxyphenyl)-2-(4-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium) for 4 h, and the absorbance in each well was measured at 490/630 nm with plate reader PHERA star FS (BMG Labtech, Ortenberg, Germany). The experiments were carried out in triplicate and the mean absorbance values were calculated. The results were presented as the percentage of inhibition that produced a reduction in absorbance after tested compounds treatment compared to the non-treated cells (negative control), p < 0.01.

3.6. Hemolytic Activity

Erythrocytes were isolated from human blood (AB(IV) Rh+) by centrifugation with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (pH 7.4) at 4 °C for 5 min by 450 g on centrifuge LABOFUGE 400R (Heraeus, Hanau, Germany) three times. Then, the residue of erythrocytes was resuspended in ice cold phosphate saline buffer (pH 7.4) to a final optical density of 1.5 at 700 nm, and kept on ice. For the hemolytic assay, 180 µL of erythrocyte suspension was mixed with 20 µL of test compound solution (including chitonoidoside L used as positive control) in V-bottom 96-well plates. After 1 h of incubation at 37 °C, plates were exposed to centrifugation for 10 min at 900 g on laboratory centrifuge LMC-3000 (Biosan, Riga, Latvia). Then, 100 µL of supernatant was carefully selected and transferred in new flat-plates, respectively. Lysis of erythrocytes was determined by measuring the concentration of hemoglobin in the supernatant with microplate photometer Multiskan FC (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), λ = 570 nm. The effective dose causing 50% hemolysis of erythrocytes (ED50) was calculated using the computer program SigmaPlot 10.0. All the experiments were carried out in triplicate, p < 0.01.

4. Conclusions

As a result of investigation of the glycosidic composition of the sea cucumber Paracaudina chilensis, the structures of five new glycosides, chilensosides A–D (15), were established and their cytotoxic activities were studied. Two different aglycones were found and one of them was a part of four compounds. Four diverse carbohydrate chains were detected in the studied glycosides. They differed in the quantity of sulfate groups: two in chilensosides of groups A (1, 2) and B (3), three in chilensoside C (4), and four in chilensoside D (5). The positions of sulfation were also variable: two sulfates were attached to C-4 and C-6 of Glc4 residue in the glycosides 1, 2; additional third sulfate group bonded C-3 Glc3 in chilensoside C (4); two sulfates bonded different monosaccharide residues, C-6 Glc4 and C-4 Meglc5, in chilensoside B (3); and, finally, two positions of sulfation at C-6 Glc3 and C-6 MeGlc5, additional to those observed in 1, 2, were detected in chilensoside D (5).
Such diversity in sulfate group quantity and positions indicates the high enzymatic activity of sulfatases. They have low specificity to attach a sulfate group to different positions of the same or several monosaccharide residues in glycosides 15. Especially interesting was the observation that the sulfatase could compete with the glycosidase, bonding the sulfate group to C-3 Glc3 in chilensoside C (4) instead of potential glycosylation of this position. Additionally, it is interesting to note that only the aglycones with intranuclear 9(11)-double were found. This indicates that one oxidosqualene cyclase (OSC), forming the parkeol (precursor of the glycosides with 9(11)-double bond), is expressed in P. chilensis.
The structures of the glycosides of P. chilensis were similar to those found in some representatives of the order Dendochirotida, confirming phylogenetic closeness of the order Molpadida to the order Dendrochirotida.
Rather high hemolytic and cytotoxic activity of three out of five isolated glycosides along with the previous investigations of highly polar tri- and tetrasulfated glycosides indicate the possible potential of these water-soluble compounds to be used as anticancer drugs.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/molecules27217655/s1, The original spectral data (Figures S1–S40 and Tables S1–S4).

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.S.S. and V.I.K.; methodology, A.S.S., S.A.A. and V.I.K.; investigation, A.S.S., S.A.A., R.S.P., A.B.R., E.A.C., P.V.A. and B.B.G.; writing—original draft preparation, A.S.S. and V.I.K.; review and editing, A.S.S. and V.I.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by the Ethics Committee of the Pacific Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry (Protocol No. 0037.12.03.2021).

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Acknowledgments

The study was carried out on the equipment of the Collective Facilities Center “The Far Eastern Center for Structural Molecular Research (NMR/MS) PIBOC FEB RAS”.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Sample Availability

Samples of the compounds, chilensosides A–D (15), are available from the authors.

References

  1. Kalinin, V.I.; Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Stonik, V.A. Progress in the studies of triterpene glycosides from sea cucumbers (Holothuroidea, Echinodermata) between 2017 and 2021. Nat. Prod. Commun. 2021, 16, 10. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Kalinin, V.I.; Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Stonik, V.A. Non-holostane aglycones of sea cucumber triterpene glycosides. Structure, biosynthesis, evolution. Steroids 2019, 147, 42–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Zelepuga, E.A.; Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Kalinin, V.I. Structure-activity relationships of holothuroid’s triterpene glycosides and some in silico insights obtained by molecular dynamics study on the mechanisms of their membranolytic action. Mar. Drugs 2021, 19, 604. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Hawas, U.W.; Abou El-Kassem, L.T.; Shaher, F.M.; Ghandourah, M.; Al-Farawati, R. Sulfated triterpene glycosides from the Saudi Red Sea cucumber Holothuria atra with antioxidant and cytotoxic activities. Thalass. Int. J. Mar. Sci. 2021, 37, 817–824. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Silchenko, A.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Avilov, S.A.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Popov, R.S.; Dmitrenok, P.S.; Chingizova, E.A.; Kalinin, V.I. Unusual structures and cytotoxicities of chitonoidosides A, A1, B, C, D, and E, six triterpene glycosides from the Far Eastern sea cucumber Psolus chitonoides. Mar. Drugs 2021, 19, 449. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  6. Silchenko, A.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Avilov, S.A.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Popov, R.S.; Chingizova, E.A.; Kalinin, V.I.; Dmitrenok, P.S. Triterpene glycosides from the Far Eastern sea cucumber Psolus chitonoides: Chemical structures and cytotoxicities of chitonoidosides E1, F, G, and H. Mar. Drugs 2021, 19, 696. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Popov, R.S.; Chingizova, E.A.; Dmitrenok, P.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Rasin, A.B.; Kalinin, V.I. Structures and biologic activity of chitonoidosides I, J, K, K1 and L–triterpene di-, tri- and tetrasulfated hexaosides from the sea cucumber Psolus chitonoides. Mar. Drugs 2022, 20, 369. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Mondol, M.A.M.; Shin, H.J.; Rahman, M.A. Sea cucumber glycosides: Chemical structures, producing species and important biological properties. Mar. Drugs 2017, 15, 317. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. Vien, L.T.; Hanh, T.T.H.; Quang, T.H.; Thanh, Q.N.V.; Thao, D.T.; Cuong, N.X.; Nam, N.H.; Thung, D.C.; Kiem, P.V. Triterpene tetraglycosides from Stichopus herrmanni Semper, 1868. Nat. Prod. Commun. 2022, 17, 5. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Van Dyck, S.; Gerbaux, P.; Flammang, P. Elucidation of molecular diversity and body distribution of saponins in sea cucumber Holothuria forskali (Echinodermata) by mass spectrometry. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 2009, 152B, 124–134. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Van Dyck, S.; Flammang, P.; Meriaux, C.; Bonnel, D.; Salzet, M.; Fourmier, I.; Wisztorski, M. Localization of secondary metabolites in marine invertebrates: Contribution of MALDI MSI for the study of saponins in Cuvierian tubules of H. forskali. PLoS ONE 2010, 5, 11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  12. Van Dyck, S.; Gerbaux, P.; Flammang, P. Quialitative and quantitative saponin contents in five sea cucumbers from Indian Ocean. Mar. Drugs 2010, 8, 173–189. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  13. Bahrami, Y.; Zhang, W.; Franco, C.M.M. Distribution of saponins in the sea cucumber Holothuria lessoni; the body wall versus the viscera, and their biological activities. Mar. Drugs 2018, 16, 423. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  14. Bondoc, K.G.V.; Lee, H.; Gruz, L.J.; Lebrila, C.B.; Juinio-Menez, M.A. Chemical fingerprinting and phylogenetic mapping of saponin congeners from three tropical holothurian sea cucumbers. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 2013, 166B, 182–193. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Caulier, G.; Mezali, K.; Soualili, D.L.; Decroo, C.; Demeyer, M.; Eeckhaut, I.; Cerbauz, P.; Flammang, P. Chemical characterization of saponins contained in the body wall and the Cuvierian tubules of the sea cucumber Holothuria (Platyperona) sanctori (Delle Chiaje, 1823). Biochem. Syst. Ecol. 2016, 68, 119–127. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Bryne, M.; Rowe, F.; Uthike, S. Molecular, phylogeny and evolution in the family Stichopodidae (Aspidochirotida: Holothurioidea) based on COI and 16S mitochondrial DNA. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 2010, 56, 1068–1081. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Kamyab, E.; Rohde, S.; Kellerman, M.Y.; Schupp, P.J. Chemical defense mechanisms and ecological implications of Indo-Pacific holothurians. Molecules 2020, 25, 4008. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Van Dyck, S.; Caulier, G.; Todeso, M.; Gebraux, P.; Fournier, I.; Wisztorsky, M.; Flammang, P. The triterpene glycosides of Holohuria forskali: Usefulness and efficiency as a chemical defense mechanism against predatory fish. J. Exp. Biol. 2011, 214, 1347–1356. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  19. Elyakov, G.B.; Stonik, V.; Levina, E.V.; Levin, V.S. Glycosides of marine invertebrates-III. Biosynthesis of stichoposides from acetate. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 1975, 52, 321–323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Kelecom, A.; Daloze, D.; Tursch, B. Chemical studies of marine invertebrates-XXI. Six triterpene genins artifacts from thelothurins A and B, toxic saponins of the sea cucumber Thelenota ananas Jaeger (Echinodermata). Biosynthesis of the Thelothurins. Tetrahedron 1976, 32, 2353–2359. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Sheikh, Y.M.; Djerassi, C. Bioconversion of lanosterol into holotoxingonin, a triterpenoid from the sea cucumber Stichopus californicus. J. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun. 1976, 24, 1057–1058. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Cordeiro, M.L.; Djerassi, C. Biosynthetic studies of marine lipids. 25. Biosynthesis of Δ9(11) sterols and saponins in sea cucumbers. J. Org. Chem. 1990, 55, 2806–2813. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Makarieva, T.N.; Stonik, V.A.; Kapustina, I.I.; Boguslavsky, V.M.; Dmitrenok, A.S.; Kalinin, V.I.; Cordeiro, M.L.; Djerassi, C. Biosynthetic studies of marine lipids. 42. Biosynthesis of steroid and triterpenoid metabolites in the sea cucumber Eupentacta fraudatrix. Steroids 1993, 58, 508–517. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Kerr, R.G.; Chen, Z. In vivo and in vitro biosynthesis of saponin in sea cucumbers. J. Nat. Prod. 1995, 58, 172–176. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  25. Claereboudt, E.J.S.; Gualier, G.; Decroo, C.; Colson, E.; Gerbaux, P.; Claereboudt, M.R.; Schaller, H.; Flammang, P.; Deleu, M.; Eeckhaut, I. Triterpenoids in echinoderms: Fundamental differences in diversity and biosynthetic pathways. Mar. Drugs 2019, 17, 352. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  26. Li, Y.; Wang, R.; Xun, X.; Wang, J.; Bao, L.; Thimmappa, R.; Ding, J.; Jiang, J.; Zhang, L.; Li, T.; et al. Sea cucumber genome provides insights into saponin biosynthesis and aestivation regulation. Cell Discov. 2018, 4, 29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  27. Mitu, S.A.; Bose, U.; Suwansa-ard, S.; Turner, L.H.; Zhao, M.; Elizur, A.; Osbourne, S.M.; Shaw, P.N.; Cummins, S.F. Evidence for a saponin biosynthesis pathway in the body wall of the commercially significant sea cucumber Holothuria scabra. Mar. Drugs 2017, 15, 349. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  28. Liu, H.; Kong, X.; Chen, J.; Zhang, H. De novo sequencing and transcriptome analysis of Stichpous horrens to reveal genes related to biosynthesis of triterpenoids. Aquaculture 2018, 491, 358–367. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Kim, S.K.; Himaya, S.W.A. Triterpene glycosides from sea cucumbers and their biological activities. Adv. Food Nutr. Res. 2012, 65, 297–317. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Khotimchenko, Y. Pharmacological potential of sea cucumbers. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2020, 19, 1342. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Park, J.-I.; Bae, H.-R.; Kim, C.G.; Stonik, V.A.; Kwak, J.Y. Relationships between chemical structures and functions of triterpene glycosides isolated from sea cucumbers. Front. Chem. 2014, 2, 77. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  32. Zhao, Y.-C.; Xue, C.-H.; Zhang, T.T.; Wang, Y.-M. Saponins from sea cucumber and their biological activities. Agric. Food Chem. 2018, 66, 7222–7237. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  33. Gomes, A.R.; Freitas, A.C.; Duarte, A.C.; Rocha-Santos, T.A.P. Echinoderms: A review of bioactive compounds with potential health effects. In Studies in Natural Products Chemistry; Rahman, A.U., Ed.; Elsevier, B.V.: Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2016; Volume 49, pp. 1–54. [Google Scholar]
  34. Chludil, H.D.; Murray, A.P.; Seldes, A.M.; Maier, M.S. Biologically active triterpene glycosides from sea cucumbers (Holothurioidea, Echinodermata). In Studies in Natural Products Chemistry; Rahman, A.U., Ed.; Elsevier Science, B.V.: Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2003; Volume 28, pp. 587–616. [Google Scholar]
  35. Maier, M.S. Biological activities of sulfated glycosides from Echinoderms. In Studies in Natural Product Chemistry (Bioactive Natural Products); Rahman, A.U., Ed.; Elsevier Science Publisher: Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2008; Volume 35, pp. 311–354. [Google Scholar]
  36. Kalinin, V.I.; Malyutin, A.N.; Stonik, V.A. Caudinoside A − A new triterpene glycoside from the holothurian Paracaudina ransonetii. Chem. Nat. Compd. 1986, 22, 355–356. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Smirnov, A.V. System of the class Holothuroidea. Paleontol. J. 2012, 46, 793–832. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Kalinin, V.I.; Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Stonik, V.A.; Smirnov, A.V. Sea cucumbers triterpene glycosides, the recent progress in structural elucidation and chemotaxonomy. Phytochem. Rev. 2005, 4, 221–236. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Avilov, S.A.; Kalinin, V.I.; Smirnov, A.V. Use of triterpene glycosides for resolving taxonomic problems in the sea cucumber genus Cucumaria (Holothorioidea, Echinodermata). Biochem. Syst. Ecol. 2004, 32, 715–733. [Google Scholar]
  40. Honey-Escandon, M.; Arreguin-Espinosa, R.; Solis-Martin, F.A.; Samyn, Y. Biological and taxonomic perspective of triterpenoid glycosides of sea cucumbers of the family Holothuriidae (Echinodermata, Holothuroidea). Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 2015, 180B, 16–39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Omran, N.E.; Salem, ·H.K.; Eissa, S.H.; Kabbash, A.M.; Kandeil, ·M.A.; Salem, M.A. Chemotaxonomic study of the most abundant Egyptian sea-cucumbers using ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Chemoecology 2020, 30, 35–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Silchenko, A.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Avilov, S.A.; Andryjaschenko, P.V.; Dmitrenok, P.S.; Yurchenko, E.A.; Dolmatov, I.Y.; Savchenko, A.M.; Kalinin, V.I. Triterpene glycosides from the sea cucumber Cladolabes schmeltzii II. Structure and biological action of cladolosides A1–A6. Nat. Prod. Commun. 2014, 9, 1421–1428. [Google Scholar]
  43. Silchenko, A.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Avilov, S.A.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Popov, R.S.; Dmitrenok, P.S.; Chingizova, E.A.; Kalinin, V.I. Kurilosides A1, A2, C1, D, E and F–triterpene glycosides from the Far Eastern sea cucumber Thyonidium (=Duasmodactyla) kurilensis (Levin): Structures with unusual non-holostane aglycones and cytotoxicities. Mar. Drugs 2020, 18, 551. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Silchenko, A.S.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Avilov, S.A.; Kalinin, V.I.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Dmitrenok, P.S.; Popov, R.S.; Chingizova, E.A. Structures and bioactivities of psolusosides B1, B2, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, and Q from the sea cucumber Psolus fabricii. The first finding of tetrasulfated marine low molecular weight metabolites. Mar. Drugs 2019, 17, 631. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  45. Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Kalinovsky, A.I.; Kalinin, V.I.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Dmitrenok, P.S. Psolusosides C1, C2 and D1, novel triterpene hexaosides from the sea cucumber Psolus fabricii (Psolidae, Dendrochirotida). Nat. Prod. Commun. 2018, 13, 1623–1628. [Google Scholar]
  46. Miller, A.K.; Kerr, A.M.; Paulay, G.; Reich, M.; Wilson, N.G.; Carvajal, J.I.; Rouse, G.W. Molecular phylogeny of extant Holothuroidea (Echinodermata). Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 2017, 111, 110–131. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  47. Aminin, D.L.; Menchinskaya, E.S.; Pislyagin, E.A.; Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Kalinin, V.I. Sea cucumber triterpene glycosides as anticancer agents. In Studies in Natural Product Chemistry; Rahman, A.U., Ed.; Elsevier, B.V.: Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2016; Volume 49, pp. 55–105. [Google Scholar]
Figure 1. Chemical structures of glycosides isolated from Paracaudina chilensis: 1—chilensoside A; 2—chilensoside A1; 3—chilensoside B; 4—chilensoside C; 5—chilensoside D.
Figure 1. Chemical structures of glycosides isolated from Paracaudina chilensis: 1—chilensoside A; 2—chilensoside A1; 3—chilensoside B; 4—chilensoside C; 5—chilensoside D.
Molecules 27 07655 g001
Table 1. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of aglycone moiety of chilensoside A (1).
Table 1. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of aglycone moiety of chilensoside A (1).
PositionδC Mult. aδH Mult. (J in Hz) bHMBCROESY
136.0 CH21.72 m H-11
1.31 m H-3, H-5, H-11
226.6 CH22.06 m
1.84 m H-30
388.6 CH3.13 dd (4.5; 11.3) H-5, H-31, H1-Xyl1
439.5 C
552.7 CH0.79 brd (11.2)C: 10, 19H-1, H-3, H-31
620.9 CH21.57 m H-31
1.38 m H-30
728.2 CH21.56 m
1.17 m H-32
838.6 CH3.11 m H-19
9151.1 C
1039.6 C
11111.2 CH5.26 brs H-1
1231.8 CH22.61 d (16.7) H-17, H-32
2.45 dd (6.7; 16.7) H-21
1355.8 C
1442.0 C
1552.0 CH22.41 d (15.2)C: 13, 16H-32
2.15 d (15.2)
16214.6 C
1761.1 CH2.89 sC: 12, 16, 18H-12, H-21, H-32
18176.8 C
1921.9 CH31.26 sC: 1, 5, 9, 10H-1, H-2, H-8, H-30
2082.8 C
2127.0 CH31.44 sC: 17, 20, 22H-12, H-17, H-22
2241.9 CH22.55 dd (4.8; 13.8) H-24
2.33 m H-24
23123.9 CH5.90 dd (6.3; 11.8)C: 22
24140.1 CH5.90 d (11.8)C: 25H-22, H-26, H-27
2581.3 C
2624.7 CH31.42 sC: 24, 27H-24
2724.7 CH31.42 sC: 24, 26H-24
3016.6 CH30.96 sC: 3, 4, 5, 31H-2, H-6, H-19, H-31
3127.9 CH31.13 sC: 3, 4, 5, 30H-3, H-5, H-6, H-30, H-1 Xyl1
3220.5 CH30.88 sC: 8, 13, 14, 15H-7, H-12, H-15, H-17
a Recorded at 176.04 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Recorded at 700.13 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). The original spectra of 1 are provided in Figures S1–S7.
Table 2. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside A (1).
Table 2. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside A (1).
AtomδC Mult. a,b cδH Mult. (J in Hz) dHMBCROESY
Xyl1 (1 → C-3)
1104.7 CH4.66 d (7.2)C: 3H-3; H-3, 5 Xyl1
282.0 CH3.93 t (8.6) H-1 Qui2
375.1 CH4.13 t (8.6)C: 4 Xyl1H-1, 5 Xyl1
478.3 CH4.11 m H-1 Glc4
563.5 CH24.32 mC: 3 Xyl1
3.61 m H-1 Xyl1
Qui2 (1 → 2Xyl1)
1104.4 CH5.02 d (7.1)C: 2 Xyl1H-2 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Qui2
275.5 CH3.88 t (9.1)C: 1, 3 Qui2H-4 Qui2
375.1 CH4.02 t (9.1)C: 2, 4 Qui2H-1, 5 Qui2
486.3 CH3.51 t (9.1)C: 3 Qui2, 1 Glc3H-1 Glc3; H-2 Qui2
571.4 CH3.70 dd (6.1; 9.2) H-1, 3 Qui2
617.9 CH31.61 d (6.1)C: 4, 5 Qui2H-4 Qui2
Glc3 (1 → 4Qui2)
1104.6 CH4.80 d (8.1)C: 4 Qui2H-4 Qui2; H-3, 5 Glc3
274.4 CH3.86 t (8.7)C: 1, 3 Glc3
377.2 CH4.13 mC: 4 Glc3H-1, 5 Glc3
470.9 CH3.92 mC: 5 Glc3
577.6 CH3.92 mC: 6 Glc3H-1, 3 Glc3
661.8 CH24.39 d (11.2) H-4 Glc3
4.06 mC: 5 Glc3
Glc4 (1 → 4Xyl1)
1102.2 CH4.87 d (7.8)C: 4 Xyl1H-4 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Glc4
273.8 CH3.93 t (8.9)C: 1 Glc4
382.9 CH4.37 t (8.9)C: 2, 4 Glc4; 1 MeGlc5H-1 MeGlc5; H-1 Glc4
475.6 CH4.78 t (8.9)C: 3, 5, 6 Glc4
574.5 CH4.27 t (8.9) H-1 Glc4
668.2 CH25.49 m
4.71 dd (8.9; 11.2)
MeGlc5 (1 → 3Glc4)
1104.4 CH5.20 d (7.8)C: 3 Glc4H-3 Glc4; H-3,5 MeGlc5
274.3 CH3.99 t (8.9)C: 1, 3 MeGlc5
386.9 CH3.65 t (8.9)C: 2, 4 MeGlc5; OMeH-1, 5 Me Glc5; OMe
470.0 CH3.91 t (8.9)C: 3, 5 MeGlc5
577.4 CH3.86 m H-1 MeGlc5
662.0 CH24.34 d (12.3) H-4 MeGlc5
4.09 dd (6.7; 12.3)C: 5 MeGlc5
OMe60.5 CH33.76 sC: 3 MeGlc5
a Recorded at 176.04 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Bold = interglycosidic positions. c Italic = sulfate position. d Recorded at 700.13 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). Multiplicity by 1D TOCSY. The original spectra of 1 are provided in Figures S1–S7.
Table 3. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts, HMBC and ROESY correlations of aglycone moiety of chilensoside A1 (2).
Table 3. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts, HMBC and ROESY correlations of aglycone moiety of chilensoside A1 (2).
PositionδC Mult. aδH Mult. (J in Hz) bHMBCROESY
136.0 CH21.72 m H-11
1.31 m
226.7 CH22.07 m
1.85 m
388.6 CH3.13 dd (5.0; 12.3) H-5, H-31, H1-Xyl1
439.5 C
552.7 CH0.79 brd (11.2) H-1, H-3, H-7, H-31
620.8 CH21.58 m
1.39 m H-19, H-30
728.2 CH21.58 m H-15
1.16 m
838.6 CH3.13 m H-19
9151.0 C
1039.6 C
11111.2 CH5.27 m H-1
1232.0 CH22.64 brd (15.5)C: 13, 18H-32
2.48 brd (15.5) H-21
1355.9 C
1442.0 C
1551.9 CH22.39 d (16.4)C: 13, 16H-7, H-32
2.09 m
16214.6 C
1761.3 CH2.88 sC: 16, 18, 21H-12, H-21, H-32
18176.7 C
1921.9 CH31.26 sC: 1, 5, 9, 10H-1, H-2, H-8, H-30
2083.4 C
2126.6 CH31.47 sC: 17, 20, 22H-12, H-17, H-23
2238.6 CH21.80 m
1.58 m
2322.9 CH22.27 m H-21
2.01 m
24123.8 CH5.03 mC: 27H-26
25132.2 C
2625.4 CH31.56 sC: 24, 25, 27H-24
2717.5 CH31.52 sC: 24, 25, 26H-23
3016.5 CH30.95 sC: 3, 4, 5, 31H-2, H-6, H-19, H-31
3127.9 CH31.13 sC: 3, 4, 5, 30H-3, H-5, H-6, H-30, H-1 Xyl1
3220.5 CH30.89 sC: 8, 13, 14, 15H-7, H-12, H-15, H-17
a Recorded at 125.67 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Recorded at 500.12 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). The original spectra of 2 are provided Figures S9–S15.
Table 4. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside B (3).
Table 4. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside B (3).
AtomδC Mult. a b cδH Mult. (J in Hz) dHMBCROESY
Xyl1 (1 → C-3)
1104.7 CH4.66 d (7.9)C: 3H-3; H-3, 5 Xyl1
282.0 CH3.95 t (7.9)C: 1 Qui2; 1, 3 Xyl1H-1 Qui2
375.0 CH4.15 t (7.9)C: 4 Xyl1H-1, 5 Xyl1
478.2 CH4.14 mC: 3 Xyl1H-1 Glc4
563.4 CH24.37 dd (5.3; 11.8)C: 1, 3 Xyl1
3.62 m H-1 Xyl1
Qui2 (1 → 2Xyl1)
1104.5 CH5.02 d (7.1)C: 2 Xyl1H-2 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Qui2
275.6 CH3.88 t (8.9)C: 1, 3 Qui2H-4 Qui2
375.0 CH4.00 t (8.9)C: 2, 4 Qui2H-1, 5 Qui2
486.2 CH3.52 t (8.9)C: 1 Glc3; 3, 5 Qui2H-1 Glc3; H-2 Qui2
571.4 CH3.69 m H-1, 3 Qui2
617.8 CH31.62 d (5.1)C: 4, 5 Qui2H-4 Qui2
Glc3 (1 → 4Qui2)
1104.4 CH4.81 d (7.8)C: 4 Qui2H-4 Qui2; H-3, 5 Glc3
274.4 CH3.87 t (8.6)C: 1, 3 Glc3
377.2 CH4.13 t (8.6)C: 2, 4 Glc3H-1, 5 Glc3
470.8 CH3.93 mC: 3 Glc3
577.6 CH3.92 m H-1, 3 Glc3
661.8 CH24.39 d (11.2)
4.06 dd (4.3; 11.2)C: 5 Glc3
Glc4 (1 → 4Xyl1)
1102.3 CH4.89 d (8.1)C: 4 Xyl1H-4 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Glc4
273.2 CH3.83 t (9.3)C: 1, 3 Glc4
385.9 CH4.17 t (9.3)C: 1 MeGlc5; 2, 4 Glc4H-1 MeGlc5; H-1 Glc4
468.9 CH3.86 t (9.3)C: 3, 5, 6 Glc4H-6 Glc4
575.1 CH4.05 t (9.3) H-1 Glc4
667.2 CH24.95 d (11.2)
4.65 brd (11.2)C: 5 Glc4
MeGlc5 (1 → 3Glc4)
1104.3 CH5.18 d (7.5)C: 3 Glc4H-3 Glc4; H-3,5 MeGlc5
274.0 CH3.86 t (9.3)C: 1, 3 MeGlc5H-4 MeGlc5
385.2 CH3.71 t (9.3)C: 2, 4 MeGlc5; OMeH-1 Me Glc5; OMe
476.1 CH4.88 t (9.3)C: 3, 5, 6 MeGlc5H-2, 6 MeGlc5
576.4 CH3.85 t (9.3) H-1 MeGlc5
661.7 CH24.50 d (11.2)
4.33 dd (5.6; 11.2)
OMe60.6 CH33.93 sC: 3 MeGlc5
a Recorded at 176.04 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Bold = interglycosidic positions. c Italic = sulfate position. d Recorded at 700.13 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). Multiplicity by 1D TOCSY. The original spectra of 3 are provided in Figures S17–S23.
Table 5. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside C (4).
Table 5. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside C (4).
AtomδC Mult. a b,cδH Mult. (J in Hz) dHMBCROESY
Xyl1 (1 → C-3)
1104.7 CH4.65 d (6.5)C: 3H-3; H-3, 5 Xyl1
282.3 CH3.89 t (8.4)C: 1 Qui2; 1, 3 Xyl1H-1 Qui2
375.0 CH4.08 mC: 4 Xyl1H-1 Xyl1
478.9 CH4.07 m H-1 Glc4
563.4 CH24.31 mC: 3 Xyl1
3.60 dd (9.3; 11.2) H-1, 3 Xyl1
Qui2 (1 → 2Xyl1)
1104.6 CH4.94 d (7.5)C: 2 Xyl1H-2 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Qui2
275.4 CH3.89 t (9.3)C: 1, 3 Qui2H-4 Qui2
374.8 CH4.04 t (9.3)C: 2, 4 Qui2H-1, 5 Qui2
486.1 CH3.51 t (9.3)C: 1 Glc3; 3, 5 Qui2H-1 Glc3; H-2 Qui2
571.5 CH3.68 dd (6.5; 9.3) H-1, 3 Qui2
617.7 CH31.60 d (6.5)C: 4, 5 Qui2H-4 Qui2
Glc3 (1 → 4Qui2)
1104.4 CH4.82 d (8.5)C: 4 Qui2H-4 Qui2; H-3, 5 Glc3
273.1 CH3.90 t (8.5)C: 3 Glc3
384.3 CH5.03 t (8.5)C: 2, 4 Glc3H-1, 5 Glc3
469.8 CH3.93 mC: 3, 5 Glc3
577.1 CH3.93 m H-1, 3 Glc3
661.5 CH24.35 brd (11.7)
3.99 d (11.7)C: 5 Glc3
Glc4 (1 → 4Xyl1)
1102.4 CH4.85 d (8.5)C: 4 Xyl1H-4 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Glc4
273.7 CH3.93 t (8.5)C: 1, 3 Glc4H-4 Glc4
382.9 CH4.37 t (8.5)C: 1 MeGlc5; 2, 4 Glc4H-1 MeGlc5; H-1, 5 Glc4
475.6 CH4.78 t (8.5)C: 3, 5, 6 Glc4H-2 Glc4
574.3 CH4.28 t (8.5)C: 4 Glc4H-1, 3 Glc4
668.3 CH25.50 brd (9.0)
4.70 brd (9.9)C: 5 Glc4
MeGlc5 (1 → 3Glc4)
1104.2 CH5.21 d (7.7)C: 3 Glc4H-3 Glc4; H-3,5 MeGlc5
274.6 CH4.00 t (8.6)C: 1, 3 MeGlc5
386.9 CH3.65 t (8.6)C: 2, 4 MeGlc5; OMeH-1, 5 Me Glc5; OMe
470.0 CH3.91 t (8.6)C: 3, 5, 6 MeGlc5
577.4 CH3.87 t (8.6) H-1, 3 MeGlc5
662.0 CH24.35 brd (11.5)
4.09 dd (5.7; 11.5)C: 5 MeGlc5H-4 MeGlc5
OMe60.3 CH33.76 sC: 3 MeGlc5
a Recorded at 176.04 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Bold = interglycosidic positions. c Italic = sulfate position. d Recorded at 700.13 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). Multiplicity by 1D TOCSY. The original spectra of 4 are provided in Figures S25–S31.
Table 6. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside D (5).
Table 6. 13C and 1H NMR chemical shifts and HMBC and ROESY correlations of carbohydrate moiety of chilensoside D (5).
AtomδC Mult. a,b,cδH Mult. (J in Hz) dHMBCROESY
Xyl1 (1 → C-3)
1104.7 CH4.63 d (8.0)C: 3H-3; H-5 Xyl1
282.7 CH3.74 t (8.0)C: 1 Qui2; 1, 3 Xyl1H-1 Qui2
375.5 CH4.01 t (8.0)C: 2, 4 Xyl1
480.7 CH3.97 t (8.0) H-1 Glc4
563.5 CH24.40 dd (5.3; 11.5)
3.64 dd (8.0; 11.5) H-1 Xyl1
Qui2 (1 → 2Xyl1)
1104.5 CH4.77 d (8.6)C: 2 Xyl1H-2 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Qui2
275.2 CH3.91 t (8.6)C: 1, 3 Qui2H-4 Qui2
374.4 CH4.04 t (8.6)C: 4 Qui2H-1 Qui2
486.1 CH3.29 t (8.6)C: 1 Glc3; 3 Qui2H-1 Glc3; H-2 Qui2
571.6 CH3.62 t (8.6) H-1 Qui2
617.8 CH31.55 d (6.1)C: 4, 5 Qui2H-4 Qui2
Glc3 (1 → 4Qui2)
1104.6 CH4.64 d (7.9)C: 4 Qui2H-4 Qui2; H-3 Glc3
273.9 CH3.75 t (8.6)C: 1, 3 Glc3
376.8 CH4.10 t (8.6)C: 2, 4 Glc3H-1 Glc3
470.6 CH3.81 t (8.6)C: 3, 5, 6 Glc3
575.1 CH4.07 m H-1 Glc3
667.6 CH25.00 d (11.9)
4.61 m
Glc4 (1 → 4Xyl1)
1103.4 CH4.80 d (7.4)C: 4 Xyl1H-4 Xyl1; H-3, 5 Glc4
273.3 CH3.95 t (8.6)C: 1, 3 Glc4
379.4 CH4.50 t (8.6)C: 1 MeGlc5; 2, 4 Glc4H-1 MeGlc5; H-1, 5 Glc4
475.1 CH4.78 m
573.8 CH4.28 t (8.6) H-1, 3 Glc4
668.5 CH25.46 dd (7.5; 12.5)
4.66 m
MeGlc5 (1 → 3Glc4)
1101.8 CH5.33 d (7.6)C: 3 Glc4H-3 Glc4; H-3,5 MeGlc5
273.5 CH4.00 t (7.6)C: 1, 3 MeGlc5
386.4 CH3.62 t (7.6)C: 4 MeGlc5; OMeH-1, 5 Me Glc5; OMe
469.5 CH4.01 t (7.6)C: 5 MeGlc5
575.7 CH4.01 t (7.6) H-1, 3 MeGlc5
667.0 CH24.99 brd (11.9)
4.78 dd (5.1; 11.9)
OMe60.4 CH33.75 sC: 3 MeGlc5
a Recorded at 125.67 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). b Bold = interglycosidic positions. c Italic = sulfate position. d Recorded at 500.12 MHz in C5D5N/D2O (4/1). Multiplicity by 1D TOCSY. The original spectra of 5 are provided in Figures S33–S39.
Table 7. The cytotoxic activities of glycosides 15, and chitonoidoside L (positive control) against human erythrocytes, and SH-SY5Y, HeLa, DLD-1, HL-60, THP-1 human cell lines.
Table 7. The cytotoxic activities of glycosides 15, and chitonoidoside L (positive control) against human erythrocytes, and SH-SY5Y, HeLa, DLD-1, HL-60, THP-1 human cell lines.
GlycosidesED50, µM, ErythrocytesCytotoxicity, IC50 µM
SH-SY5YHeLaDLD-1HL-60THP-1
Chilensoside A (1)4.85 ± 0.10>100.00>100.00>100.0084.90 ± 2.9675.29 ± 2.12
Chilensoside A1 (2)1.45 ± 0.1238.78 ± 0.0821.80 ± 0.2229.78 ± 2.3422.78 ± 0.6030.26 ± 1.60
Chilensoside B (3)0.96 ± 0.0130.73 ± 2.6520.34 ± 0.3245.08 ± 1.635.68 ± 0.0519.57 ± 0.75
Chilensoside C (4)1.18 ± 0.0526.43 ± 0.9117.79 ± 0.5635.44 ± 1.7614.21 ± 1.2318.59 ± 0.79
Chilensoside D (5)10.26 ± 0.53>100.00>100.00>100.0064.74 ± 3.6356.23 ± 2.74
Chitonoidoside L1.24 ± 0.027.58 ± 0.1310.88 ± 0.0411.48 ± 0.256.96 ± 0.449.00 ± 0.75
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Silchenko, A.S.; Avilov, S.A.; Andrijaschenko, P.V.; Popov, R.S.; Chingizova, E.A.; Grebnev, B.B.; Rasin, A.B.; Kalinin, V.I. The Isolation, Structure Elucidation and Bioactivity Study of Chilensosides A, A1, B, C, and D, Holostane Triterpene Di-, Tri- and Tetrasulfated Pentaosides from the Sea Cucumber Paracaudina chilensis (Caudinidae, Molpadida). Molecules 2022, 27, 7655. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27217655

AMA Style

Silchenko AS, Avilov SA, Andrijaschenko PV, Popov RS, Chingizova EA, Grebnev BB, Rasin AB, Kalinin VI. The Isolation, Structure Elucidation and Bioactivity Study of Chilensosides A, A1, B, C, and D, Holostane Triterpene Di-, Tri- and Tetrasulfated Pentaosides from the Sea Cucumber Paracaudina chilensis (Caudinidae, Molpadida). Molecules. 2022; 27(21):7655. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27217655

Chicago/Turabian Style

Silchenko, Alexandra S., Sergey A. Avilov, Pelageya V. Andrijaschenko, Roman S. Popov, Ekaterina A. Chingizova, Boris B. Grebnev, Anton B. Rasin, and Vladimir I. Kalinin. 2022. "The Isolation, Structure Elucidation and Bioactivity Study of Chilensosides A, A1, B, C, and D, Holostane Triterpene Di-, Tri- and Tetrasulfated Pentaosides from the Sea Cucumber Paracaudina chilensis (Caudinidae, Molpadida)" Molecules 27, no. 21: 7655. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27217655

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop