posted on 2018-02-26, 00:00authored byChuanfu Dong, Douglas K. Reilly, Célia Bergame, Franziska Dolke, Jagan Srinivasan, Stephan H. von Reuss
Chemical
communication in nematodes such as the model organism Caenorhabditis
elegans is modulated by a variety of glycosides
based on the dideoxysugar l-ascarylose. Comparative ascaroside
profiling of nematode exometabolome extracts using a GC-EIMS screen
reveals that several basic components including ascr#1 (asc-C7), ascr#2
(asc-C6-MK), ascr#3 (asc-ΔC9), ascr#5 (asc-ωC3), and ascr#10
(asc-C9) are highly conserved among the Caenorhabditis. Three novel side chain hydroxylated ascaroside derivatives were
exclusively detected in the distantly related C. nigoni and C. afra. Molecular structures of these species-specific
putative signaling molecules were elucidated by NMR spectroscopy and
confirmed by total synthesis and chemical correlations. Biological
activities were evaluated using attraction assays. The identification
of (ω)- and (ω – 2)-hydroxyacyl ascarosides demonstrates
how GC-EIMS-based ascaroside profiling facilitates the detection of
novel ascaroside components and exemplifies how species-specific hydroxylation
of ascaroside aglycones downstream of peroxisomal β-oxidation
increases the structural diversity of this highly conserved class
of nematode signaling molecules.