Glycosides of fatty acids
with a
O-glycosyl link and an ester link
Ustilagic acid is a cellobiose
lipid
produced by the corn smut fungus, Ustilago maydis. It was discovered in
1950 (Haskins RH, Can J Res 1950, 28, 213) and was shown to be an amphipathic
glycolipid with surface active properties and secreted in large amounts under
conditions of nitrogen starvation. It consists of a cellobiose moiety
glycosidically linked to the w-hydroxyl
group of 15,16-dihydroxy hexadecanoic or 2,15,16 trihydroxy hexadecanoic acid (ustilic acid).
In addition the cellobiose is esterified with acetic acid and hydroxy hexanoic or hydroxy octanoic acid (Eveleigh DE et
al., J Biol Chem 1964, 239, 839).

n = 2 or 4
R = H or OH
The
fungal biocontrol agent Pseudozyma flocculosa produces a parent
cellobiose lipid named flocculosin which has antifungal activity (Cheng
Y et al., Appl Environ Microbiol 2003, 69, 2595).
Unusual glycolipids, roselipins,
were described in the marine fungus Gliocladium roseum (Tabata N et al., J
Antibiot 1999, 52, 815). Several forms were described : roselipins 1A,
1B, 2A and 2B. One of these is shown below.
A mannose moiety is linked to a hydroxyl and an
arabinitol moiety is ester-linked to the carboxyl of a nona-methylated tri-hydroxylated
triene fatty acid (C20). Several forms were found with different arabinitol
stereoisomers and various acetylations. These molecules were shown to be
potent inhibitors of diacylglycerol
acyltransferase (Tomoda
H et al., J Antibiot 1999, 52, 689). Structure/activity studies have
shown that the arabinitoyl fatty acid core is essential for eliciting the
activity (Tomoda H et al., J Antibiot 2003, 56, 24).
Resin glycosides (or glycoresins) are glycolipids of plant origin, which are mainly
isolated from seeds and roots of Convolvulaceae (morning glory family, genus Ipomoea, Convolvulus,
Cuscuta and Calystegia) and Scrophulariaceae plants. Investigations into resin
glycosides began in the 19th century (Kayser GA, Justus Liebigs Ann
1855, 51, 81) as
essential ingredients of traditional folk medicines. They consist frequently of
four
deoxy sugars (sometimes 3 or 5) such as D-quinovose, D-fucose, and L-rhamnose, and of 11-hydroxy
fatty acids, namely jalapinolic acid (11-hydroxyhexadecanoic acid) and
convolvulinolic acid (11-hydroxytetradecanoic acid). Among convolvulaceae,
the genus Ipomoea is the best known for these components and as medicinal
plants used for their purgative and antihelminthic properties. Several other
pathologies have been treated in Mexico and Central America by extracts of these
plants. Modern investigations have revealed that these glycolipids may have
antimycobacterial activity, cytotoxicity and some activity at the level of the
central nervous system.
Most resin glycosides with bioactivity have a macrolidic structure (lactones) as
in the case of murucins, tricolorins, orizabins and arboresins. That structure
is characterized by a glycosidically link between
the hydroxyl group of the fatty acid and a sugar residue and an intramolecular
esterification between the fatty acid carboxylic group and one of the sugar
hydroxyl groups. Furthermore, several sugar hydroxyl groups may be esterified with
short chain organic acids
: 2-methylbutyric acid, 2-methyl-2-butenoic (tiglic)
acid or 3-hydroxy-2-methylbutyric (nilic) acid. The simplest glycoresin among the height compounds
(tricolorins) described in Ipomoea
tricolor (Bah M et al., Tetrahedron 1997, 53, 9007) is shown below.

One tricolorin from Ipomoea tricolor
In tricolorins, the oligosaccharide core linked to
jalapinolic acid is formed by fucose, glucose and quinovose.
In the tetrasaccharide glycolipids (orizabins, scammonins) from Ipomea
orizabensis, the core linked to jalapinolic acid is formed by rhamnose,
glucose and two quinovose residues (Hernandez-Carlos B et al., J Nat Prod
1999, 62, 1096). Similar structures have been described in Ipomea tyrianthina. These compounds showed
antimycobacterial activity, potentiation of hypnosis induced by pentobarbital,
and protection against seizures (Leon-Rivera I et al., J Nat Prod 2008, 71,
1686). Similar structures were also described in Ipomea stans, a plant
used in Mexican traditional medicine (Reynolds W et al., J Nat Prod 1995, 58,
1730). They exhibited pronounced cytotoxicity towards tumor cell lines and
specific antibiotic activities. Pentasaccharide glycolipids (pescaproside,
pescapreins) were studied in Ipomea pres-caprae (Pereda-Miranda R et al., J Nat
Prod 2005, 68, 226), their core linked to jalapinolic acid was shown to be formed by fucose
and four rhamnose residues.
Similar structures but without the ester link have
been also described in Convolvulaceae and Scrophulariaceae.