PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Zebrafish-based identification of the antiseizure nucleoside inosine from the marine diatom Skeletonema marinoi.

  • Théo Brillatz,
  • Chiara Lauritano,
  • Maxime Jacmin,
  • Supitcha Khamma,
  • Laurence Marcourt,
  • Davide Righi,
  • Giovanna Romano,
  • Francesco Esposito,
  • Adrianna Ianora,
  • Emerson F Queiroz,
  • Jean-Luc Wolfender,
  • Alexander D Crawford

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196195
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. e0196195

Abstract

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With the goal of identifying neuroactive secondary metabolites from microalgae, a microscale in vivo zebrafish bioassay for antiseizure activity was used to evaluate bioactivities of the diatom Skeletonema marinoi, which was recently revealed as being a promising source of drug-like small molecules. A freeze-dried culture of S. marinoi was extracted by solvents with increasing polarities (hexane, dichloromethane, methanol and water) and these extracts were screened for anticonvulsant activity using a larval zebrafish epilepsy model with seizures induced by the GABAA antagonist pentylenetetrazole. The methanolic extract of S. marinoi exhibited significant anticonvulsant activity and was chosen for bioassay-guided fractionation, which associated the bioactivity with minor constituents. The key anticonvulsant constituent was identified as the nucleoside inosine, a well-known adenosine receptor agonist with previously reported antiseizure activities in mice and rat epilepsy models, but not reported to date as a bioactive constituent of microalgae. In addition, a UHPLC-HRMS metabolite profiling was used for dereplication of the other constituents of S. marinoi. Structures of the isolated compounds were elucidated by nuclear magnetic resonance and high-resolution spectrometry. These results highlight the potential of zebrafish-based screening and bioassay-guided fractionation to identify neuroactive marine natural products.