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Merck

Bikaverin production and applications.

Applied microbiology and biotechnology (2010-04-09)
M Carmen Limón, Roberto Rodríguez-Ortiz, Javier Avalos
RESUMEN

Bikaverin is a reddish pigment produced by different fungal species, most of them from the genus Fusarium, with antibiotic properties against certain protozoa and fungi. Chemically, bikaverin is a polyketide with a tetracyclic benzoxanthone structure, resulting from the activity of a specific class I multifunctional polyketide synthase and subsequent group modifications introduced by a monooxygenase and an O-methyltransferase. In some fungi, bikaverin is found with smaller amounts of a precursor molecule, called norbikaverin. Production of these metabolites by different fungal species depends on culture conditions, but it is mainly affected by nitrogen availability and pH. Regulation of the pathway has been investigated in special detail in the gibberellin-producing fungus Fusarium fujikuroi, whose genes and enzymes responsible for bikaverin production have been recently characterized. In this fungus, the synthesis is induced by nitrogen starvation and acidic pH, and it is favored by other factors, such as aeration, sulfate and phosphate starvation, or sucrose availability. Some of these inducing agents increase mRNA levels of the enzymatic genes, organized in a coregulated cluster. The biological properties of bikaverin include antitumoral activity against different cancer cell lines. The diverse biological activities and the increasing information on the biochemical and genetic basis of its production make bikaverin a metabolite of increasing biotechnological interest.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Bikaverin, from Fusarium subglutinans, ≥98% (HPLC)