Penicillium thymicola
Penicillium thymicola is a halotolerant species of the genus of Penicillium which produces okaramine A, daldinin D, alantrypinone, seranttrypinone, fumiquinazoline F and fumiquinazoline G.[1][3][4][5][6][7]
Further reading
- E. H. Rodd (1973). Chemistry of Carbon Compounds. Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company. ISBN 0-444-82980-6.
- Larsen, Thomas Ostenfeld; Frydenvang, Karla; Frisvad, Jens Christian; Christophersen, Carsten (1998). "UV-Guided Isolation of Alantrypinone, a Novel Penicillium Alkaloid". Journal of Natural Products 61 (9): 1154–7. doi:10.1021/np980056v. PMID 9748389.
- Zhelifonova, V. P.; Antipova, T. V.; Kozlovskii, A. G. (2012). "Biosynthesis of fumiquinazolines by the fungus Penicillium thymicola". Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology 48 (3): 302–306. doi:10.1134/S0003683812030179.
See also
References
- 1 2 MycoBank
- ↑ Straininfo of Penicillium thymicola
- ↑ UniProt
- ↑ Zhelifonova, V. P.; Antipova, T. V.; Kozlovskiĭ, A. G. (2012). "Biosynthesis of fumiquinazolines by the fungus Penicillium thymicola". Prikladnaia biokhimiia i mikrobiologiia 48 (3): 334–9. PMID 22834306.
- ↑ Nina Gunde-Cimerman, Aharon Oren, Ana Plemenitaš (2006). Adaptation to Life at High Salt Concentrations in Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 1-4020-3633-7.
- ↑ Lewis Mander, Hung-Wen Liu (2010). Comprehensive Natural Products II: Chemistry and Biology. Newnes. ISBN 0-08-045382-1.
- ↑ Romero Ariza, M; Larsen, T. O.; Petersen, B. O.; Duus, J.O.; Christophersen, C; Barrero, A. F. (2001). "A novel alkaloid serantrypinone and the spiro azaphilone daldinin D from Penicillium thymicola". Journal of Natural Products 64 (12): 1590–2. doi:10.1021/np0101550. PMID 11754624.