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Challenge 04: Develop a sustainable and equitable ocean economy

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://repository.unesco.gov.ph/handle/123456789/23

Ocean Decade


Challenge 04:
Develop a sustainable and equitable ocean economy



Generate knowledge, support innovation and multi-sectoral partnerships and develop solutions for equitable, resilient and sustainable development of the ocean economy under changing environmental, social and climate conditions.

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    Anti-inflammatory activity of monosubstituted xestoquinone analogues from the marine sponge Neopetrosia compacta
    Susana, Shalice R.; Salvador-Reyes, Lilibeth A. (MDPI, 2022-03-22)
    Chronic inflammation is recognized as a contributor to multiple chronic diseases, such as cancer, cardiovascular, and autoimmune disorders. Here, a natural products-initiated discovery of anti-inflammatory agents from marine sponges was undertaken. From the screening of 231 crude extracts, a total of 30 extracts showed anti-inflammatory activity with no direct cytotoxic effects at 50 μg/mL on RAW 264.7 (ATCC®TIB-71™) murine macrophage cells stimulated with 1 μg/mL lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Bioactivity-guided purification of the anti-inflammatory extract from the sponge Neopetrosia compacta led to the isolation of xestoquinone (1), adociaquinone B (2), adociaquinone A (3), 14-hydroxymethylxestoquinone (4), 15-hydroxymethylxestoquinone (5), and an inseparable 2:1 mixture of 14-methoxyxestoquinone and 15-methoxyxestoquinone (6). Compounds 1–6 caused a concentration-dependent reduction of nitric oxide (NO) production in LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 cells, with 4–6 having low micromolar IC50 and acceptable selectivity index. Gene expression analysis using qRT-PCR showed that 1, 5, and 6 downregulated Il1b and Nos2 expression by 2.1- to 14.8-fold relative to the solvent control at 10 μM. Xestoquinone (1) and monosubstituted analogues (4–6), but not the disubstituted adociaquinones (2 and 3), caused Nrf2 activation in a luciferase reporter MCF7 stable cells. Compounds 5 and 6 caused a modest increase in Nqo1 gene expression at 10 μM. The anti-inflammatory activity of xestoquinone (1) and monosubstituted analogues (4–6) may, in part, be mediated by Nrf2 activation, leading to attenuation of inflammatory mediators such as IL-1β and NOS2.
    Samples were collected under gratuitous permit numbers GP-0084-15 and GP-0123-17, issued by the Department of Agriculture of the Philippines. We thank the municipalities of Bolinao, Pangasinan, and Puerto Galera, Oriental Mindoro for permission for sample collection. We acknowledge assistance from Z. L. Malto and DDHP chemical ecology group in obtaining the mass spectrometric data and sample collection, respectively.
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    Emerging pharmaceutical contaminants in key aquatic environments of the Philippines
    Mariano, Shyrill Mae F.; Angeles, Luisa F.; Aga, Diana S.; Villanoy, Cesar L.; Jaraula, Caroline Marie B. (Frontiers Media SA, 2023-09-13)
    Pharmaceuticals in natural waters are considered emerging pollutants due to their low concentrations and the negative effects they pose to the environment. Common sources of such pollutants include untreated wastewater from hospitals, residential, industrial, and agricultural sources. Many wastewater treatment methods only remove a subset of all pharmaceuticals from the wastewater; remaining pharmaceuticals are discharged into natural waters, and ultimately drain into coastal areas. Regions without proper wastewater treatment are especially susceptible to such contamination. This study deals with the distribution, sources, and seasonal variability of pharmaceuticals in key aquatic systems in the Philippines. Two watershed continuums (Davao Gulf, Davao City; Macajalar Bay, Cagayan de Oro City); two tourist areas (Boracay Island, Aklan; Mabini, Batangas); and one pristine atoll (Tubbataha Reefs, Palawan)—all with varied prevailing human population pressures—were studied. Samples of hospital wastewater as well as groundwater, surface and bottom water samples from rivers and coastal seas collected during dry and wet seasons were analyzed using solid-phase extraction and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Thirty-four target pharmaceutical residues and antibiotics were extracted and quantified. Acetaminophen was detected at concentrations of up to 289.17 ppb in freshwater samples, and at concentrations of up to 253.39 ppb in seawater samples. Ubiquitous to all the sites was caffeine, reaching 1848.57 ppb. Sulfamethazine, a commonly used veterinary antibiotic, was detected at 764.91 ppb in a river site in Cagayan de Oro. Untreated hospital wastewater contained metformin, iopamidol, sulfamethoxazole, acetylsulfamethoxazole, ciprofloxacin, and azithromycin, but these pharmaceuticals were not detected in other river and coastal waters. Samples collected during the dry season exhibited higher concentrations than those from the wet season, which appears to be related to increase in transient populations from tourism activities as well as dilution. The presence of pharmaceutical residues and antibiotics in these areas and the potential impact on the environment indicate the need for stricter wastewater management measures, particularly in communities located near water bodies. As the results of this study show, such measures might be most beneficial and effective if imposed during dry season and in areas open to tourism.
    We thank the crew and researchers aboard M/Y Panata expedition PA0421 to Tubbataha in October 2019 and cruise to Boracay December 2019. Our gratitude to Mary Antoinette Limen, Mishel Valery Rañada, Gio Ferson Bautista, and Ernest Guiller Pineda for helping us in the field, and to Lahiruni Halwatura for assisting in the creation of a standard calibration curve for saltwater.
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    Synthesis and biological evaluation of cyanobacterial-inspired peptides
    Casanova, Jannelle R.; Villaraza, Aaron Joseph L.; Salvador-Reyes, Lilibeth (Philippine-American Academy of Science and Engineering, 2024-03-18)
    Cyanobacteria are known producers of structurally diverse and potent natural products; the majority are peptides with unique modifications. Yet, there remains a huge underexplored chemodiversity from cyanobacteria. Here, we designed a linear octapeptide as a product of combinatorial peptide design inspired by the natural products from the filamentous cyanobacteria Hapalosiphon welwitschii and Leptolyngbya sp. The target peptide was synthesized via solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) using fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl-protecting group (Fmoc) strategy. Structural diversity was expanded by the substitution of unnatural amino acids to yield five analogues. The structure and sequence of the synthesized peptides were confirmed using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry (MS). Biological activity evaluation was done; with none of the peptides showing antimicrobial or cytotoxic activities against microbial pathogens and mammalian cells, respectively. To our knowledge, this study is the first to report a combinatorial peptide design inspired by a natural product and a predicted biosynthetic product. This strategy of peptide design expands the chemistry of a known bioactive natural product with the aid of unexplored cyanobacterial biosynthetic gene clusters.
    This study was funded by the Philippine Council for Health Research and Development – Department of Science and Technology through the Discovery and Development of Health Products – Marine Component Program. J.R.C acknowledges scholarship support from the Accelerated Science and Technology Human Resource Development Program of the Department of Science and Technology – Science Education Institute. We acknowledge the assistance of Z. Malto, J. Peran and S. Susana in the conduct of the biological assays. This is MSI Contribution No. 502.