MDPI Contact

MDPI AG
St. Alban-Anlage 66,
4052 Basel, Switzerland
Support contact
Tel. +41 61 683 77 34
Fax: +41 61 302 89 18

For more contact information, see here.

Advanced Search

You can use * to search for partial matches.

Search Results

3 articles matched your search query. Search Parameters:
Authors = Pierre Le Pogam

Matches by word:

PIERRE (609) , LE (1042) , POGAM (3)

View options
order results:
result details:
results per page:
Articles per page View Sort by
Displaying article 1-50 on page 1 of 1.
Export citation of selected articles as:
Open AccessFeature PaperArticle Specialized Metabolites of the Lichen Vulpicida pinastri Act as Photoprotective Agents
Molecules 2017, 22(7), 1162; doi:10.3390/molecules22071162
Received: 6 June 2017 / Accepted: 7 July 2017 / Published: 12 July 2017
Viewed by 170 | PDF Full-text (2192 KB) | HTML Full-text | XML Full-text | Supplementary Files
Abstract
The extreme resiliency of lichens to UV radiations makes them an interesting model to find new photoprotective agents acting as UV-blockers and antioxidant. In this research, using a new in vitro method designed to overcome the shortage of material associated to many studies
[...] Read more.
The extreme resiliency of lichens to UV radiations makes them an interesting model to find new photoprotective agents acting as UV-blockers and antioxidant. In this research, using a new in vitro method designed to overcome the shortage of material associated to many studies dealing with natural products, we show that the three major compounds isolated from the lichen Vulpicida pinastri, vulpinic acid, pinastric acid and usnic acid, were UV blocker agents. Antioxidant assays evidenced superoxide anion scavenging activity. Combination of the most promising compounds against UVB and UVB radiations, usnic acid, vulpinic acid and pinastric acid, increased the photoprotective activity. At the same time, they were found not cytotoxic on keratinocyte cell lines and photostable in the UVA and UVB ranges. Thus, lichens represent an attractive source to find good candidate ingredients as photoprotective agents. Additionally, the uncommon scalemic usnic acid mixture in this Vulpicida species was proven through electronic circular dichroism calculation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Lichens: Chemistry, Ecological and Biological Activities)
Figures

Open AccessArticle Which Specialized Metabolites Does the Native Subantarctic Gastropod Notodiscus hookeri Extract from the Consumption of the Lichens Usnea taylorii and Pseudocyphellaria crocata?
Molecules 2017, 22(3), 425; doi:10.3390/molecules22030425
Received: 26 January 2017 / Revised: 23 February 2017 / Accepted: 1 March 2017 / Published: 8 March 2017
Viewed by 591 | PDF Full-text (2549 KB) | HTML Full-text | XML Full-text | Supplementary Files
Abstract
Notodiscus hookeri is the only representative of terrestrial gastropods on Possession Island and exclusively feeds on lichens. The known toxicity of various lichen metabolites to plant-eating invertebrates led us to propose that N. hookeri evolved means to protect itself from their adverse effects.
[...] Read more.
Notodiscus hookeri is the only representative of terrestrial gastropods on Possession Island and exclusively feeds on lichens. The known toxicity of various lichen metabolites to plant-eating invertebrates led us to propose that N. hookeri evolved means to protect itself from their adverse effects. To validate this assumption, the current study focused on the consumption of two lichen species: Usnea taylorii and Pseudocyphellaria crocata. A controlled feeding experiment was designed to understand how the snail copes with the unpalatable and/or toxic compounds produced by these lichen species. The occurrence of two snail ecophenotypes, represented by a mineral shell and an organic shell, led to address the question of a metabolic response specific to the phenotype. Snails were fed for two months with one of these lichens and the chemical profiles of biological samples of N. hookeri (i.e., crop, digestive gland, intestine, and feces) were established by HPLC-DAD-MS and compared to that of the lichens. N. hookeri appears as a generalist lichen feeder able to consume toxic metabolite-containing lichens, independently of the ecophenotype. The digestive gland did not sequester lichen metabolites. The snail metabolism might be based on four non-exclusive processes according to the concerned metabolites (avoidance, passive transport, hydrolysis, and excretion). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Lichens: Chemistry, Ecological and Biological Activities)
Figures

Figure 1

Open AccessReview Xanthones of Lichen Source: A 2016 Update
Molecules 2016, 21(3), 294; doi:10.3390/molecules21030294
Received: 25 January 2016 / Revised: 21 February 2016 / Accepted: 23 February 2016 / Published: 2 March 2016
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1247 | PDF Full-text (4628 KB) | HTML Full-text | XML Full-text
Abstract
An update of xanthones encountered in lichens is proposed as more than 20 new xanthones have been described since the publication of the compendium of lichen metabolites by Huneck and Yoshimura in 1996. The last decades witnessed major advances regarding the elucidation of
[...] Read more.
An update of xanthones encountered in lichens is proposed as more than 20 new xanthones have been described since the publication of the compendium of lichen metabolites by Huneck and Yoshimura in 1996. The last decades witnessed major advances regarding the elucidation of biosynthetic schemes leading to these fascinating compounds, accounting for the unique substitution patterns of a very vast majority of lichen xanthones. Besides a comprehensive analysis of the structures of xanthones described in lichens, their bioactivities and the emerging analytical strategies used to pinpoint them within lichens are presented here together with physico-chemical properties (including NMR data) as reported since 1996. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coumarins, Xanthones and Related Compounds)

Years

Subjects

Refine Subjects

Journals

Refine Journals

Article Types

Refine Types

Countries

Refine Countries
Back to Top