Soaking up the anti-cancer properties of a South Korean sea sponge
en-GBde-DEes-ESfr-FR

Soaking up the anti-cancer properties of a South Korean sea sponge

14/11/2025 Yale University

Yale chemists have synthesized a complex, potentially cancer-fighting molecule found in sea sponges discovered off the coast of South Korea.

The work, described in the journal Science, sets the stage for identifying the active biological mechanism of gukulenin A, an intricate, much-heralded molecule — first isolated from the marine sponge Phorbas gukhulensis in 2010 — that may have applications in chemotherapy.

“This molecule is highly complex, and the synthetic version is the most complex structure my lab has created to date,” said Seth Herzon, the Milton Harris ’29 Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry in Yale’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences and senior author of the new study.

Herzon is a member of the Yale Cancer Center and holds joint appointments in the departments of pharmacology and therapeutic radiology at Yale School of Medicine.

Several gukulenins have demonstrated anticancer properties. The potential effectiveness of Gukulenin A was highlighted in a 2019 animal model of ovarian cancer. Yet over the past 14 years, no research group has been able to synthesize gukulenin A in the lab.

The molecule’s structure is highly difficult to recreate in the laboratory, Herzon said. It is filled with challenges for a researcher to overcome: two aromatic “troplone” rings (reactive, seven-membered rings with single and double bonds that alternate), nine stereogenic centers (a carbon atoms with four different substituents bonded to it), and several unstable and reactive functional groups that could stop a synthesis instantly.

To overcome these challenges, Herzon’s group devised a synthetic route to create gukulenin A in 24 steps. Along the way, the team had to develop three new methods for the synthesis of tropolones and design a two-carbon “linchpin” reagent (a molecule with two reactive sites) to unite the two tropolone rings.

“These methods not only kept our synthesis short, but also made it modular,” said lead researcher Vaani Gupta, a fourth-year student in Yale’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and a member of Herzon’s lab. “We were able to leverage this modularity to access several derivatives of gukulenin A.”

The researchers synthesized 15 gukulenin derivatives and evaluated their anti-cancer properties. Each derivative was designed to examine the relationship between a specific aspect of the molecule’s structure and anticancer activity.

Using this method, the team determined that certain residues in gukulenin A are necessary to achieve potent anti-cancer effects, while other substructures are dispensable. This information helped the researchers design a simpler structure that retained the molecule’s therapeutic potency.

“This work will allow us to identify the biological mechanism underlying the anticancer activity of gukulenin A and evaluate simplified synthetic analogs in preclinical studies to assess their potential as novel chemotherapies,” Herzon said.

Gupta and Zechun Wang, Ph.D. students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, are lead authors of the study. Current and former Yale co-authors are Joshua Combs, Timothy Wright, Lei Chen, Boxu Lin, Ryan Holmes, Bo Qin, Joonseok Oh, and Jason Crawford.
Funding for the research came from the National Institutes of Health.
14/11/2025 Yale University
Regions: North America, United States, Asia, South Korea, Europe, United Kingdom
Keywords: Science, Earth Sciences, Health, Medical

Disclaimer: AlphaGalileo is not responsible for the accuracy of content posted to AlphaGalileo by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the AlphaGalileo system.

Témoignages

We have used AlphaGalileo since its foundation but frankly we need it more than ever now to ensure our research news is heard across Europe, Asia and North America. As one of the UK’s leading research universities we want to continue to work with other outstanding researchers in Europe. AlphaGalileo helps us to continue to bring our research story to them and the rest of the world.
Peter Dunn, Director of Press and Media Relations at the University of Warwick
AlphaGalileo has helped us more than double our reach at SciDev.Net. The service has enabled our journalists around the world to reach the mainstream media with articles about the impact of science on people in low- and middle-income countries, leading to big increases in the number of SciDev.Net articles that have been republished.
Ben Deighton, SciDevNet
AlphaGalileo is a great source of global research news. I use it regularly.
Robert Lee Hotz, LA Times

Nous travaillons en étroite collaboration avec...


  • e
  • The Research Council of Norway
  • SciDevNet
  • Swiss National Science Foundation
  • iesResearch
Copyright 2025 by DNN Corp Terms Of Use Privacy Statement