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Main Authors: Wijerathna, Parakkrama, Chen, Xinqi, Qiu, Rongxiang, Wijethilake, P V J S, Chen, Yi, Madushanka, Nuwan, Perera, I J J U N, Cai, Jian, Jayasinghe, Lalith, Liu, Yonghong, Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P, Zhou, Xuefeng
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41599310/
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author Wijerathna, Parakkrama
Chen, Xinqi
Qiu, Rongxiang
Wijethilake, P V J S
Chen, Yi
Madushanka, Nuwan
Perera, I J J U N
Cai, Jian
Jayasinghe, Lalith
Liu, Yonghong
Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P
Zhou, Xuefeng
author_facet Wijerathna, Parakkrama
Chen, Xinqi
Qiu, Rongxiang
Wijethilake, P V J S
Chen, Yi
Madushanka, Nuwan
Perera, I J J U N
Cai, Jian
Jayasinghe, Lalith
Liu, Yonghong
Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P
Zhou, Xuefeng
Wijerathna, Parakkrama
Chen, Xinqi
Qiu, Rongxiang
Wijethilake, P V J S
Chen, Yi
Madushanka, Nuwan
Perera, I J J U N
Cai, Jian
Jayasinghe, Lalith
Liu, Yonghong
Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P
Zhou, Xuefeng
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Advances in Natural Products from Mangrove-Associated Fungi Along the Indian Ocean Coast. Wijerathna, Parakkrama Chen, Xinqi Qiu, Rongxiang Wijethilake, P V J S Chen, Yi Madushanka, Nuwan Perera, I J J U N Cai, Jian Jayasinghe, Lalith Liu, Yonghong Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P Zhou, Xuefeng Biological Products Fungi Indian Ocean Humans Wetlands Drug Discovery Antioxidants Mangrove ecosystems along the Indian Ocean coast show great biodiversity, adapting to harsh environmental conditions of high salinity and higher organic matter, and they are a host for a range of microbial communities with special features that produce unique secondary metabolites. Of this, mangrove-associated endophytic fungi, the second largest ecological group of marine fungi, show the greater potential, being a diverse pool for discovering novel bio-actives with pharmacological and biotechnological interest. This review summarizes the research findings on structural diversity and the associated pharmacological activities of secondary metabolites produced by mangrove-associated fungi along the Indian Ocean coast reported over the period of 2002-2025, based on the literature retrieved from Google Scholar. The total of secondary metabolites is presented mainly from classes of polyketides (), alkaloids (), and terpenoids (). Interestingly, compounds were identified, as first reported in those publications. These compounds have been reported to show diverse biological activities, and the most prominent activities are cytotoxic, antibacterial, antifungal, antioxidant, enzyme inhibitory, and anti-inflammatory effects. The structural novelty and pharmacological activities of these metabolites highlight the importance of mangrove fungi as promising sources for new drug discovery and advancing industrial biotechnology. Therefore, this review highlights the insight into the possible application of these chemical compounds in the future drug industry, as well as in biotechnology for advancing human well-being. Furthermore, though significant progress has been made in exploring the fungi community from mangroves of the African and Middle Eastern coasts, the Indian coast mangrove fungi are yet to be explored more for novel discoveries.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41599310
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Advances in Natural Products from Mangrove-Associated Fungi Along the Indian Ocean Coast.
Wijerathna, Parakkrama
Chen, Xinqi
Qiu, Rongxiang
Wijethilake, P V J S
Chen, Yi
Madushanka, Nuwan
Perera, I J J U N
Cai, Jian
Jayasinghe, Lalith
Liu, Yonghong
Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P
Zhou, Xuefeng
Biological Products
Fungi
Indian Ocean
Humans
Wetlands
Drug Discovery
Antioxidants
Advances in Natural Products from Mangrove-Associated Fungi Along the Indian Ocean Coast. Wijerathna, Parakkrama Chen, Xinqi Qiu, Rongxiang Wijethilake, P V J S Chen, Yi Madushanka, Nuwan Perera, I J J U N Cai, Jian Jayasinghe, Lalith Liu, Yonghong Bulugahapitiya, Vajira P Zhou, Xuefeng Biological Products Fungi Indian Ocean Humans Wetlands Drug Discovery Antioxidants Mangrove ecosystems along the Indian Ocean coast show great biodiversity, adapting to harsh environmental conditions of high salinity and higher organic matter, and they are a host for a range of microbial communities with special features that produce unique secondary metabolites. Of this, mangrove-associated endophytic fungi, the second largest ecological group of marine fungi, show the greater potential, being a diverse pool for discovering novel bio-actives with pharmacological and biotechnological interest. This review summarizes the research findings on structural diversity and the associated pharmacological activities of secondary metabolites produced by mangrove-associated fungi along the Indian Ocean coast reported over the period of 2002-2025, based on the literature retrieved from Google Scholar. The total of secondary metabolites is presented mainly from classes of polyketides (), alkaloids (), and terpenoids (). Interestingly, compounds were identified, as first reported in those publications. These compounds have been reported to show diverse biological activities, and the most prominent activities are cytotoxic, antibacterial, antifungal, antioxidant, enzyme inhibitory, and anti-inflammatory effects. The structural novelty and pharmacological activities of these metabolites highlight the importance of mangrove fungi as promising sources for new drug discovery and advancing industrial biotechnology. Therefore, this review highlights the insight into the possible application of these chemical compounds in the future drug industry, as well as in biotechnology for advancing human well-being. Furthermore, though significant progress has been made in exploring the fungi community from mangroves of the African and Middle Eastern coasts, the Indian coast mangrove fungi are yet to be explored more for novel discoveries.
title Advances in Natural Products from Mangrove-Associated Fungi Along the Indian Ocean Coast.
topic Biological Products
Fungi
Indian Ocean
Humans
Wetlands
Drug Discovery
Antioxidants
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41599310/