UNUSUAL STEROL COMPOSITION AND CLASSIFICATION OF THREE MARINE SPONGE FAMILIES
Resumen
Five sponge species belonging to the family Suberitidae are shown to contain 80-95 % of 5?-stanols, mainly cholestanol (51 - 74 %), confirming the data already known for this family. Three Ciocalypta species (Halichondriidae) contained four quite unusual 24-isopropyl and 24isopropenyl ?5 sterols, accounting for 70 - 80 % of the total sterol mixture, mainly 24isopropylcholesterol (41 - 59 %). Fourteen A-nor-sterols were found as major sterols (66 - 72 % of the total sterol fraction) in Stylissa carteri (family Dictyonellidae). These results confirm that sterols can provide useful chemotaxonomic data for the classification of these sponge families.Descargas
Publicado
2018-05-22
Número
Sección
Articoli
Licencia
Authors who publish in this journal accept the following conditions:
- Authors mantain the rights to their work and give the journal the right of first publication, simoultaneously licensed under a Creative Common International License 4.0: Attribution - Noncommercial - Share-Alike, which allows to share the work declaring the intellectual paternity and the first publication in this journal
- Authors can subscribe othe non exclusive license agreements to distribute the published version of their work (eg deposit it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monograph) only if they declare that the first publication was in this journal.
- The authors can spread their work online (eg in institutional repositories or on their own website) at the end of submission process (post print version).