Brown Algae from San Andres Island, Southwest Caribbean: A Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy–Metabolomic Study
Felipe de la Roche, Sara P. Abril, Lady J. Sepulveda, Anderson Piza, Leonardo Castellanos, Natalia Rincón, Mónica Puyana, Freddy A. Ramos

TL;DR
This study uses NMR spectroscopy to analyze the metabolites of brown algae from San Andrés Island, revealing species-specific metabolic patterns and environmental influences.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the metabolic diversity of brown algae in the SW Caribbean using NMR-based metabolomics.
Findings
S. zonale and C. crispatus were distinguished by their unique metabolite profiles, including meroditerpenes and diterpenes.
Metabolic differences in S. zonale were linked to growth substrates, such as rocky bottoms versus dead coral.
Temporal lipid variations were observed in P. gymnospora, and juvenile Dictyota spp. showed simpler metabolic signatures.
Abstract
Background: Brown algae from the order Dictyotales are known to produce specialized metabolites with a wide array of biological activities. Studying these compounds is important for understanding their ecological roles, exploring biomedical potential and developing biotechnological applications. Methods: To evaluate the metabolic diversity of brown algae from the shallow habitats of the northern region of San Andrés Island (Colombia, SW Caribbean), a metabolic profiling approach was employed, based on 1H-NMR spectra taken from organic extracts. Four sampling expeditions were conducted to collect the most abundant species, taking into account the taxonomic identity, growth substrate and collection date. Results: Five species were found and identified as Canistrocarpus crispatus, Stypopodium zonale, Dictyopteris delicatula, Padina gymnospora and Dictyota spp. Multivariate analyses applied…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Marine Sponges and Natural Products · Seaweed-derived Bioactive Compounds
