• Agelas is a genus of sea sponge in the class Demospongiae. (wikipedia.org)
  • The paper, Sharks checking in to the sponge hotel: first internal use of sponges of the genus Agelas and family Irciniidae by banded sand catsharks Atelomycterus fasciatus, was published in the Journal of Fish Biology by authors from CSIRO, Te Papa Tongarewa and Western Australian Museum . (www.csiro.au)
  • Antimicrobial diterpene alkaloids from an Agelas Citrina sponge collected in the Yucatán Peninsula. (mpg.de)
  • Reef sponges of the genus Agelas (Porifera: Demospongiae) from the Greater Caribbean" (PDF). (wikipedia.org)
  • Spesies ko juo marupokan bagian dari genus Agelas dan famili Agelasidae . (wikipedia.org)
  • Agelas nemoechinata adolah spesies spons nan tagolong dalam kelas Demospongiae . (wikipedia.org)
  • Agesasines A and B, Bromopyrrole Alkaloids from Marine Sponges Agelas spp. (tokushima-u.ac.jp)
  • The lipid assemblages of the "living fossil" stromatoporoid Astrosclera willeyana (Great Barrier Reet) and the demosponge Agelas aroides (Mediterranean Sea) were investigated. (geo-leo.de)
  • α-galactosylceramide, a glycolipid with an α-anomeric-linked galactose moiety, was originally derived from the marine sponge Agelas mauritianus and was shown to possess potent antitumor properties in mice, which required the presence of both CD1d, as the antigen-presenting molecule, and NKT cells. (medscape.com)
  • Novel α-galactosylceramides (α-GalCer), agelasphins were isolated from the marine sponge Agelas mauritianus by assessing in vivo anti-tumor activities. (or.jp)
  • 4. Agelastatin E, agelastatin F, and benzosceptrin C from the marine sponge Agelas dendromorpha. (nih.gov)
  • Agelastatin A (AglA) is a marine natural product isolated from an axinellid sponge Agelas dendromorpha. (baylor.edu)
  • For this work, the team analyzed the Agelas dispar species, native to Fernando de Noronha, an archipelago off the coast of the Northeast. (gutnews.com)
  • Niphates olemda , and Agelas nakamurai presented notable cholinesterase inhibitory activities. (mabjournal.com)