The first isolated ICZ, dubbed
staurosporine (STA) was in 1977 from a culture of
Streptomyces staurosporeus found in a soil sample from Iwate Prefecture, Japan. The proper
stereochemistry was not proven until 1994. Over the course of the next decade, further study of the compound showed some fungal inhibition, hypotensive activity, and most importantly, a broad protein kinase inhibitor. The next landmark discovery came with the detection of
rebeccamycin (REB) in a sample of
Lechevalieria aerocolonigenes, again in soil, but this time in a sample from
Panama. REB was found to act against
leukemia and
melanoma in mice, and also against human
adenocarcinoma cells. Since 1977, ICZs have been discovered all over the world in actinomycetes, bacteria commonly found in soil. Numerous forms have tested positive for anti-tumor activity, such as 7-hydroxy-STA and 7-oxo-STA2. Some of the strains from which ICZ compounds have been found are Actinomadura melliaura in Bristol Cove,
San Diego County, California,
Streptomyces hygroscopicus in
Numazu Prefecture, Japan, Micromonospora sp. L-31-CLO-002 from
Fuerteventura Island, Canary Islands, Spain, and Actinomadura sp. Strain 007 from Jiaozhou Bay,
Shandong, China. The wide distribution of the various strains that produce these compounds is not surprising due to the number of properties these compounds can take on with limited functionalization on the species's part. In addition to
actinomycetes, ICZs have been found in
slime molds (myxomycetes), blue-green algae (
cyanobacteria, and marine invertebrates. Like the ones derived from actinomycetes, the ones found in myxomycetes cover an expansive range of derivatives and functionalizations. Two of the more important ones to date have been Arcyriacyanin A, which was found to inhibit a panel of human cancer cells by effecting PKC and protein tyrosine kinase, and lycogalic acid dimethyl ester A (found in Tokushima, Japan from
Lycogala epidendrum), which showed strong antiviral activity. A few of the strains of
myxomycetes studied are
Arcyria ferruginea and Arcyria cinerea, both from
Kochi Prefecture, Japan. The final major group in which ICZs are found are various marine invertebrates. Three species of
tunicate, one
mollusk, one
flatworm, and one
sponge have been discovered in places ranging from Micronesia to New Zealand. Testing for further invertebrate production is ongoing by both genetic and phylum-based studies. ==Biological activity==