Recebido em 13/7/06; aceito em 10/4/07; publicado na web em 5/10/07Antimycobacterial and cytotoxicity activity of synthetic and natural compounds. Secondary metabolites from Curvularia eragrostidis and Drechslera dematioidea, Clusia sp. floral resin, alkaloids from Pilocarpus alatus, salicylideneanilines, piperidine amides, the amine 1-cinnamylpiperazine and chiral pyridinium salts were assayed on Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. N-(salicylidene)-2-hydroxyaniline was the most effective compound with a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 8 µmol/L. Dihydrocurvularin was moderately effective with a MIC of 40 μmol/L. Clusia sp. floral resin and a gallocatechin-epigallocatechin mixture showed MIC of 0.02 g/L and 38 µmol/L, respectively. The cytotoxicity was evaluated for N-(salicylidene)-2-hydroxyaniline, curvularin, dihydrocurvularin and Clusia sp. floral resin, and the selectivity indexes were > 125, 0.47, 0.75 and 5, respectively.
Withanolides constitute a valuable class of bioactive natural products because some members of the class are known to exhibit cytotoxic activity and also induce a cytoprotective heat-shock response. In order to understand the relationship between their structures and these dual bioactivities of the withanolide scaffold, we obtained 25 analogues of withaferin A (WA) and withanolide D (WD) including 17 new compounds by semisynthesis involving chemical and microbial transformations. Hitherto unknown 16β-hydroxy analogues of WA and WD were prepared by their reaction with triphenylphosphine/iodine, providing unexpected 5β-hydroxy-6α-iodo analogues (iodohydrins) followed by microbial biotransformation with Cunninghamella echinulata and base-catalyzed cyclization of the resulting 16β-hydroxy iodohydrins. Evaluation of these 25 withanolide analogues for their cytotoxicity and heat-shock-inducing activity (HSA) confirmed the known structure-activity relationships for WA-type withanolides and revealed that WD analogues were less active in both assays compared to their corresponding WA analogues. The 5β,6β-epoxide moiety of withanolides contributed to their cytotoxicity but not HSA. Introduction of a 16β-OAc group to 4,27-di- O-acetyl-WA enhanced cytotoxicity and decreased HSA, whereas introduction of the same group to 4- O-acetyl-WD decreased both activities.
An exocellular proteinase activity has been characterized in Paracoccidioides brasiliensis culture filtrates. Chromatographic analysis showed that the activity was eluted from an anion-exchange Resource Q column at 0.08-0.1 M NaCl, and by gel filtration near ovalbumin elution, in a single peak. Purification of the proteinase, however, was hampered by the low protein yield, in contrast to the high peptidase activity. Numerous chromogenic peptidyl p-nitroanilide derivatives and internally quenched fluorescent peptides, flanked by Abz (O-aminobenzoyl) and EDDnp (ethylenediaminedinitrophenyl), were tested as substrates. Cleavage was observed with Abz-MKRLTL-EDDnp, Abz-FRLVR-EDDnp, and Abz-PLGLLGR-EDDnp at Leu-Thr, Leu-Val and Leu-Leu/Leu-Gly bonds respectively as determined by isolation of the corresponding fragments by HPLC. Leucine at P1 seemed to be restrictive for the activity of the exocellular enzyme, but threonine (P'1) and leucine (P'2) in Abz-MKRLTL-EDDnp apparently were not essential. Also, a pair of alanines could substitute for lysine (P3) and arginine (P2) in this substrate, with a decrease in the Km values. The exocellular peptidase activity of P. brasiliensis had an optimum pH of > 9.0 and was irreversibly inhibited by PMSF, mercuric acetate and p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. Inhibition of the mercuriate compounds could be partially reversed by Cys/EDTA. E-64 [trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido-(4-guanido)butene] was a weak and reversible inhibitor, whereas EDTA and pepstatin were not inhibitory. These results suggest that P. brasiliensis exocellular enzyme belongs to the subfamily of SH-containing serine proteinases.
Recebido em 5/1/10; aceito em 11/6/10; publicado na web em 22/9/10 FLAVONOIDS AND OTHER SUBSTANCES FROM Lippia sidoides AND THEIR ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITIES. The chemical investigation of the ethanol extracts of stems, roots and leaves of Lippia sidoides led to the isolation of: steroid b-sitosterol, naphthoquinone tecomaquinone, monoterpene carvacrol, flavonoid 4',5,7-trihydroxyflavanone (naringenin), 3',4',5,7-tetrahydroxyflavanone and 4',5,7-trihydroxy-6-methoxyflavone flavonoids mixture, and 3,4,4',6'-tetrahydroxydihydrochalcone-2'-O-b-D-glucopyranoside and 4,4',6'-trihydroxydihydrochalcone-2'-O-b-D-glucopyranoside dihydrochalcones mixture. Their structures were characterized on the basis of spectral data, mainly 1 H and 13 C NMR (1D and 2D) and mass spectra. The ethanol extract and isolated compounds were evaluated for their antioxidative properties using the method of inhibition of free radical DPPH (2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl).Keywords: Lippia; Verbenaceae; chalcones. INTRODUÇÃOO gênero Lippia (Verbenaceae), possui cerca de 200 espécies de ervas, arbustos e pequenas árvores, que são naturais da América do Sul e Central.1 Espécies deste gênero destacam-se pelo aroma forte e agradável e seu aspecto atrativo no período de floração. A espécie Lippia sidoides é conhecida popularmente como alecrim-pimenta e é encontrada no sertão nordestino, principalmente nos estados do Ceará e Rio Grande do Norte. Estudos anteriores realizados com esta espécie relataram a presença de flavonoides, quinonas, triterpenos, lignanas, esteroides livres e glicosilados e ácidos orgânicos. 2 A exemplo de outras plantas do gênero, a referida espécie tem uso comprovado na medicina popular, principalmente como antisséptico e antimicrobiano.2 As folhas e flores constituem a parte medicinal desta planta. Seu óleo essencial possui elevado valor comercial, tendo o timol e o carvacrol como constituintes principais, os quais apresentam propriedades antisséptica, antimicrobiana, antifúngica, antioxidante, anti-inflamatória e larvicida.3 O chá ou a tintura diluída desta espécie é também usado no tratamento de problemas de pele.
In line with a recent study of the pharmacological potential of bioinspired synthetic acetylenic lipids, after identification of the terminal dialkynylcarbinol (DAC) and butadiynyl alkynylcarbinol (BAC) moieties as functional antitumor pharmacophoric units, this work specifically addresses the issue of carbon backbone length. A systematic variation of the aliphatic chain length was thus carried out in both the DAC and BAC series. The critical impact of the length of the lipidic skeleton was first confirmed in the racemic series, with the highest cytotoxic activity observed for C to C backbones. Enantiomerically enriched samples were prepared by asymmetric synthesis of the optimal C DAC and C BAC derivatives. Samples with upgraded enantiomeric purity were alternatively produced by enzymatic kinetic resolution. Eutomers possessing the S configuration displayed cytotoxicity IC values as low as 15 nm against HCT116 cancer cells, the highest level of activity reached to date in this series.
The cytotoxic activities of extracts (50 μg/ml) from 48 fungal strains, recovered from sediments of Pecém's offshore port terminal (Northeast coast of Brazil), against HCT-116 colon cancer cell lines were investigated. The most promising extract was obtained from strain BRF082, identified as Dichotomomyces cejpii by phylogenetic analyses of partial RPB2 gene sequence. Thus, it was selected for bioassay-guided isolation of the cytotoxic compounds. Large-scale fermentation of BRF082 in potato dextrose broth, followed by chromatographic purification of the bioactive fractions from the liquid medium, yielded gliotoxin (4) and its derivatives acetylgliotoxin G (3), bis(dethio)bis(methylsulfanyl)gliotoxin (1), acetylgliotoxin (5), 6-acetylbis(dethio)bis(methylsulfanyl)gliotoxin (2), besides the quinazolinone alkaloid fiscalin B. All isolated compounds were tested for their cytotoxicities against the tumor cell lines HCT-116, revealing 4 and 3 as the most cytotoxic ones (IC50 0.41 and 1.06 μg/ml, resp.).
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