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Featured researches published by Alessia Catalano.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

2-Aminobenzothiazole derivatives: Search for new antifungal agents

Alessia Catalano; Alessia Carocci; Ivana Defrenza; Marilena Muraglia; Antonio Carrieri; Françoise Van Bambeke; Antonio Rosato; Filomena Corbo; Carlo Franchini

A new series of 6-substituted 2-aminobenzothiazole derivatives were synthesized and screened in vitro as potential antimicrobials. Almost all the compounds showed antifungal activity. In particular, compounds 1n,o, designed on the basis of molecular modeling studies, were the best of the series, showing MIC values of 4-8 μg/mL against Candida albicans, Candida parapsilosis and Candida tropicalis. None of the two compounds did show any cytotoxicity effect on human THP-1 cells.


Tetrahedron-asymmetry | 2000

Stereospecific synthesis of mexiletine and related compounds: Mitsunobu versus Williamson reaction

Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Filomena Corbo; Andrea Duranti; Rosa Amoroso; Carlo Franchini; Giovanni Lentini; Vincenzo Tortorella

Abstract Mexiletine [1-(2,6-dimethylphenoxy)-2-propanamine], a chiral, orally effective antiarrhythmic agent, and several analogues substituted on either the stereogenic centre or the xylyloxy moiety, were prepared in both, highly enriched, optically active forms. According to the ‘chiral pool’ approach, the appropriate amino alcohols, protected as the corresponding phthalimide derivatives, were condensed with the desired phenols under either Mitsunobu (method A) or Williamson (method B) conditions. Generally, method A provided the most efficient route, both in terms of yields and number of steps necessary. Only when an isopropyl group was present on the stereogenic centre, i.e. when 2-amino-3-methylbutanol was used as the starting alcohol, method B proved to be the only available route, method A giving no product other than the starting phthalimide derivative. Regardless of the method used, enantiomeric excesses ranged from 91 to 99%. Given the availability of both variously substituted phenols and optically active amino alcohols, the two methods described herein, taken together, may serve as a versatile approach, useful to meet the needs of new chiral, optically active mexiletine analogues, possibly endowed with higher potency in exerting a use-dependent block on sodium channels and/or more resistant to biotransformations.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Constrained analogues of tocainide as potent skeletal muscle sodium channel blockers towards the development of antimyotonic agents

Alessia Catalano; Alessia Carocci; Filomena Corbo; Carlo Franchini; Marilena Muraglia; Antonio Scilimati; Michela De Bellis; Annamaria De Luca; Diana Conte Camerino; Maria Stefania Sinicropi; Vincenzo Tortorella

1-Benzyl-N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)piperidine-3-carboxamide and 4-benzyl-N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)piperazine-2-carboxamide, two conformationally restricted analogues of tocainide, were designed and synthesized as voltage-gated skeletal muscle sodium channel blockers. They showed, with respect to tocainide, a marked increase in both potency and use-dependent block.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

New N-(phenoxydecyl)phthalimide derivatives displaying potent inhibition activity towards α-glucosidase

Rossana Pascale; Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Giovanni Lentini; Anna Spagnoletta; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Francesco De Santis; Annalisa De Palma; Vito Scalera; Carlo Franchini

Several members of a new family of non-sugar-type alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, bearing a phthalimide moiety connected to a variously substituted phenoxy ring by an alkyl chain, were synthesized and their activities were investigated. The efficacy of the inhibition activity appeared to be governed by the chain length of the substrate. Substrates possessing 10 carbons afforded the highest levels of activity, which were one to two orders of magnitude more potent than the known inhibitor 1-deoxynojirimycin (dNM). Furthermore, structure-activity relationship studies indicated a critical role of electron-withdrawing substituents at the phenoxy group for the activity. Derivatives bearing a chlorine atom along with a strong electron-withdrawing group, such as a nitro group, were the most potent of the series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Design, synthesis, and pharmacological effects of structurally simple ligands for MT1 and MT2 melatonin receptors

Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Angelo Lovece; Giovanni Lentini; Andrea Duranti; Valeria Lucini; Marilou Pannacci; Francesco Scaglione; Carlo Franchini

A series of phenoxyalkyl and phenylthioalkyl amides were prepared as melatoninergic ligands. Modulation of affinity of the newly synthesized compound by applying SARs around the terminal amide moiety, the alkyl chain, and the methoxy group on the aromatic ring provides compounds with nanomolar affinity for both melatonin receptor subtypes. Affinity towards MT(1) and MT(2) receptors were modulated also exploiting chirality. The investigation of intrinsic activity revealed that all the tested compounds behave as full or partial agonists.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2017

Mercury Exposure and Heart Diseases

Giuseppe Genchi; Maria Stefania Sinicropi; Alessia Carocci; Graziantonio Lauria; Alessia Catalano

Environmental contamination has exposed humans to various metal agents, including mercury. It has been determined that mercury is not only harmful to the health of vulnerable populations such as pregnant women and children, but is also toxic to ordinary adults in various ways. For many years, mercury was used in a wide variety of human activities. Nowadays, the exposure to this metal from both natural and artificial sources is significantly increasing. Recent studies suggest that chronic exposure, even to low concentration levels of mercury, can cause cardiovascular, reproductive, and developmental toxicity, neurotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, immunotoxicity, and carcinogenicity. Possible biological effects of mercury, including the relationship between mercury toxicity and diseases of the cardiovascular system, such as hypertension, coronary heart disease, and myocardial infarction, are being studied. As heart rhythm and function are under autonomic nervous system control, it has been hypothesized that the neurotoxic effects of mercury might also impact cardiac autonomic function. Mercury exposure could have a long-lasting effect on cardiac parasympathetic activity and some evidence has shown that mercury exposure might affect heart rate variability, particularly early exposures in children. The mechanism by which mercury produces toxic effects on the cardiovascular system is not fully elucidated, but this mechanism is believed to involve an increase in oxidative stress. The exposure to mercury increases the production of free radicals, potentially because of the role of mercury in the Fenton reaction and a reduction in the activity of antioxidant enzymes, such as glutathione peroxidase. In this review we report an overview on the toxicity of mercury and focus our attention on the toxic effects on the cardiovascular system.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2012

Molecular Insights into the Local Anesthetic Receptor within Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels Using Hydroxylated Analogs of Mexiletine

Jean-François Desaphy; Antonella Dipalma; Teresa Costanza; Roberta Carbonara; Maria Maddalena Dinardo; Alessia Catalano; Alessia Carocci; Giovanni Lentini; Carlo Franchini; Diana Conte Camerino

We previously showed that the β-adrenoceptor modulators, clenbuterol and propranolol, directly blocked voltage-gated sodium channels, whereas salbutamol and nadolol did not (Desaphy et al., 2003), suggesting the presence of two hydroxyl groups on the aromatic moiety of the drugs as a molecular requisite for impeding sodium channel block. To verify such an hypothesis, we synthesized five new mexiletine analogs by adding one or two hydroxyl groups to the aryloxy moiety of the sodium channel blocker and tested these compounds on hNav1.4 channels expressed in HEK293 cells. Concentration–response relationships were constructed using 25-ms-long depolarizing pulses at −30 mV applied from an holding potential of −120 mV at 0.1 Hz (tonic block) and 10 Hz (use-dependent block) stimulation frequencies. The half-maximum inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were linearly correlated to drug lipophilicity: the less lipophilic the drug, minor was the block. The same compounds were also tested on F1586C and Y1593C hNav1.4 channel mutants, to gain further information on the molecular interactions of mexiletine with its receptor within the sodium channel pore. In particular, replacement of Phe1586 and Tyr1593 by non-aromatic cysteine residues may help in the understanding of the role of π–π or π–cation interactions in mexiletine binding. Alteration of tonic block suggests that the aryloxy moiety of mexiletine may interact either directly or indirectly with Phe1586 in the closed sodium channel to produce low-affinity binding block, and that this interaction depends on the electrostatic potential of the drug aromatic tail. Alteration of use-dependent block suggests that addition of hydroxyl groups to the aryloxy moiety may modify high-affinity binding of the drug amine terminal to Phe1586 through cooperativity between the two pharmacophores, this effect being mainly related to drug lipophilicity. Mutation of Tyr1593 further impaired such cooperativity. In conclusion, these results confirm our former hypothesis by showing that the presence of hydroxyl groups to the aryloxy moiety of mexiletine greatly reduced sodium channel block, and provide molecular insights into the intimate interaction of local anesthetics with their receptor.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Synthesis and Toxicopharmacological Evaluation of m-Hydroxymexiletine, the First Metabolite of Mexiletine More Potent Than the Parent Compound on Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels

Alessia Catalano; Jean-Franco̧is Desaphy; Giovanni Lentini; Alessia Carocci; Antonia Di Mola; Claudio Bruno; Roberta Carbonara; Annalisa De Palma; Roberta Budriesi; Carla Ghelardini; Maria Grazia Perrone; Nicola Antonio Colabufo; Diana Conte Camerino; Carlo Franchini

The first synthesis of m-hydroxymexiletine (MHM) has been accomplished. MHM displayed hNav1.5 sodium channel blocking activity, and tests indicate it to be ∼2-fold more potent than the parent mexiletine and to have more favorable toxicological properties than mexiletine. Thus, MHM and possible related prodrugs might be studied as agents for the treatment of arrhythmias, neuropathic pain, and myotonias in substitution of mexiletine (metabolite switch), which has turned out to be tainted with common toxicity.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2006

Evaluation of the pharmacological activity of the major mexiletine metabolites on skeletal muscle sodium currents

M. De Bellis; A. De Luca; Francesco Rana; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Alessia Catalano; Giovanni Lentini; Carlo Franchini; Vincenzo Tortorella; D. Conte Camerino

Mexiletine (Mex), an orally effective antiarrhythmic agent used to treat ventricular arrhythmias, has also been found to be effective for myotonia and neuropathic pain. It is extensively metabolized in humans but little information exists about the pharmacodynamic properties of its metabolites.


Clinical Pharmacology: Advances and Applications | 2014

Melatonergic drugs in development

Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Maria Stefania Sinicropi

Melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) is widely known as “the darkness hormone”. It is a major chronobiological regulator involved in circadian phasing and sleep-wake cycle in humans. Numerous other functions, including cyto/neuroprotection, immune modulation, and energy metabolism have been ascribed to melatonin. A variety of studies have revealed a role for melatonin and its receptors in different pathophysiological conditions. However, the suitability of melatonin as a drug is limited because of its short half-life, poor oral bioavailability, and ubiquitous action. Due to the therapeutic potential of melatonin in a wide variety of clinical conditions, the development of new agents able to interact selectively with melatonin receptors has become an area of great interest during the last decade. Therefore, the field of melatonergic receptor agonists comprises a great number of structurally different chemical entities, which range from indolic to nonindolic compounds. Melatonergic agonists are suitable for sleep disturbances, neuropsychiatric disorders related to circadian dysphasing, and metabolic diseases associated with insulin resistance. The results of preclinical studies on animal models show that melatonin receptor agonists can be considered promising agents for the treatment of central nervous system-related pathologies. An overview of recent advances in the field of investigational melatonergic drugs will be presented in this review.

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