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Dive into the research topics where Antonia Q. L. de Souza is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonia Q. L. de Souza.


Química Nova | 2007

Diversidade de policetídeos produzidos por espécies de Penicillium isoladas de Melia azedarach e murraya paniculata

Renata Pastre; Andrey M. do Rosário Marinho; Edson Rodrigues-Filho; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; José Odair Pereira

Eight compounds comprising four groups of polyketides, the xanthone fusarindin, the mixed peptide alkaloid-polyketide GKK1032, the anthraquinones crisophanol, citreoveridin and janthinone, and the azaphylones dihydrocitrinone, citrinin and citrinin H-1, were identified in Penicillium species isolated as endophytic fungi from Melia azedarach and Murraya paniculata. The antibacterial activity of the azaphylones was tested and showed that citrinin H-1 is more active than citrinin.


Revista Brasileira De Farmacognosia-brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy | 2012

Triterpenes and flavonoids from the roots of Mauritia flexuosa

Hector Henrique Ferreira Koolen; Elzalina R. Soares; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Edson Rodrigues Filho; Afonso D. L. de Souza

Mauritia flexuosa L. f., Arecaceae, is an endemic species of South America. This species was studied with the intent to isolate the constituents of its roots. After the fractionation of the n-hexane and methanolic extracts from the roots of M. flexuosa, six triterpenes were obtained: friedelin, taraxerone, lupenyl acetate, lupenone, betulin and betulinic acid, along with three flavonoids: rutin, quercitrin and quercetin. All the compounds were identified by analysis of NMR and MS data and comparison with the literature. All those compounds are been reported for the first time in Mauritia, and the chemosystematic significance of the flavonoids isolated in this genus is discussed.


Natural Product Research | 2012

An antimicrobial diketopiperazine alkaloid and co-metabolites from an endophytic strain of Gliocladium isolated from Strychnos cf. toxifera

Hector Henrique Ferreira Koolen; Elzalina R. Soares; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Lívia Soman de Medeiros; Edson Rodrigues Filho; Richardson A. de Almeida; Ismael Alexandre Ribeiro; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Morais; Patrícia Marçal da Costa; Afonso D. L. de Souza

From an endophytic strain of Gliocladium sp. isolated from the Amazonian plant Strychnos cf. toxifera, we obtained the diketopiperazine alkaloid cyclo-(glycyl-L-tyrosyl)-4,4-dimethylallyl ether (1), the steroids ergosterol (2), ergosterol peroxide (3), cerevisterol (4) and the citric acid (5). The AcOEt extract of the fermented broth by Gliocladium sp. showed potent activity against the cancer cell lines MDA-MB435 (human breast cancer cells), HCT-8 (human colorectal cancer cells) and SF-295 (human glioblastoma cancer cells). Compound 1 exhibited a strong antimicrobial activity against Micrococcus luteus at a concentration of 43.4 µM.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2014

Endophytic fungi from Myrcia guianensis at the Brazilian Amazon: distribution and bioactivity

Elissandro Fonseca dos Banhos; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Juliano Camurça de Andrade; Afonso D. L. de Souza; Hector H.F. Koolen; Patrícia Melchionna Albuquerque

Beneficial interactions between plants and microorganisms have been investigated under different ecological, physiological, biochemical, and genetic aspects. However, the systematic exploration of biomolecules with potential for biotechnological products from this interaction still is relatively scarce. Therefore, this study aimed the evaluation of the diversity and antimicrobial activity of the endophytic fungi obtained from roots, stems and leafs of Myrcia guianensis (Myrtaceae) from the Brazilian Amazon. 156 endophytic fungi were isolated and above 80% were identified by morphological examination as belonging to the genera Pestalotiopsis, Phomopsis, Aspergillus, Xylaria, Nectria, Penicillium and Fusarium. Fermented broth of those fungi were assayed for antimicrobial activity and four inhibited the growth of Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecalis, Candida albicans and Penicillium avellaneum. As the strain named MgRe2.2.3B (Nectria haematococca) had shown the most promising results against those pathogenic strains, its fermented broth was fractioned and only its two low polar fractions demonstrated to be active. Both fractions exhibited a minimum bactericidal concentration of 50 μg.mL−1 against S. aureus and a minimum fungicidal concentration of 100 μg.mL−1 against P. avellaneum. These results demonstrate the diversity of fungal genera in M. guianensis and the potential of these endophytic fungi for the production of new antibiotics.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C | 2003

Three highly oxygenated caryophyllene sesquiterpenes from Pestalotiopsis sp., a fungus isolated from bark of Pinus taeda.

Rodrigo F. Magnan; Edson Rodrigues-Fo; Cristina Daolio; A. Gilberto Ferreira; Antonia Q. L. de Souza

Abstract A Pestalotiopis sp. was isolated from the trunk bark of Pinus taeda. The fungus was cultivated in liquid medium and produced three highly oxygenated caryophyllene sequiterpene derivatives, named pestalotiopsolide A, taedolidol and 6-epitaedolidol, respectively. The sesquiterpenes were isolated by silica gel based chromatographic procedures and their structures were elucidated by NMR spectroscopic data.


Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2013

Talaroxanthone, a novel xanthone dimer from the endophytic fungus Talaromyces sp. associated with Duguetia stelechantha (Diels) R. E. Fries

Hector Henrique Ferreira Koolen; Laís S. Menezes; Mayane P. Souza; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Fabiana Greyce Oliveira Almeida; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Angelita Nepel; Andersson Barison; Flávio Henrique da Silva; Danilo Elton Evangelista; Afonso D. L. de Souza

DgCr22.1b, an endophytic isolate of Talaromyces sp., was collected in the Amazonian Rainforest from the medicinal plant Duguetia stelechantha. From the fractionation of the methanolic mycelial extract, a new xanthone dimer talaroxanthone was isolated. The structure of this new compound was elucidated based on spectroscopic analyses including 2D nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments.


Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education | 2005

A complete approach for recombinant protein expression training: From gene cloning to assessment of protein functionality*

M. Teresa Marques Novo; Andrea Soares-Costa; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Ana Carolina M. Figueira; Gustavo C. Molina; Carlos A. Palacios; Claudia R. Kull; Izabel F. Monteiro; Paulo H. Baldan‐Pineda; Flávio Henrique-Silva

A practical course was given to undergraduate biology students enrolled in the elective course “Introduction to Genetic Engineering” at the Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar), São Paulo, Brazil. The goal of the course was to teach current molecular biology tools applied to a real research situation that could be reported by the students themselves. The purpose was to produce a plant recombinant protein and demonstrate a heretofore unreported biological activity. Cystatins, natural inhibitors of cysteine proteases, were proposed for these studies. Initially, the students searched for plant cystatin cDNA sequences in the NCBI databases and selected the Oryzacystatin I gene (ocI) from rice, Oriza sativa, as the target gene for this study. Total RNA was extracted from rice‐germinating seeds and primers containing restriction sites for NdeI and EcoRI were designed based on the ocI cDNA sequence and then used to amplify the open reading frame (ORF). RT‐PCR amplification provided a band of the expected size for ocI ORF (309 bp). The PCR product was cut with NdeI and EcoRI restriction enzymes and cloned directly in the pET28a expression vector digested with the same enzymes. A pET28‐ocI recombinant clone was selected, checked by sequencing, and used to transform Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) expression strain. After induction of the bacteria with isopropylthiogalactoside and cellular disruption, the His‐tagged OCI protein, present mainly in the soluble fraction, was purified by affinity chromatography in a nickel column. The purified protein was successfully used to inhibit fungal growth (Trichoderma reesei). The results were discussed extensively and the students contributed to the writing of this article, of which they are co‐authors.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2013

Larvicidal effects of endophytic and basidiomycete fungus extracts on Aedes and Anopheles larvae (Diptera, Culicidae)

Augusto Bucker; Nádia Falcão Bücker; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Auricelia Matos da Gama; Edson Rodrigues-Filho; Fabio Medeiros da Costa; Cecilia Veronica Nunez; Ademir Castro e Silva; Wanderli Pedro Tadei

INTRODUCTION In vitro bioassays were performed to access the larvicidal activity of crude extracts from the endophytic fungus Pestalotiopsis virgulata (Melanconiales, Amphisphaeriaceae) and the saprophytic fungus Pycnoporus sanguineus (Basidiomycetes, Polyporaceae) against the mosquitoes Aedes aegypti and Anopheles nuneztovari. METHODS The extracts were tested at concentrations of 100, 200, 300, 400 and 500ppm. Ethyl acetate mycelia (EAM) extracts and liquid culture media (LCM) from Pe. virgulata and Py. sanguineus were tested against third instar larvae of Ae. aegypti and An. nuneztovari. RESULTS The larvicidal activity of the EAM extracts from Pe. virgulata against Ae. aegypti had an LC50=101.8ppm, and the extract from the basidiomycete fungus Py. sanguineus had an LC50=156.8ppm against the Ae. aegypti larvae. The Pe. virgulata extract had an LC50=16.3ppm against the An. nuneztovari larvae, and the Py. sanguineus extract had an LC50=87.2ppm against these larvae. CONCLUSIONS These results highlight the larvicidal effect of EAM extracts from the endophyte Pe. virgulata against the two larval mosquitoes tested. Thus, Pe. virgulata and Py. sanguineus have the potential for the production of bioactive substances against larvae of these two tropical disease vectors, with An. nuneztovari being more susceptible to these extracts.


Natural Product Research | 2013

Mauritic acid: a new dammarane triterpene from the roots of Mauritia flexuosa L.f. (Arecaceae)

Hector H.F. Koolen; Elzalina R. Soares; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Aimêe A. de Oliveira; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Lívia Soman de Medeiros; Edson Rodrigues-Filho; Bruno C. Cavalcanti; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Moraes; Marcos José Salvador; Afonso D. L. de Souza

A new dammarane triterpene named mauritic acid (1) was isolated from the roots of Mauritia flexuosa L.f. The complete structural assignment of this new compound was elucidated from spectroscopic methods. Moreover, this compound was evaluated for its cytotoxicity against human cancer cell lines (OVCAR-8, PCM3, NCIH358M and different leukaemia cell strains). The mauritic acid presented significant cytotoxicity against OVCAR-8, PCM3 and NCIH358M cell lines with IC50 3.02, 2.39 and 6.19 μM, respectively. The triterpenes 1 and 2 were also tested for their antimicrobial activity against 15 strains of microorganisms, including fungi and bacteria, with the best minimal inhibitory concentration values ranging from 50.8 to 203.5 μM.


Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2008

A new guaiane mannoside from a Eutypa-like fungus isolated from Murraya paniculata in Brazil

Afonso D. L. Souza; Edson Rodrigues-Filho; Antonia Q. L. de Souza; Flávio Henrique-Silva; José Odair Pereira

A Eutypa-like fungus was isolated from the stems of Murraya paniculata. The fungus was cultivated in liquid medium and produced the new guaiane-type sesquiterpenoid (1R,4S,5S,7R,10R)-10-hydroxyguaianol 10-O-β-mannopyranoside and the 3-hydroxy-5-phenylmethyl-(3S,5R)-tetrahydrofuran-2-one, a diastereomer of harzialactone A, obtained for the first time from a natural source. The structures of these metabolites were elucidated based on analysis of their spectroscopic data.

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Afonso D. L. de Souza

Federal University of Amazonas

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Edson Rodrigues-Filho

Federal University of São Carlos

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Felipe M.A. da Silva

Federal University of Amazonas

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José Odair Pereira

Federal University of Amazonas

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Edson Rodrigues-Fo

Federal University of São Carlos

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Elzalina R. Soares

Federal University of Amazonas

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Hector H.F. Koolen

State University of Campinas

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Lívia Soman de Medeiros

Federal University of São Carlos

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Cláudia Pessoa

Federal University of Ceará

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