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Dive into the research topics where Carmen Sanmartín is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmen Sanmartín.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2012

Selenium Compounds, Apoptosis and Other Types of Cell Death: An Overview for Cancer Therapy

Carmen Sanmartín; Daniel Plano; Arun K. Sharma; Juan Antonio Palop

Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element involved in different physiological functions of the human body and plays a role in cancer prevention and treatment. Induction of apoptosis is considered an important cellular event that can account for the cancer preventive effects of Se. The mechanisms of Se-induced apoptosis are associated with the chemical forms of Se and their metabolism as well as the type of cancer studied. So, some selenocompounds, such as SeO2 involve the activation of caspase-3 while sodium selenite induces apoptosis in the absence of the activation of caspases. Modulation of mitochondrial functions has been reported to play a key role in the regulation of apoptosis and also to be one of the targets of Se compounds. Other mechanisms for apoptosis induction are the modulation of glutathione and reactive oxygen species levels, which may function as intracellular messengers to regulate signaling pathways, or the regulation of kinase, among others. Emerging evidence indicates the overlaps between the apoptosis and other types of cell death such as autophagy. In this review we report different processes of cell death induced by Se compounds in cancer treatment and prevention.


Mini-reviews in Medicinal Chemistry | 2008

Selenium Compounds and Apoptotic Modulation: A New Perspective in Cancer Therapy

Carmen Sanmartín; Daniel Plano; Juan Antonio Palop

Recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated that selenium may be an effective chemopreventive and anticancer agent with a broad spectrum against several human cancer cells (prostate, colon, bladder, lung, liver, ovarian, leukemia). A wide range of potential mechanisms have been proposed for the antitumorigenic effects of selenium and these include antiandrogen activity, growth inhibitory effects by regulation of p53 and antioxidant function, and through DNA damage. However, apoptosis is one of the most plausible mechanisms for the anticancer activity. The regulating mechanisms of apoptosis are extremely complex and for selenium compounds they mainly involve a mitochondrial pathway, protein kinases, tumor necrosis factor, activation of caspases and reactive oxygen species. The aim of this review is to summarize the current knowledge about more than twenty eight selenium-containing molecules and to discuss the implications for apoptosis and the impact in cancer therapy.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Design, Synthesis, and Biological Evaluation of Phosphoramide Derivatives as Urease Inhibitors

María J. Domínguez; Carmen Sanmartín; María Font; Juan Antonio Palop; Sara San Francisco; Oscar Urrutia; Fabrice Houdusse; Jose M. Garcia-Mina

The design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of phosphoramide derivatives as urease inhibitors to reduce the loss of ammonia has been carried out. Forty phosphorus derivatives were synthesized and their inhibitory activities evaluated against that of jack bean urease. In addition, in vivo assays have been carried out. All of the compounds were characterized by IR, (1)H NMR, MS, and elemental microanalysis. In some cases, detailed molecular modeling studies were carried out, and these highlighted the interaction between the enzyme active center and the compounds and also the characteristics related to their activity as urease inhibitors. According to the IC(50) values for in vitro inhibitory activity, 12 compounds showed values below 1 microM and 8 of them represent improvements of activity in comparison to the commercial urease inhibitor N-n-butylthiophosphorictriamide (NBPT) (100 nM) (AGROTAIN). On the basis of the activity results and the conclusions of the molecular modeling study, a structural model for new potential inhibitors has been defined.


Molecules | 2010

Antioxidant-Prooxidant Properties of a New Organoselenium Compound Library

Daniel Plano; Ylenia Baquedano; Elena Ibáñez; Iosu Jiménez; Juan Antonio Palop; Julian E. Spallholz; Carmen Sanmartín

The present study describes the biological evaluation of a library of 59 organo-selenium compounds as superoxide (O2─) generators and cytotoxic agents in human prostate cancer cells (PC-3) and in breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7). In order to corroborate that the biological activity for selenium compounds depends on the chemical form, a broad structural variety is presented. These structures include selenocyanates, diselenides, selenoalkyl functional moieties and eight newly synthesized symmetrically substituted dithioselenites and selenylureas. Eleven of the derivatives tested showed high levels of superoxide generation in vitro via oxidation of reduced glutathione (GSH) and nine of them were more catalytic than the reference compound, diselenodipropionic acid. Eighteen of the library compounds inhibited cell growth more than or similar to reference chemotherapeutic drugs in PC-3 and eleven were more potent cytotoxic agents than etoposide in the MCF-7 cell line. Considering both parameters (superoxide generation and cell cytotoxicity) compounds B1, C6 and C9 displayed the best therapeutic profiles. Considering that many diselenide compounds can generate superoxide (O2─) in vitro via oxidation of GSH and other thiols, the analogue B1, that contains a diselenide moiety, was selected for a preliminary mechanistic investigation, which . revealed that B1 has apoptogenic effects similar to camptothecin mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in lymphocytic leukemia cells (CCRF-CEM) and affected the MCF-7 cell-cycle in G2/M and S-phases.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1989

2-Arylamino-4-oxo-3,4-dihydropyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidines: synthesis and diuretic activity

Antonio Monge; Victor Martinez-Merino; Carmen Sanmartín; Francisco J Fernandez; Maria C Ochoa; Carlos Bellver; Pedro Artigas; E. Fernández-Alvarez

Abstract The synthesis of a series of 19 new compounds, 2-arylamino-4-oxo-3,4-dihydropyrido[2,3- d ]pyrimidines 9 , and the results of a study of their potassium-sparing diuretic activity are reported. Compounds 9 were obtained by boiling in dimethylformamide a solution of 2-methylthio-4-oxo-3,4-dihydropyrido[2,3- d ]pyrimidine hydrochloride ( 5 HCl, method A) or 2-chloro-4-oxo-3,4-dihydropyrido[2,3- d ]pyrimidine hydrochloride ( 8 HCl, method B) and the respective substituted aniline. Some of the compounds showed significant diuretic and potassium-sparing activities. Quantitative structure—activity relationships are described.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Selenium and Clinical Trials: New Therapeutic Evidence for Multiple Diseases

Carmen Sanmartín; Daniel Plano; María Font; J. A. Palop

The understanding of the essential role of selenium (Se) in human health has increased substantially in recent decades. Micronutrient deficiencies are very common in the general population and may be even more common in patients with different pathologies due to genetic or environmental causes and prescription drug use. Selenium is used by people in the prevention and/or treatment of different disorders including cardiovascular disease, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, hypothyroidism, stroke, atherosclerosis, cancer susceptibility and treatment, HIV, AIDS, neuronal diseases such as Alzheimer or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, pancreatitis, depression, and diabetes amongst others. Several mechanisms have been suggested to mediate the biological effects of Se and these include antioxidant defence systems, synthesis and stability of metabolites that act as intermediates implicated in diverse selenoproteins expression pathways oxidative metabolism, immune system modulation, DNA intercalators, kinase regulation, enzymatic cofactor, and gene expression. A number of clinical trials in recent years have provided convincing evidence of the central role of this element, either alone or in combination with other micronutrients or antioxidants, in the prevention and treatment of multiple diseases. Based on these studies this review focuses on the advances made so far in the study of mechanisms and applications of selenium compounds that could be suitable for chronic diseases.


Archiv Der Pharmazie | 2010

Synthesis and in vitro anticancer activities of some selenadiazole derivatives.

Daniel Plano; Esther Moreno; María Font; Ignacio Encío; Juan Antonio Palop; Carmen Sanmartín

A novel series of fourteen substituted selenadiazoles has been synthesized and the compounds tested for their in vitro antiproliferative and cytotoxic activities. The tests were carried out against leukemia (CCRF‐CEM), colon (HT‐29), lung (HTB‐54), and breast (MCF‐7) cancer cells. In order to assess the selectivity of the compounds under investigation the assays were also carried out on two non‐tumoral lines – one mammary (184B5) and one bronchial epithelium (BEAS‐2B) cell line. Assay‐based antiproliferative activity studies revealed that seven derivatives (2a, 2c, 2e, 2f, 2g, 3a, and 3b) exhibited good activity against MCF‐7 cells: for instance, 2c and 2f inhibited cell growth with nanomolar GI50 values. Compound 2f had a better antitumoral profile than vinorelbine and paclitaxel, two drugs that are used as first‐line treatments in advanced, recurrent, and/or metastatic cancer. In the other cell lines the compounds showed moderate activity or were inactive – with the exception of 2a, which was also found to have antiproliferative activity. Modulation of the cell cycle and apoptotic effects of active compounds were further evaluated in MCF‐7 cells. Of these, 6‐bromo[1,2,5]selenadiazolo[3,4‐b]pyridine (2a) was the most active, with an apoptogenic effect 3.9 times higher than that of camptothecin, which was used as a positive control. Compound 2a also provoked cell cycle arrest with a significant decrease in the G0/G1 phase cell population and an increase in S and G2/M cells, thus suggesting mitotic arrest prior to metaphase.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014

Thermosensitive hydrogels of poly(methyl vinyl ether-co-maleic anhydride) - Pluronic(®) F127 copolymers for controlled protein release.

Esther Moreno; Juana Schwartz; Eneko Larrañeta; Paul Nguewa; Carmen Sanmartín; Maite Agüeros; Juan M. Irache; Socorro Espuelas

Thermosensitive hydrogels are of a great interest due to their many biomedical and pharmaceutical applications. In this study, we synthesized a new series of random poly (methyl vinyl ether-co-maleic anhydride) (Gantrez(®) AN, GZ) and Pluronic(®) F127 (PF127) copolymers (GZ-PF127), that formed thermosensitive hydrogels whose gelation temperature and mechanical properties could be controlled by the molar ratio of GZ and PF127 polymers and the copolymer concentration in water. Gelation temperatures tended to decrease when the GZm/PF127 ratio increased. Thus, at a fixed GZm/PF127 value, sol-gel temperatures decreased at higher copolymer concentrations. Moreover, these hydrogels controlled the release of proteins such as bovine serum albumin (BSA) and recombinant recombinant kinetoplastid membrane protein of Leishmania (rKMP-11) more than the PF127 system. Toxicity studies carried out in J774.2 macrophages showed that cell viability was higher than 80%. Finally, histopathological analysis revealed that subcutaneous administration of low volumes of these hydrogels elicited a tolerable inflammatory response that could be useful to induce immune responses against the protein cargo in the development of vaccine adjuvants.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Structural Characteristics of Phosphoramide Derivatives as Urease Inhibitors. Requirements for Activity

María Font; María-José Domínguez; Carmen Sanmartín; Juan Antonio Palop; Sara San-Francisco; Oscar Urrutia; Fabrice Houdusse; Jose M. Garcia-Mina

Taking as a reference the structural characteristics of a set of compounds that act as jack bean ( Canavalia ensiformis) urease inhibitors, namely, phenylphosphorodiamidate (PPD), N- n-butylthiophosphorictriamide (NBPT), and N- n-butylphosphorictriamide (NBPTO), we have studied the structure-activity relationships of a series of phosphoramide derivatives for which the activity as urease inhibitors in both in vitro and in vivo assays is known. Molecular modeling studies were carried out, and the results highlighted the relevance of characteristics such as the presence of intramolecular hydrogen bonds, the volume of the fragment involved in the enzyme interaction, and the degree of conformational freedom as well as the HOMO orbital and atomic orbital contributions to the HOMO orbital, electron density, and PEM distributions on the activity of these compounds as urease inhibitors. These data, along with the preliminary docking study carried out, allow us to propose a union mode to the active site of the enzyme for these compounds.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis and antiproliferative activity of novel selenoester derivatives.

Enrique Domínguez-Álvarez; Daniel Plano; María Font; Alfonso Calvo; Celia Prior; Claus Jacob; Juan Antonio Palop; Carmen Sanmartín

A series of 31 new selenoesters were synthesized and their cytotoxic activity was evaluated against a prostate cancer cell line (PC-3). The most active compounds were also tested against three tumoural cell lines (MCF-7, A-549 and HT-29) and one non-tumour prostate cell line (RWPE-1). Thirteen compounds showed significant activity towards all tumour cells investigated, and some of them were even more potent than etoposide and cisplatin, which were used as reference drugs. Because of their pronounced potency and/or selectivity, four analogues (5, 21, 28 and 30), were selected in order to assess their redox properties related to a possible redox modulating activity. The glutathione peroxidase (GPx) assay showed slight activity for compound 30 and the 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl-(DPPH) assay showed a weak activity for compounds 5 and 28. The present results revealed that analogues 5, 21, 28 and 30 might serve as a useful starting point for the design of improved anti-tumour agents.

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Ignacio Encío

Universidad Pública de Navarra

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Elena Ibáñez

Spanish National Research Council

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