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Dive into the research topics where Caroline Caramano de Lourenço is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline Caramano de Lourenço.


Food Research International | 2014

Comprehensive characterization of lipids from Amazonian vegetable oils by mass spectrometry techniques

Giovana A. Bataglion; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Jandyson M. Santos; Fábio N. dos Santos; Milene Teixeira Barcia; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Marcos José Salvador; Helena Teixeira Godoy; Marcos N. Eberlin; Hector Henrique Ferreira Koolen

An integrative approach in mass spectrometry (MS) comprising gas chromatography coupled to MS (GC-MS), ultra-efficiency liquid chromatography coupled to MS (UPLC-MS) and easy ambient sonic-spray ionization MS (EASI-MS) is proposed for the comprehensive characterization of Amazonian oils. Coconut, andiroba and castor seed oils, which are vastly sold in markets of the Amazonian region of Brazil, were selected as a representative test set. These oils were found to contain several lipids such as triacylglycerides (TAGs), fatty acids (FAs), phytosterols and limonoids. In the analyzed samples 30 different TAGs, 11 FAs, 6 phytosterols and 7 limonoids were identified. The antioxidant capacity (AOC) of the oils, as measured by their oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), was also used to evaluate their potential biological properties as well as their possible consumption as food. Edible virgin coconut oil was the most active (0.720±0.001 Trolox eq./mmol), whereas considerable lower activity was observed for andiroba and castor seed oils. The antimicrobial activities of the oils were also recorded against a panel of pathogenic bacteria and fungi in which andiroba oil was the only one that was active, solely against Enterococcus aeruginosa.


Natural Product Research | 2013

Antioxidant and antimicrobial activities of aporphinoids and other alkaloids from the bark of Annona salzmannii A. DC. (Annonaceae)

Emmanoel Vilaça Costa; Pedro Ernesto Oliveira da Cruz; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Valéria Regina de Souza Moraes; Paulo Cesar de Lima Nogueira; Marcos José Salvador

The antioxidant capacity by oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC)-FL method and antimicrobial activity using the broth microdilution method of aporphinoids (liriodenine 1, anonaine 2 and asimilobine 3) and other alkaloids (reticuline 4 and cleistopholine 5) isolated from the bark of Annona salzmannii A. DC. (Annonaceae) were evaluated. For antioxidant activity, the most active alkaloid was asimilobine with ORAC value of 2.09 relative trolox equivalents. For antimicrobial activity, some alkaloids showed significant minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) values in the range of 25–100 µg mL−1. The most active compounds were the aporphinoids liriodenine, anonaine and asimilobine, some of them more active than the positive control.


Natural Product Research | 2015

Bioactivity and chemical composition of the essential oil from the leaves of Guatteria australis A.St.-Hil

Carlos Alberto Theodoro Siqueira; Alessandra Freitas Serain; Aislan Cristina Rheder Fagundes Pascoal; Nathalia Luiza Andreazza; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Ana Cláudia Oliveira de Souza; Juliana T. Mesquita; Andre G. Tempone; Marcos José Salvador

Essential oil from the leaves of Guatteria australis was obtained by hydrodistillation, analyzed by Gas Chromatography coupled to Mass Spectromery (GC–MS) and their antiproliferative, antileishmanial, antibacterial, antifungal and antioxidant activities were also evaluated. Twenty-three compounds were identified among which germacrene B (50.66%), germacrene D (22.22%) and (E)-caryophyllene (8.99%) were the main compounds. The highest antiproliferative activity was observed against NCI-ADR/RES (TGI = 31.08 μg/ml) and HT-29 (TGI = 32.81 μg/ml) cell lines. It also showed good antileishmanial activity against Leishmania infantum (IC50 = 30.71 μg/ml). On the other hand, the oil exhibited a small effect against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538, S. aureus ATCC 14458 and Escherichia coli ATCC 10799 (MIC = 250 μg/ml), as well as small antioxidant activity (457 μmol TE/g) assessed through ORACFL assay. These results represent the first report regarding chemical composition and bioactivity of G. australis essential oil.


Current Drug Targets | 2013

Photodynamic Inactivation of Yeast and Bacteria by Extracts of Alternanthera brasiliana

Nathalia Luiza Andreazza; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Carlos Alberto Theodoro Siqueira; Alexandra Christine Helena Frankland Sawaya; Tadia F. Lapinski; Adriana Gasparetto; Sonia Khouri; Stella Regina Zamuner; Egberto Munin; Marcos J. Salvador

This study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of Alternathera brasiliana (Amaranthaceae) extracts as photosensitizing agents in photodynamic antimicrobial therapies (PACT) against Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis and Candida dubliniensis. The crude hexane and ethanol extracts were obtained from A. brasiliana whole plant and showed absortion from 650 to 700 nm. Also, singlet molecular oxygen (1O2) production (type II photosensitization reaction) was examined, and the results show that 1,3-diphenylisobenzofuran photodegradation was greatly enhanced in the presence of the A. brasiliana extracts. One plate in each assay was irradiated while the other was not irradiated, the number of colony-forming units per milliliter (CFU/mL) was obtained, and data analyzed by the Tukey test. The chemical composition of the extracts was determined by chromatographic and spectrometric techniques; steroids, triterpenes, and flavonoids were identified. Laser irradiation alone at 685 nm using diode laser, output power of 35 mW, and energy of 28 J/cm2, or non-irradiated crude extracts in sub-inhibitory concentration did not reduce the number of CFU/mL significantly, whereas irradiated hexane and ethanol extracts, in sub-inhibitory concentrations, inhibited the growth of these microorganisms. The photoactivation of hexane and ethanol extracts of A. brasiliana, in sub-inhibitory concentrations, using red laser radiation at 685 nm had an antimicrobial effect.


Natural Product Research | 2015

Chemical composition and antimicrobial evaluation of the essential oils of Bocageopsis pleiosperma Maas

Elzalina R. Soares; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Richardson A. de Almeida; Bruna R. de Lima; Hector H.F. Koolen; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Marcos José Salvador; Adriana Flach; Luiz Antonio Mendonça Alves da Costa; Antonia Queiroz Lima de Souza; Maria Lúcia B. Pinheiro; Afonso D. L. de Souza

Essential oils from the leaves, twigs and barks of Bocageopsis pleiosperma Maas were obtained by using hydrodistillation and analysed by using gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Several compounds (51) were detected and identified, being β-bisabolene the main component in all aerial parts of the plant, with higher concentration in the leaves (55.77%), followed by barks (38.53%) and twigs (34.37%). In order to increase the biological knowledge about the essential oil of Bocageopsis species, antimicrobial activities were evaluated against the microorganisms Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Enterobacter aerogenes, Candida tropicalis, Candida dubliniensis, Candida glabrata and Candida albicans. The essential oil obtained from the barks exhibited a moderate effect against S. epidermidis ATCC 1228 (MIC = 250 μg/mL), while the other oils did not exhibit antimicrobial activity. These results represent the first report about the chemical composition of B. pleiosperma and the first antimicrobial evaluation with a Bocageopsis species.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2016

Antimicrobial photodynamic effect of extracts and oxoaporphine alkaloid isomoschatoline from Guatteria blepharophylla.

Nathalia Luiza Andreazza; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Alvaro J. Hernandez-Tasco; Maria Lúcia B. Pinheiro; Maria Élida Alves Stefanello; Emmanoel Vilaça Costa; Marcos José Salvador

Photodynamic Therapy, a tumor therapy idealized at the beginning of the last century, emerges nowadays as a promising treatment alternative against infectious diseases. In this study we report a bioguided study of Guatteria blepharophylla phytoderivatives for antimicrobial PDT. Crude extracts and fraction from the species bark were obtained and further fractionated for substances isolation. All samples were evaluated in relation to their photophysical (absorbance and fluorescence) and photochemical properties (1,3-DPBF bleaching method). Then, bioassays were conducted using as biological models bacteria and yeast strains and a diode laser as a light source. Phytochemical analyses lead to the isolation of 5 isoquinoline alkaloids from oxoaporphine subclass, denominated GB1 to GB5. Photophysical and photochemical analysis showed that extracts, fraction and GB1 (isomoschatoline) presented absorption profile with bands at 600-700nm and were positive for singlet oxygen production. Photobiological assays indicate that these samples presented photodynamic antimicrobial activity against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial and some Candida ssp. yeast strains at sub-inhibitory concentrations. The susceptibility of gram-negative bacteria was significantly enhanced when CaCl2 or MgCl2 were employed. Greater energy doses and double samples dosage also decreased microbial survival. It is suggested that GB1 photodynamic activity happens through both types I and II photochemical mechanisms, but with a predominance of the latter. Phytoderivatives of G. blepharophylla promoted antimicrobial effect, however more detailed study concerning chemical composition of the crude extracts and fractions as also photophysical and photochemical characteristics of GB1 are necessary to ensure their potential as photosensitizers at antimicrobial photodynamic inactivation.


Lasers in Medical Science | 2015

Photodynamic antimicrobial effects of bis-indole alkaloid indigo from Indigofera truxillensis Kunth (Leguminosae)

Nathalia Luiza Andreazza; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Maria Élida Alves Stefanello; Teresa Dib Zambon Atvars; Marcos José Salvador

Multidrug-resistant microbial infections represent an exponentially growing problem affecting communities worldwide. Photodynamic therapy is a promising treatment based on the combination of light, oxygen, and a photosensitizer that leads to reactive oxygen species production, such as superoxide (type I mechanism) and singlet oxygen (type II mechanism) that cause massive oxidative damage and consequently the host cell death. Indigofera genus has gained considerable interest due its mutagenic, cytotoxic, and genotoxic activity. Therefore, this study was undertaken to investigate the effect of crude extracts, alkaloidal fraction, and isolated substance derived from Indigofera truxillensis in photodynamic antimicrobial chemotherapy on the viability of bacteria and yeast and evaluation of mechanisms involved. Our results showed that all samples resulted in microbial photoactivation in subinhibitory concentration, with indigo alkaloid presenting a predominant photodynamic action through type I mechanism. The use of CaCl2 and MgCl2 as cell permeabilizing additives also increased gram-negative bacteria susceptibility to indigo.


Journal of Essential Oil Research | 2011

Essential Oil from the Leaves of Campomanesia guaviroba (DC.) Kiaersk. (Myrtaceae): Chemical Composition, Antioxidant and Cytotoxic Activity

Aislan Cristina Rheder Fagundes Pascoal; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Ladaslav Sodek; Jorge Yoshio Tamashiro; Gilberto C. Franchi; Alexandre E. Nowill; Maria Élida Alves Stefanello; Marcos José Salvador

Abstract The essential oil from the leaves of Campomanesia guaviroba (DC.) Kiaersk., obtained by hydrodistillation, was analyzed by GC and GC/MS. Sixteen compounds could be identified, representing around 94% of the total oil. The major components were myrtenal (27.0%), myrtenol (24.7%) and trans-pinocarveol (15.7%). The essential oil was also evaluated for DPPH radical-scavenging activity by TLC autographic assay, antioxidant capacity by ORAC-FL assay and antiproliferative activity against leukemic cells lines.


Industrial Crops and Products | 2017

Antimicrobial Annona muricata L. (soursop) extract targets the cell membranes of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria

Nícolas de Castro Campos Pinto; Lara M. Campos; Anna Carolina S. Evangelista; Ari S.O. Lemos; Thiago P. Silva; Rossana C. N. Melo; Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Marcos José Salvador; Ana Carolina M. Apolônio; Elita Scio; Rodrigo L. Fabri


Archive | 2016

Fitoquímica e avaliação do efeito biológico fotoinduzido de extratos e substâncias isoladas de Annonaceae (planta in natura e obtida por cultura de células)

Caroline Caramano de Lourenço; Marcos J. Salvador

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Emmanoel Vilaça Costa

Universidade Federal de Sergipe

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Felipe M.A. da Silva

Federal University of Amazonas

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Adriana Flach

Federal University of Roraima

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Afonso D. L. de Souza

Federal University of Amazonas

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