Catarina Charneira
Instituto Superior Técnico
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Featured researches published by Catarina Charneira.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2011
Catarina Charneira; Ana L. A. Godinho; M. Conceição Oliveira; Sofia A. Pereira; Emília C. Monteiro; M. Matilde Marques; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
Abacavir is a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor marketed since 1999 for the treatment of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV). Despite its clinical efficacy, abacavir administration has been associated with serious and sometimes fatal toxic events. Abacavir has been reported to undergo bioactivation in vitro, yielding reactive species that bind covalently to human serum albumin, but the haptenation mechanism and its significance to the toxic events induced by this anti-HIV drug have yet to be elucidated. Abacavir is extensively metabolized in the liver, resulting in inactive glucuronide and carboxylate metabolites. The metabolism of abacavir to the carboxylate involves a two-step oxidation via an unconjugated aldehyde, which under dehydrogenase activity isomerizes to a conjugated aldehyde. Concurrently with metabolic oxidation, the two putative aldehyde metabolites may be trapped by nucleophilic side groups in proteins yielding covalent adducts, which can be at the onset of the toxic events associated with abacavir. To gain insight into the role of aldehyde metabolites in abacavir-induced toxicity and with the ultimate goal of preparing reliable and fully characterized prospective biomarkers of exposure to the drug, we synthesized the two putative abacavir aldehyde metabolites and investigated their reaction with the α-amino group of valine. The resulting adducts were subsequently stabilized by reduction with sodium cyanoborohydride and derivatized with phenyl isothiocyanate, leading in both instances to the formation of the same phenylthiohydantoin, which was fully characterized by NMR and MS. These results suggest that the unconjugated aldehyde, initially formed in vivo, rapidly isomerizes to the thermodynamically more stable conjugated aldehyde, which is the electrophilic intermediate mainly involved in reaction with bionucleophiles. Moreover, we demonstrated that the reaction of the conjugated aldehyde with nitrogen bionucleophiles occurs exclusively via Schiff base formation, whereas soft sulfur nucleophiles react by Michael-type 1,4-addition to the α,β-unsaturated system. The synthetic phenylthiohydantoin adduct was subsequently used as standard for LC-ESI-MS monitoring of N-terminal valine adduct formation, upon modification of human hemoglobin in vitro with the conjugated abacavir aldehyde, followed by reduction and Edman degradation. The same postmodification strategy was applied to investigate the products formed by incubation of abacavir with rat liver cytosol, followed by trapping with ethyl valinate. In both instances, the major adduct detected corresponded to the synthetic phenylthiohydantoin standard. These results suggest that abacavir metabolism to the carboxylate(s) via aldehyde intermediate(s) could be a factor in the toxic events elicited by abacavir administration. Furthermore, the availability of a reliable and fully characterized synthetic standard of the abacavir adduct with the N-terminal valine of hemoglobin and its easy detection in the model hemoglobin modifications support the usefulness of this adduct as a prospective biomarker of abacavir toxicity in humans.
Toxicology Letters | 2014
Nádia M. Grilo; Catarina Charneira; Sofia A. Pereira; Emília C. Monteiro; M. Matilde Marques; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
Aldehydes are highly reactive molecules, which can be generated during numerous physiological processes, including the biotransformation of drugs. Several non-P450 enzymes participate in their metabolism albeit alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase are the ones most frequently involved in this process. Endogenous and exogenous aldehydes have been strongly implicated in multiple human pathologies. Their ability to react with biomacromolecules (e.g. proteins) yielding covalent adducts is suggested to be the common primary mechanism underlying the toxicity of these reactive species. Abacavir is one of the options for combined anti-HIV therapy. Although individual susceptibilities to adverse effects differ among patients, abacavir is associated with idiosyncratic hypersensitivity drug reactions and an increased risk of cardiac dysfunction. This review highlights the current knowledge on abacavir metabolism and discusses the potential role of bioactivation to an aldehyde metabolite, capable of forming protein adducts, in the onset of abacavir-induced toxic outcomes.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012
Catarina Charneira; Nádia M. Grilo; Sofia A. Pereira; Ala Godinho; Emília C. Monteiro; M. Matilde Marques; Amm Antunes
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim of this study was to obtain evidence for the activation of the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor abacavir to reactive aldehyde metabolites in vivo. Protein haptenation by these reactive metabolites may be a factor in abacavir‐induced toxic events.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2018
Inês L. Martins; João P. Nunes; Catarina Charneira; Judit Morello; Sofia A. Pereira; João P. Telo; M. Matilde Marques; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
&NA; Carbamazepine (CBZ) is one of the most widely used antiepileptic drugs by both adults and children. Despite its widespread use, CBZ is associated with central nervous system toxicity and severe hypersensitivity reactions, which raise concerns about its chronic use. While the precise mechanisms of CBZ‐induced adverse events are still unclear, metabolic activation to the epoxide (CBZ‐EP) has been thought to play a significant role. This work reports first‐hand evidence that CBZ reacts readily with biologically relevant thiyl radicals with no need for bioactivation. Using liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution mass spectrometry, multiple products from direct reaction of CBZ with glutathione (GSH) and N‐acetyl‐l‐cysteine (NAC) were unequivocally identified, including the same product obtained upon ring‐opening of CBZ‐EP. The product profile is complex and consistent with radical‐mediated mechanisms. Importantly, side products and adducts compatible with this non‐enzymatic pathway were identified in liver extracts from CBZ‐treated Wistar rats. The reaction of CBZ with GSH and NAC is more extensive in the presence of oxygen. Taking into consideration that GSH conjugation is, in general, a detoxification pathway, these results suggest that under hyperoxia/oxidative stress conditions the bioavailability of the parent drug may be compromised. Additionally, this non‐enzymatic process can be anticipated to play, at least in part, a role in the onset of CBZ‐induced adverse reactions due to the concomitant generation of reactive oxygen species. Therefore, the search for causal relationships between the formation of non‐enzymatically‐driven CBZ products and the occurrence of CBZ‐induced adverse events in human patients merits further research, aiming the translation of basic mechanistic findings into a clinical context that may ultimately lead to a safer CBZ prescription. HighlightsCBZ reacts with biologically relevant thiols with no need for bioactivation.The product profile is complex and consistent with radical‐mediated mechanisms.The reaction is more extensive in the presence of oxygen.Products compatible with radical‐mediated mechanisms were identified in liver extracts from CBZ‐treated rats.The concomitant generation of reactive oxygen species can have a role on CBZ‐induced adverse reactions. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2018
Ana L. A. Godinho; Inês L. Martins; João P. Nunes; Catarina Charneira; Jorge Grilo; Diogo M. Silva; Sofia A. Pereira; Karina Soto; M. Conceição Oliveira; M. Matilde Marques; Cristina C. Jacob; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
ABSTRACT Drug bioactivation to reactive metabolites capable of covalent adduct formation with bionucleophiles is a major cause of drug‐induced adverse reactions. Therefore, elucidation of reactive metabolites is essential to unravel the toxicity mechanisms induced by drugs and thereby identify patient subgroups at higher risk. Etravirine (ETR) was the first second‐generation Non‐Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor (NNRTI) to be approved, as a therapeutic option for HIV‐infected patients who developed resistance to the first‐generation NNRTIs. Additionally, ETR came into market aiming to overcome some adverse effects associated with the previously used efavirenz (neurotoxicity) and nevirapine (hepatotoxicity) therapies. Nonetheless, post‐marketing reports of severe ETR‐induced skin rash and hypersensitivity reactions have prompted the U.S. FDA to issue a safety alert on ETR. Taking into consideration that ETR usage may increase in the near future, due to the possible use of the drug for coinfection with malaria and HIV, the development of reliable prognostic tools for early risk/benefit estimations is urgent. In the current study, high resolution mass spectrometry‐based methodologies were integrated with MS3 experiments for the identification of reactive ETR metabolites/adducts: 1) in vitro incubation of the drug with human and rat liver S9 fractions in the presence of Phase I and II co‐factors, including glutathione, as a trapping bionucleophile; and 2) in vivo, using urine samples from HIV‐infected patients on ETR therapy. We obtained evidence for multiple bioactivation pathways leading to the formation of covalent adducts with glutathione and N‐acetyl‐L‐cysteine. These results suggest that similar reactions may occur with cysteine residues of proteins, supporting a role for ETR bioactivation in the onset of the toxic effects elicited by the drug. Additionally, ETR metabolites stemming from amine oxidation, with potential toxicological significance, were identified in vitro and in vivo. Also noteworthy is the fact that new metabolic conjugation pathways of glucuronide metabolites were demonstrated for the first time, raising questions about their potential toxicological implications. In conclusion, these results represent not only a contribution towards the elucidation of new metabolic pathways of drugs in general but also an important step towards the elucidation of potentially toxic ETR pathways, whose understanding may be crucial for reliable risk/benefit estimations of ETR‐based regimens.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015
Inês L. Martins; Catarina Charneira; Valentina Gandin; João L. Ferreira da Silva; Gonçalo C. Justino; João P. Telo; Abel J. S. C. Vieira; Cristina Marzano; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
Toxicology Letters | 2013
Nádia M. Grilo; Alexandra M. M. Antunes; Umbelina Caixas; Aline T. Marinho; Catarina Charneira; M. Conceição Oliveira; Emília C. Monteiro; M. Matilde Marques; Sofia A. Pereira
Toxicology Letters | 2016
João P. Nunes; Inês L. Martins; Catarina Charneira; Igor P. Pogribny; Aline de Conti; Frederick A. Beland; M. Matilde Marques; Cristina C. Jacob; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
Toxicology Letters | 2010
M. Matilde Marques; Catarina Charneira; Alexandra M. M. Antunes
Toxicology Letters | 2016
Alexandra M. M. Antunes; João P. Nunes; Inês L. Martins; Catarina Charneira; Igor P. Pogribny; A. De Conti; Frederick A. Beland; M. Matilde Marques; Cristina C. Jacob