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Dive into the research topics where Claudia Sissi is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudia Sissi.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Phosphate Diester and DNA Hydrolysis by a Multivalent, Nanoparticle-Based Catalyst

Renato Bonomi; Francesco Selvestrel; Valentina Lombardo; Claudia Sissi; Stefano Polizzi; Fabrizio Mancin; Umberto Tonellato; Paolo Scrimin

2-nm gold nanoclusters coated with Zn(II) complexes bearing auxiliary hydrogen bond donors act as multivalent catalysts capable of promoting the hydrolysis of model phosphate diesters with exceptional activity and inducing DNA double strand cleavage.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Quinone Methides Tethered to Naphthalene Diimides as Selective G-Quadruplex Alkylating Agents

Marco Di Antonio; Filippo Doria; Sara N. Richter; Carolina Bertipaglia; Mariella Mella; Claudia Sissi; Manlio Palumbo; Mauro Freccero

We have developed novel G-quadruplex (G-4) ligand/alkylating hybrid structures, tethering the naphthalene diimide moiety to quaternary ammonium salts of Mannich bases, as quinone-methide precursors, activatable by mild thermal digestion (40 degrees C). The bis-substituted naphthalene diimides were efficiently synthesized, and their reactivity as activatable bis-alkylating agents was investigated in the presence of thiols and amines in aqueous buffered solutions. The electrophilic intermediate, quinone-methide, involved in the alkylation process was trapped, in the presence of ethyl vinyl ether, in a hetero Diels-Alder [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction, yielding a substituted 2-ethoxychroman. The DNA recognition and alkylation properties of these new derivatives were investigated by gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism, and enzymatic assays. The alkylation process occurred preferentially on the G-4 structure in comparison to other DNA conformations. By dissecting reversible recognition and alkylation events, we found that the reversible process is a prerequisite to DNA alkylation, which in turn reinforces the G-quadruplex structural rearrangement.


Current Medicinal Chemistry - Anti-cancer Agents | 2003

The quinolone family: from antibacterial to anticancer agents.

Claudia Sissi; Manlio Palumbo

The present review focuses on the structural modifications responsible for the transformation of an antibacterial into an anticancer agent. Indeed, a distinctive feature of drugs based on the quinolone structure is their remarkable ability to target different type II topoisomerase enzymes. In particular, some congeners of this drug family display high activity not only against bacterial topoisomerases, but also against eukaryotic topoisomerases and are toxic to cultured mammalian cells and in vivo tumor models. Hence, these cytotoxic quinolones represent an exploitable source of new anticancer agents, which might also help addressing side-toxicity and resistance phenomena. Their ability to bind metal ion co-factors represents an additional means of modulating their pharmacological response(s). Moreover, quinolones link antibacterial and anticancer chemotherapy together and provide an opportunity to clarify drug mechanism across divergent species.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Effects of magnesium and related divalent metal ions in topoisomerase structure and function

Claudia Sissi; Manlio Palumbo

The catalytic steps through which DNA topoisomerases produce their biological effects and the interference of drug molecules with the enzyme–DNA cleavage complex have been thoroughly investigated both from the biophysical and the biochemical point of view. This provides the basic structural insight on how this family of essential enzymes works in living systems and how their functions can be impaired by natural and synthetic compounds. Besides other factors, the physiological environment is known to affect substantially the biological properties of topoisomerases, a key role being played by metal ion cofactors, especially divalent ions (Mg2+), that are crucial to bestow and modulate catalytic activity by exploiting distinctive chemical features such as ionic size, hardness and characteristics of the coordination sphere including coordination number and geometry. Indeed, metal ions mediate fundamental aspects of the topoisomerase-driven transphosphorylation process by affecting the kinetics of the forward and the reverse steps and by modifying the enzyme conformation and flexibility. Of particular interest in type IA and type II enzymes are ionic interactions involving the Toprim fold, a protein domain conserved through evolution that contains a number of acidic residues essential for catalysis. A general two-metal ion mechanism is widely accepted to account for the biophysical and biochemical data thus far available.


Biochimie | 2011

The evolving world of protein-G-quadruplex recognition: A medicinal chemist’s perspective

Claudia Sissi; Manlio Palumbo

Abstract The physiological and pharmacological role of nucleic acids structures folded into the non canonical G-quadruplex conformation have recently emerged. Their activities are targeted at vital cellular processes including telomere maintenance, regulation of transcription and processing of the pre-messenger or telomeric RNA. In addition, severe conditions like cancer, fragile X syndrome, Bloom syndrome, Werner syndrome and Fanconi anemia J are related to genomic defects that involve G-quadruplex forming sequences. In this connection G-quadruplex recognition and processing by nucleic acid directed proteins and enzymes represents a key event to activate or deactivate physiological or pathological pathways. In this review we examine protein-G-quadruplex recognition in physiologically significant conditions and discuss how to possibly exploit the interactions’ selectivity for targeted therapeutic intervention.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Spectroscopic, molecular modeling, and NMR-spectroscopic investigation of the binding mode of the natural alkaloids berberine and sanguinarine to human telomeric G-quadruplex DNA.

Irene Bessi; Carla Bazzicalupi; Christian Richter; Hendrik R. A. Jonker; Krishna Saxena; Claudia Sissi; Matteo Chioccioli; Sara Bianco; Anna Rita Bilia; Harald Schwalbe; Paola Gratteri

G-quadruplex structures can be formed at the single-stranded overhang of telomeric DNA, and ligands able to stabilize this structure have recently been identified as potential anticancer drugs. Among the potential G-quadruplex binders, we have studied the binding ability of berberine and sanguinarine, two members of the alkaloid family, an important class of natural products long known for medicinal purpose. Our spectroscopic (CD, NMR, and fluorescence) studies and molecular modeling approaches revealed binding modes at ligand-complex stoichiometries >1:1 and ligand self-association induced by DNA for the interactions of the natural alkaloids berberine and sanguinarine with the human telomeric G-quadruplex DNA.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Identification and Characterization of New DNA G-Quadruplex Binders Selected by a Combination of Ligand and Structure-Based Virtual Screening Approaches

Stefano Alcaro; Caterina Musetti; Simona Distinto; Margherita Casatti; Giuseppe Zagotto; Anna Artese; Lucia Parrotta; Federica Moraca; Giosuè Costa; Francesco Ortuso; Elias Maccioni; Claudia Sissi

Nowadays, it has been demonstrated that DNA G-quadruplex arrangements are involved in cellular aging and cancer, thus boosting the discovery of selective binders for these DNA secondary structures. By taking advantage of available structural and biological information on these structures, we performed a high throughput in silico screening of commercially available molecules databases by merging ligand- and structure-based approaches by means of docking experiments. Compounds selected by the virtual screening procedure were then tested for their ability to interact with the human telomeric G-quadruplex folding by circular dichroism, fluorescence spectroscopy, and photodynamic techniques. Interestingly, our screening succeeded in retrieving a new promising scaffold for G-quadruplex binders characterized by a psoralen moiety.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 2001

Anthracyclines: recent developments in their separation and quantitation.

Giuseppe Zagotto; Stefano Moro; Claudia Sissi; Manlio Palumbo

Anthracyclines are among the most widely used anticancer agents. Notwithstanding the large efforts to develop new drugs with a better pharmaceutical profile, daunorubicin, doxorubicin, epirubicin and idarubicin are still the most used in clinical practice. Many efforts are now ongoing to reduce the side effects by using pharmaceutical formulations able to release the drug in the most appropriate way and monitoring the quantity of anthracyclines and their metabolites in the body fluids or tissues frequently and in every patient to maintain the drug concentration within the expected range. This review describes the most recent developments in the separation and quantitation of the above clinically useful drugs, together with their principal metabolites. Some less widely used derivatives will also be considered.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Tuning the Activity of Zn(II) Complexes in DNA Cleavage : Clues for Design of New Efficient Metallo-Hydrolases

Carla Bazzicalupi; Andrea Bencini; Claudia Bonaccini; Claudia Giorgi; Paola Gratteri; Stefano Moro; Manlio Palumbo; Alessandro Simionato; Jacopo Sgrignani; Claudia Sissi; Barbara Valtancoli

The hydrolytic ability toward plasmid DNA of a mononuclear and a binuclear Zn(II) complex with two macrocyclic ligands, containing respectively a phenanthroline (L1) and a dipyridine moiety (L2), was analyzed at different pH values and compared with their activity in bis( p-nitrophenyl)phosphate (BNPP) cleavage. Only the most nucleophilic species [ZnL1(OH)]+ and [Zn2L2(OH)2]2+, present in solution at alkaline pH values, are active in BNPP cleavage, and the dinuclear L2 complex is remarkably more active than the mononuclear L1 one. Circular dichroism and unwinding experiments show that both complexes interact with DNA in a nonintercalative mode. Experiments with supercoiled plasmid DNA show that both complexes can cleave DNA at neutral pH, where the L1 and L2 complexes display a similar reactivity. Conversely, the pH-dependence of their cleavage ability is remarkably different. The reactivity of the mononuclear complex, in fact, decreases with pH while that of the dinuclear one is enhanced at alkaline pH values. The efficiency of the two complexes in DNA cleavage at different pH values was elucidated by means of a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) study on the adducts between DNA and the different complexed species present in solution.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1998

MG2+-MEDIATED BINDING OF 6-SUBSTITUTED QUINOLONES TO DNA : RELEVANCE TO BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY

Claudia Sissi; Magda Andreolli; Violetta Cecchetti; Arnaldo Fravolini; Manlio Palumbo

The interaction of a number of novel 6-substituted quinolone derivatives with DNA in the presence/absence of magnesium ions has been investigated by fluorometric techniques. The drug-single-stranded nucleic acid interaction is invariantly mediated by the metal ion. In all cases optimal complex formation is found at physiological Mg2+ concentration. From titrations at different [Mg2+] the binding constant for the ternary drug-DNA-Mg2+ complex (KT) has been evaluated. Interestingly, a good relationship is found between KT and gyrase poisoning activity of the test quinolones (IC50), which confirms that DNA-affinity of the quinolone, modulated by Mg2+, plays an important role in poisoning the cleavable gyrase-DNA complex and, consequently, in eliciting antibacterial activity in this family of drugs. The results obtained with different 6-substituted compounds supports the idea that position 6 of the drug, besides playing a pharmacokinetic role, is involved in recognition of the enzyme pocket. Our data do not support a mechanism of action based upon quinolone intercalation into B-DNA.

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Giosuè Costa

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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