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Dive into the research topics where Constantinos Vagias is active.

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Featured researches published by Constantinos Vagias.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

Natural Products with Anti-HIV Activity from Marine Organisms

Leto-A. Tziveleka; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis

In order to combat the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), diverse strategies have been developed to research on compounds which can be developed as therapeutic agents. Screening of natural products derived from numerous species has afforded metabolites with significant antiviral activity against the HIV. The marine environment representing approximately half of the global biodiversity offers an enormous resource for novel compounds. Currently more than 150 natural products with promising levels of anti-HIV activity have been isolated following bioassay guided protocols from aqueous or organic extracts of marine organisms. Some of the most characteristic marinemetabolites that have exhibited significant anti-HIV activity on different biochemical assays designed for chemotherapeutic strategies are: Cyanovirin-N, a protein from a blue green alga; various sulfated polysaccharides extracted from seaweeds (i.e. Nothogenia fastigiata, Aghardhiella tenera); the peptides tachyplesin and polyphemusin, which are highly abundant in hemocyte debris of the horseshoe crabs Tachypleus tridentatus and Limulus polyphemus; sponge metabolites such as avarol, avarone, ilimaquinone and several phloroglucinols; and a number of metabolites from marine fungi such as equisetin, phomasetin and integric acid. Considering that number of unique metabolites that have been isolated from a small extent of the oceans biological and chemical diversity, the oceans represent a virtually untapped resource for the discovery of novel bioactive compounds.


Marine Biotechnology | 2005

Inhibitory Effects of Mediterranean Sponge Extracts and Metabolites on Larval Settlement of the Barnacle Balanus amphitrite

Claire Hellio; Maria Tsoukatou; Jean-Philippe Maréchal; Nick Aldred; Claude Beaupoil; Anthony S. Clare; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis

One of the most promising alternative technologies to antifouling paints based on heavy metals is the development of coatings whose active ingredients are compounds naturally occurring in marine organisms. This approach is based on the problem of epibiosis faced by all marine organisms and the fact that a great number of them cope with it successfully. The present study investigated the antifouling activity of a series of extracts and secondary metabolites from the epibiont-free Mediterranean sponges Ircinia oros, I. spinosula, Cacospongia scalaris, Dysidea sp., and Hippospongia communis. Antifouling efficacy was evaluated by the settlement inhibition of laboratory-reared Balanus amphitrite Darwin cyprids. The most promising activity was exhibited by the metabolites 2-[24-acetoxy]-octaprenyl-1-4-hydroquinone (8a), dihydrofurospongin II (10), and the alcoholic extract of Dysidea sp.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2004

Volatile halogenated metabolites from marine red algae

Maria Kladi; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis

A significant number of halogenated low molecular weight metabolites have exhibited an impressive array of biological properties ranging from antimicrobial to insecticidal activities. Studies on the natural products chemistry of the red seaweeds were recently stimulated by the discovery of the acyclic monoterpene halomon, which exhibits selective antitumor activity in the National Cancer Institute’s human tumor and disease oriented in vitro screen.The present review is a taxonomy based compilation of the available literature on the halogenated volatile metabolites (C1–C10) produced by red seaweeds, with a short description of the reported ecological and pharmaceutical activities. The review begins with a presentation of simple halogenated hydrocarbons and phenols, showing their wide occurrence in rhodophyta, along with a description of simple halogenated lipids in some of the most frequently investigated red algae species and finally focuses on the chemical composition of individual red algae species.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2006

Cultivated microalgae and the carotenoid fucoxanthin from Odontella aurita as potent anti-proliferative agents in bronchopulmonary and epithelial cell lines

Dimitri Moreau; Christophe Tomasoni; Catherine Jacquot; Raymond Kaas; Roland Le Guédes; Jean-Paul Cadoret; Arnaud Muller-Feuga; Ioanna Kontiza; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis; Christos Roussakis

The antiproliferative activities of several extracts from cultivated microalgae in France have been studied against bronchopulmonary and epithelial cell lines, respectively (A549, NSCLC-N6 and SRA 01/04). The algal extracts, of Diatomae (Odontella aurita, Chaetoseros sp.), as well as of Haptophyceae: Isochrisys aff. galbana, appeared as the most active among all the assayed species, expressing a broad spectrum of in vitro antiproliferative activity of well-differentiated pathologic cells such as NSCLC-N6 by terminal differentiation. Bio-guided fractionation of the above referred extracts, led us to the isolation, of the carotenoid fucoxanthin. Fucoxanthin has been structurally determined, through modern spectral means and has been studied separately for its activities.


Phytochemistry | 2002

C15 Acetogenins from the red alga Laurencia obtusa

Dimitra Iliopoulou; Constantinos Vagias; Catherine Harvala; Vassilios Roussis

Four C(15) acetogenins, 13-epilaurencienyne (3Z) (1), 13-epipinnatifidenyne (3E) (2), (3E, 6S(*), 7R(*), 9S(*), 10S(*), 12R(*))-9-chloro-13-bromo-6:12-epoxy-7, 10-diacetoxypentadec-3-en-1-yne (3), (3Z, 6S(*), 7R(*), 9S(*), 10S(*), 12R(*))-9-chloro-13-bromo-6:12-epoxy-7, 10-diacetoxypentadec-3-en-1-yne (4), along with the known 13-epilaurencienyne (3E) (5), have been isolated from the organic extract of the red alga Laurencia obtusa, collected in the Aegean Sea, Greece. The structures of the new natural products, as well as their relative stereochemistry, were established by means of spectral data analysis, including 2D NMR spectroscopic experiments. Some of the new metabolites exhibited significant insecticidal activity.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C | 2002

Chemical Defense and Antifouling Activity of Three Mediterranean Sponges of the Genus Ircinia

Maria Tsoukatou; Claire Hellio; Constantinos Vagias; Catherine Harvala; Vassilios Roussis

The defense roles and the antifouling activity of the organic extracts and the major metabolites of the sponges Ircinia oros, I. variabilis and I. spinosula were investigated. The antifeedant activity was tested in experimental aquaria on the generalist predator fish Thalassoma pavo as well as in coastal ecosystems rich in fishes. Some of the major metabolites exhibited high levels of antifeedant activity. The antifouling activity was tested in laboratory assays, against representatives of the major groups of fouling organisms (marine bacteria, marine fungi, diatoms, macroalgae and mussels). All extracts showed promising levels of activity. As was expected, no single extract was active in all tests and some fractions that were effective against one organism showed little or no activity against the others. The high but variable level of antifouling activity in combination with the absence of toxicity (tested on the development of oyster and sea urchin larvae) shows the potential of these metabolites to become ingredients in environmentally friendly antifouling preparations.


Marine Biotechnology | 2010

Anti-microfouling activity of lipidic metabolites from the invasive brown alga Sargassum muticum (Yendo) fensholt.

Erwan Plouguerné; Efstathia Ioannou; Panagiota Georgantea; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis; Claire Hellio; Edouard Kraffe; Valérie Stiger-Pouvreau

The purification of the chloroform extract from the brown invasive macroalga Sargassum muticum, through a series of chromatographic separations, yielded 12 fractions that were tested against strains of bacteria, microalgae, and fungi involved in marine biofilm formation. The chemical composition of four (a, c, g, and k) out of the six fractions that exhibited anti-microfouling activity was investigated. Fraction a contained saturated and unsaturated linear hydrocarbons (C12–C27). Arachidonic acid was identified as the major metabolite in fraction c whereas fraction g contained mainly palmitic, linolenic, and palmitoleic acids. Fraction k was submitted to further purification yielding the fraction kAcaF1e that was composed of galactoglycerolipids, active against the growth of two of the four bacterial strains (Shewanella putrefaciens and Polaribacter irgensii) and all tested fungi. These promising results, in particular the isolation and the activity of galactoglycerolipids, attest the potential of the huge biomass of S. muticum as a source of new environmentally friendly antifouling compounds.


Journal of Natural Products | 2010

Cytotoxic halogenated metabolites from the Brazilian red alga Laurencia catarinensis.

Cintia Lhullier; Miriam Falkenberg; Efstathia Ioannou; Antonio Quesada; Panagiota Papazafiri; Paulo Antunes Horta; Eloir Paulo Schenkel; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis

Seven new (1-7) and seven previously reported (8-14) halogenated metabolites were isolated from the organic extract of the Brazilian red alga Laurencia catarinensis. The structure elucidation and the assignment of the relative configurations of the new natural products were based on detailed NMR and MS spectroscopic analyses, whereas the structure of metabolite 6 was confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The absolute configuration of metabolite 1 was determined using the modified Moshers method. The in vitro cytotoxicity of compounds 1-14 was evaluated against HT29, MCF7, and A431 cell lines.


Steroids | 2009

5α,8α-Epidioxysterols from the gorgonian Eunicella cavolini and the ascidian Trididemnum inarmatum: Isolation and evaluation of their antiproliferative activity

Efstathia Ioannou; Ayman F. Abdel-Razik; Maria Zervou; Dimitrios Christofidis; Xanthippi Alexi; Constantinos Vagias; Michael N. Alexis; Vassilios Roussis

Three new (1, 4, 9) and nine previously reported (2, 3, 5-8, 10-12) 5alpha,8alpha-epidioxysterols were isolated from the organic extracts of the gorgonian Eunicella cavolini and the ascidian Trididemnum inarmatum. The structures and relative configurations of 1-12 were established on the basis of detailed NMR spectroscopic analyses and comparison with the literature. The growth inhibitory effects of 1-12 were evaluated against MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. Compound 1, bearing a cyclopropyl moiety in the side chain, exhibited the highest antiproliferative activity.


Steroids | 2006

3-Keto steroids from the marine organisms Dendrophyllia cornigera and Cymodocea nodosa

Ioanna Kontiza; Dennis Abatis; Katerina Malakate; Constantinos Vagias; Vassilios Roussis

The new (20R)-22E-cholesta-4,22-diene-3,6-dione (1), along with three known 3-keto steroids were isolated from the deep-water Mediterranean scleractinian coral Dendrophyllia cornigera (2-4). Moreover, four known related 3-keto steroids were isolated from the sea grass Cymodocea nodosa (5-8). The structure elucidation of steroid 1 and the full NMR resonance assignments of all isolated metabolites were based on interpretation of their spectral data. All compounds are reported for the first time as metabolites of the investigated organisms. Compounds 2 and 3 showed significant cytotoxicity against lung cancer NSCLC-N6 cell line.

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Vassilios Roussis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Efstathia Ioannou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Catherine Harvala

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Christina Tsitsimpikou

Olympic Athletic Center of Athens Spiros Louis

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Maria Kladi

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Maria Tsoukatou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Dennis Abatis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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