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Dive into the research topics where Denise C. Arruda is active.

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Featured researches published by Denise C. Arruda.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2005

Antileishmanial Activity of the Terpene Nerolidol

Denise C. Arruda; Fabio L. D'Alexandri; Alejandro M. Katzin; Silvia R. B. Uliana

ABSTRACT The activity of nerolidol, a sesquiterpene used as a food-flavoring agent and currently under testing as a skin penetration enhancer for the transdermal delivery of therapeutic drugs, was evaluated against Leishmania species. Nerolidol inhibited the growth of Leishmania amazonensis, L. braziliensis, and L. chagasi promastigotes and L. amazonensis amastigotes with in vitro 50% inhibitory concentrations of 85, 74, 75, and 67 μM, respectively. The treatment of L. amazonensis-infected macrophages with 100 μM nerolidol resulted in 95% reduction in infection rates. Inhibition of isoprenoid biosynthesis, as shown by reduced incorporation of [2-14C]mevalonic acid (MVA) or [1-14C]acetic acid precursors into dolichol, ergosterol, and ubiquinone, was observed in nerolidol-treated promastigotes. This drug effect can be attributed to the blockage of an early step in the mevalonate pathway, since incorporation of the precursor [1(n)-3H]farnesyl pyrophosphate in polyisoprenoids is not inhibited by nerolidol. L. amazonensis-infected BALB/c mice were treated with intraperitoneal doses of 100 mg/kg/day for 12 days or topically with 5 or 10% ointments for 4 weeks. Significant reduction of lesion sizes in nerolidol treated mice was observed for both treatment routes. However, long-term follow up indicated that the disease was not cured in this highly susceptible animal model. Nonetheless, the in vitro activity of nerolidol against these parasites may prove a useful tool for the development of new drugs for the treatment of leishmaniasis. In addition, biosynthesis of dolichols with 11 and 12 isoprene units was identified in Leishmania, as described for other trypanosomatids and Apicomplexa.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

α-Pinene isolated from Schinus terebinthifolius Raddi (Anacardiaceae) induces apoptosis and confers antimetastatic protection in a melanoma model

Alisson L. Matsuo; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Denise C. Arruda; Felipe V. Pereira; Jorge Augusto Borin Scutti; Mariana H. Massaoka; Luiz R. Travassos; Patricia Sartorelli; João Henrique G. Lago

Malignant melanoma is one the most aggressive types of cancer and its incidence has gradually increased in the last years, accounting for about 75% of skin cancer deaths. This poor prognosis results from the tumor resistance to conventional drugs mainly by deregulation of apoptotic pathways. The aim of this work was to investigate the cell death mechanism induced by α-pinene and its therapeutic application. Our results demonstrated that α-pinene was able to induce apoptosis evidenced by early disruption of the mitochondrial potential, production of reactive oxygen species, increase in caspase-3 activity, heterochromatin aggregation, DNA fragmentation and exposure of phosphatidyl serine on the cell surface. Most importantly, this molecule was very effective in the treatment of experimental metastatic melanoma reducing the number of lung tumor nodules. This is the first report on the apoptotic and antimetastatic activity of isolated α-pinene.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Jacaranone induces apoptosis in melanoma cells via ROS-mediated downregulation of Akt and p38 MAPK activation and displays antitumor activity in vivo.

Mariana H. Massaoka; Alisson L. Matsuo; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Camyla F. Farias; Natalia Girola; Denise C. Arruda; Jorge Augusto Borin Scutti; Paulete Romoff; Oriana A. Fávero; Marcelo J. P. Ferreira; João Henrique G. Lago; Luiz R. Travassos

Background Malignant melanoma is a deadly type of metastatic skin cancer with increased incidence over the past 30 years. Despite the advanced knowledge on the biology, immunobiology and molecular genetics of melanoma, the alternatives of treatment are limited with poor prognosis. On clinical trials, natural products and among them redox-active quinones have been tested in the attempt to control the growth of cancer cells. Recently, we isolated jacaranone from Pentacalia desiderabilis, a benzoquinone derivative that showed a broad antitumor activity and protective anti-melanoma effect in a syngeneic model. The purified substance is active at micromolar concentrations, is not hemolytic, and is not toxic in naïve mice. Methodology/Principal Findings The jacaranone antitumor activity was shown against several human cancer cell lines in vitro. Moreover, the induction of apoptosis in murine melanoma cells and jacaranone antitumor activity in vivo, in a melanoma experimental model, were also shown. Jacaranone renders antiproliferative and proapoptotic responses in tumor cells, by acting on Akt and p38 MAPK signaling pathways through generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The free radical scavenger N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) was able to completely suppress cell death induced by jacaranone as it blocked Akt downregulation, p38 MAPK activation as well as upregulation of proapoptotic Bax. Notably, treatment of melanoma growing subcutaneously in mice with jacaranone significantly extended the mean survival times in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusions/Significance The results provide evidence for the mechanisms of action of jacaranone and emphasize the potential use of this quinone for the treatment of melanoma.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

β-Actin-binding Complementarity-determining Region 2 of Variable Heavy Chain from Monoclonal Antibody C7 Induces Apoptosis in Several Human Tumor Cells and Is Protective against Metastatic Melanoma

Denise C. Arruda; Luana C. P. Santos; Filipe M. Melo; Felipe V. Pereira; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Alisson L. Matsuo; Renato A. Mortara; Maria A. Juliano; Elaine G. Rodrigues; Andrey S. Dobroff; Luciano Polonelli; Luiz R. Travassos

Background: Immunoglobulin complementarity-determining region (CDR) peptides frequently display antitumor activities. Results: Monoclonal antibody C7 CDR-H2 binds to β-actin and induces polymerization, F-actin stabilization, and tumor cell death. Conclusion: Alterations of actin dynamics trigger reactive oxygen species and tumor cell apoptosis. Significance: The in vitro apoptotic effect and in vivo antimetastatic activity of peptide C7H2 makes it a candidate to be developed as an anticancer drug. Complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) from monoclonal antibodies tested as synthetic peptides display anti-infective and antitumor activities, independent of the specificity of the native antibody. Previously, we have shown that the synthetic peptide C7H2, based on the heavy chain CDR 2 from monoclonal antibody C7, a mAb directed to a mannoprotein of Candida albicans, significantly reduced B16F10 melanoma growth and lung colony formation by triggering tumor apoptosis. The mechanism, however, by which C7H2 induced apoptosis in tumor cells remained unknown. Here, we demonstrate that C7H2 interacts with components of the tumor cells cytoskeleton, being rapidly internalized after binding to the tumor cell surface. Mass spectrometry analysis and in vitro validation revealed that β-actin is the receptor of C7H2 in the tumor cells. C7H2 induces β-actin polymerization and F-actin stabilization, linked with abundant generation of superoxide anions and apoptosis. Major phenotypes following peptide binding were chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation, annexin V binding, lamin disruption, caspase 8 and 3 activation, and organelle alterations. Finally, we evaluated the cytotoxic efficacy of C7H2 in a panel of human tumor cell lines. All tumor cell lines studied were equally susceptible to C7H2 in vitro. The C7H2 amide without further derivatization significantly reduced lung metastasis of mice endovenously challenged with B16F10-Nex2 melanoma cells. No significant cytotoxicity was observed toward nontumorigenic cell lines on short incubation in vitro or in naïve mice injected with a high dose of the peptide. We believe that C7H2 is a promising peptide to be developed as an anticancer drug.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Peptides of the Constant Region of Antibodies Display Fungicidal Activity

Luciano Polonelli; Tecla Ciociola; Walter Magliani; Pier Paolo Zanello; Tiziana D'Adda; Serena Galati; Flavia De Bernardis; Silvia Arancia; Elena Gabrielli; Eva Pericolini; Anna Vecchiarelli; Denise C. Arruda; Márcia Pinto; Luiz R. Travassos; Thelma A. Pertinhez; Alberto Spisni; Stefania Conti

Synthetic peptides with sequences identical to fragments of the constant region of different classes (IgG, IgM, IgA) of antibodies (Fc-peptides) exerted a fungicidal activity in vitro against pathogenic yeasts, such as Candida albicans, Candida glabrata, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Malassezia furfur, including caspofungin and triazole resistant strains. Alanine-substituted derivatives of fungicidal Fc-peptides, tested to evaluate the critical role of each residue, displayed unaltered, increased or decreased candidacidal activity in vitro. An Fc-peptide, included in all human IgGs, displayed a therapeutic effect against experimental mucosal and systemic candidiasis in mouse models. It is intriguing to hypothesize that some Fc-peptides may influence the antifungal immune response and constitute the basis for devising new antifungal agents.


Clinics | 2013

FTY720 induces apoptosis in B16F10-NEX2 murine melanoma cells, limits metastatic development in vivo, and modulates the immune system.

Felipe V. Pereira; Denise C. Arruda; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Mariana H. Massaoka; Alisson L. Matsuo; Valquiria Bueno; Elaine G. Rodrigues

OBJECTIVE: Available chemotherapy presents poor control over the development of metastatic melanoma. FTY720 is a compound already approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of patients with multiple sclerosis. It has also been observed that FTY720 inhibits tumor growth in vivo (experimental models) and in vitro (animal and human tumor cells). The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of FTY720 on a metastatic melanoma model and in tumor cell lines. METHODS: We analyzed FTY720 efficacy in vivo in a syngeneic murine metastatic melanoma model, in which we injected tumor cells intravenously into C57BL/6 mice and then treated the mice orally with the compound for 7 days. We also treated mice and human tumor cell lines with FTY720 in vitro, and cell viability and death pathways were analyzed. RESULTS: FTY720 treatment limited metastatic melanoma growth in vivo and promoted a dose-dependent decrease in the viability of murine and human tumor cells in vitro. Melanoma cells treated with FTY720 exhibited characteristics of programmed cell death, reactive oxygen species generation, and increased β-catenin expression. In addition, FTY720 treatment resulted in an immunomodulatory effect in vivo by decreasing the percentage of Foxp3+ cells, without interfering with CD8+ T cells or lymphocyte-producing interferon-gamma. CONCLUSION: Further studies are needed using FTY720 as a monotherapy or in combined therapy, as different types of cancer cells would require a variety of signaling pathways to be extinguished.


Scientific Reports | 2016

A Naturally Occurring Antibody Fragment Neutralizes Infectivity of Diverse Infectious Agents

Luciano Polonelli; Tecla Ciociola; Lisa Elviri; Pier Paolo Zanello; Laura Giovati; Denise C. Arruda; Julián E. Muñoz; Renato A. Mortara; Giulia Morace; Elisa Borghi; Serena Galati; Oriano Marin; Claudio Casoli; Elisabetta Pilotti; Paola Ronzi; Luiz R. Travassos; Walter Magliani; Stefania Conti

A phosphorylated peptide, named K40H, derived from the constant region of IgMs was detected in human serum by liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry. Synthetic K40H proved to exert a potent in vitro activity against fungal pathogens, and to inhibit HIV-1 replication in vitro and ex vivo. It also showed a therapeutic effect against an experimental infection by Candida albicans in the invertebrate model Galleria mellonella. K40H represents the proof of concept of the innate role that naturally occurring antibody fragments may exert against infectious agents, shedding a new light upon the posthumous role of antibodies and opening a new scenario on the multifaceted functionality of humoral immunity.


Archive | 2013

Melanoma: Perspectives of a Vaccine Based on Peptides

Mariana H. Massaoka; Alisson L. Matsuo; Jorge Augusto Borin Scutti; Denise C. Arruda; Aline N. Rabaça; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Camyla F. Farias; Natalia Girola; Luiz R. Travassos

Anti-tumor peptides have been identified in internal sequences of immunoglobulins, mainly the complementarity determining regions (CDRs), and also as sequences of signaling proteins. The in vitro effects of these peptides against several tumor cell lines involved different receptors and mechanisms mainly affecting the cell invasion, proliferation, cell cycle and apoptosis. Peptides also exerted in vivo protection using a melanoma subcutaneous and metastatic model, but this effect depended on the immune response. More specifically, peptides activated dendritic cells (DCs) and these cells exerted a potent anti-tumor effect. Experiments with DCs activated ex-vivo and transferred to tumor-challenged animals showed a protection identical to that of peptides alone suggesting that the latter activate DCs in vivo. A vaccine based on peptides is encouraged by the protection exerted by a signaling protein-derived peptide that caused arrest of a 200-mm3 growing subcutaneous melanoma, and by Ig-CDR readily synthesized, purified peptides that displayed anti-metastatic melanoma activities.


Pharmacognosy Magazine | 2014

Pyrostegia venusta heptane extract containing saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons induces apoptosis on B16F10-Nex2 melanoma cells and displays antitumor activity in vivo

Carlos R. Figueiredo; Alisson L. Matsuo; Felipe V. Pereira; Aline N. Rabaça; Camyla Fernandez de Farias; Natalia Girola; Mariana H. Massaoka; Ricardo A. Azevedo; Jorge Augusto Borin Scutti; Denise C. Arruda; Luciana Pereira Silva; Elaine G. Rodrigues; João Henrique G. Lago; Luiz R. Travassos; Regildo Márico Gonçalves da Silva

Background: Pyrostegia venusta (Ker. Gawl.) Miers (Bignoniacea) is a medicinal plant from the Brazilian Cerrado used to treat leucoderma and common diseases of the respiratory system. Objective: To investigate the antitumor activity of P.venusta extracts against melanoma. Materials and Methods: The cytotoxic activity and tumor induced cell death of heptane extract (HE) from P. venusta flowers was evaluated against murine melanoma B16F10-Nex2 cells in vitro and in a syngeneic model in vivo. Results: We found that HE induced apoptosis in melanoma cells by disruption of the mitochondrial membrane potential, induction of reactive oxygen species and late apoptosis evidenced by plasma membrane blebbing, cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation and DNA fragmentation, exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface and activation of caspase-2,-3,-8,-9. HE was also protective against singeneyc subcutaneous melanoma HE compounds were also able to induce cell cycle arrest at G2/M phases on tumor cells. On fractionation of HE in silica gel we isolated a cytotoxic fraction that contained a mixture of saturated hydrocarbons identified by 1H NMR and GC-MS analyses. Predominant species were octacosane (C28H58-36%) and triacontane (C30H62-13%), which individually showed significant cytotoxic activity against murine melanoma B16F10-Nex2 cells in vitro and a very promising antitumor protection against subcutaneous melanoma in vivo. Conclusion: The results suggest that the components of the heptane extract, mainly octasane and triacontane, which showed antitumor properties in experimental melanoma upon regional administration, might also be therapeutic in human cancer, such as in the mostly epidermal and slowly invasive melanomas, such as acral lentiginous melanoma, as an adjuvant treatment to surgical excision.


FEBS Open Bio | 2016

AC-1001 H3 CDR peptide induces apoptosis and signs of autophagy in vitro and exhibits antimetastatic activity in a syngeneic melanoma model

Aline N. Rabaça; Denise C. Arruda; Carlos R. Figueiredo; Mariana H. Massaoka; Camyla F. Farias; Dayane Batista Tada; Vera Susana Carneiro Maia; Pedro Ismael da Silva Junior; Natalia Girola; Fernando Real; Renato A. Mortara; Luciano Polonelli; Luiz R. Travassos

Antibody‐derived peptides modulate functions of the immune system and are a source of anti‐infective and antitumor substances. Recent studies have shown that they comprise amino acid sequences of immunoglobulin complementarity‐determining regions, but also fragments of constant regions. VH CDR3 of murine mAb AC‐1001 displays antimetastatic activities using B16F10‐Nex2 murine melanoma cells in a syngeneic model. The peptide was cytotoxic in vitro in murine and human melanoma cells inducing reactive oxygen species (ROS) and apoptosis by the intrinsic pathway. Signs of autophagy were also suggested by the increased expression of LC3/LC3II and Beclin 1 and by ultrastructural evidence. AC‐1001 H3 bound to both G‐ and F‐actin and inhibited tumor cell migration. These results are important evidence of the antitumor activity of Ig CDR‐derived peptides.

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Luiz R. Travassos

Federal University of São Paulo

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Alisson L. Matsuo

Federal University of São Paulo

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Carlos R. Figueiredo

Federal University of São Paulo

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Mariana H. Massaoka

Federal University of São Paulo

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Felipe V. Pereira

Federal University of São Paulo

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Jorge Augusto Borin Scutti

Federal University of São Paulo

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Natalia Girola

Federal University of São Paulo

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Aline N. Rabaça

Federal University of São Paulo

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Camyla F. Farias

Federal University of São Paulo

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