Don Antoine Lanfranchi
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Don Antoine Lanfranchi.
Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013
Didier Belorgey; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet
The homodimeric flavoenzyme glutathione reductase catalyzes NADPH-dependent glutathione disulfide reduction. This reaction is important for keeping the redox homeostasis in human cells and in the human pathogen Plasmodium falciparum. Different types of NADPH-dependent disulfide reductase inhibitors were designed in various chemical series to evaluate the impact of each inhibition mode on the propagation of the parasites. Against malaria parasites in cultures the most potent and specific effects were observed for redox-active agents acting as subversive substrates for both glutathione reductases of the Plasmodium-infected red blood cells. In their oxidized form, these redox-active compounds are reduced by NADPH-dependent flavoenzyme-catalyzed reactions in the cytosol of infected erythrocytes. In their reduced forms, these compounds can reduce molecular oxygen to reactive oxygen species, or reduce oxidants like methemoglobin, the major nutrient of the parasite, to indigestible hemoglobin. Furthermore, studies on a fluorinated suicide-substrate of the human glutathione reductase indicate that the glutathione reductase-catalyzed bioactivation of 3-benzylnaphthoquinones to the corresponding reduced 3-benzoyl metabolites is essential for the observed antimalarial activity. In conclusion, the antimalarial lead naphthoquinones are suggested to perturb the major redox equilibria of the targeted cells. These effects result in developmental arrest of the parasite and contribute to the removal of the parasitized erythrocytes by macrophages.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2012
Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Elena Cesar-Rodo; Benoît Bertrand; Hsin-Hung Huang; Latasha Day; Laure Johann; Mourad Elhabiri; Katja Becker; David L. Williams; Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet
Improving the solubility of polysubstituted 1,4-naphthoquinone derivatives was achieved by introducing nitrogen in two different positions of the naphthoquinone core, at C-5 and at C-8 of menadione through a two-step, straightforward synthesis based on the regioselective hetero-Diels-Alder reaction. The antimalarial and the antischistosomal activities of these polysubstituted aza-1,4-naphthoquinone derivatives were evaluated and led to the selection of distinct compounds for antimalarial versus antischistosomal action. The Ag(II)-assisted oxidative radical decarboxylation of the phenyl acetic acids using AgNO(3) and ammonium peroxodisulfate was modified to generate the 3-picolinyl-menadione with improved pharmacokinetic parameters, high antimalarial effects and capacity to inhibit the formation of β-hematin.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Mourad Elhabiri; Pavel Sidorov; Elena Cesar-Rodo; Gilles Marcou; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet; Dragos Horvath; Alexandre Varnek
In the context of the investigation of drug-induced oxidative stress in parasitic cells, electrochemical properties of a focused library of polysubstituted menadione derivatives were studied by cyclic voltammetry. These values were used, together with compatible measurements from literature (quinones and related compounds), to build and evaluate a predictive structure-redox potential model (quantitative structure-property relationship, QSPR). Able to provide an online evaluation (through Web interface) of the oxidant character of quinones, the model is aimed to help chemists targeting their synthetic efforts towards analogues of desired redox properties.
Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2012
Laure Johann; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet; Mourad Elhabiri
The role of redox enzymes in establishing a microenvironment for parasite development is well characterized. Mimicking human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and glutathione reductase (GR) deficiencies by redox-cycling compounds thus represents a challenge to the design of new preclinical antiparasitic drug candidates. Schistosomes and malarial parasites feed on hemoglobin. Heme, the toxic prosthetic group of the protein, is not digested and represents a challenge to the redox metabolism of the parasites. Here, we report on old and new redox-cycling compounds--whose antiparasitic activities are related to their interference with (met)hemoglobin degradation and hematin crystallization. Three key-assays allowed probing and differentiating the mechanisms of drug actions. Inhibition of β-hematin was first compared to the heme binding as a possible mode of action. All tested ligands interact with the hematin π-π dimer with K(D) similar to those measured for the major antiparasitic drugs. No correlation between a high affinity for hematin and the capacity to prevent β-hematin formation was however deduced. Inhibition of β-hematin formation is consequently not the result of a single process but results from redox processes following electron transfers from the drugs to iron(III)-containing targets. The third experiment highlighted that several redox-active compounds (in their reduced forms) are able to efficiently reduce methemoglobin to hemoglobin in a GR/NADPH-coupled assay. A correlation between methemoglobin reduction and inhibition of β-hematin was shown, demonstrating that both processes are closely related. The ability of our redox-cyclers to trigger methemoglobin reduction therefore constitutes a critical step to understand the mechanism of action of our drug candidates.
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2008
Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Marie-Cécile Blanc; Muriel Vellutini; Pascale Bradesi; Joseph Casanova; Félix Tomi
The 13C NMR behaviour of 21 p‐menthanic terpene bearing an oxygenated function (alcohol, ketone, acetate) was examined in the presence of a chiral lanthanide shift reagent (Yb(hfc)3). For each monocyclic compound, we measured the lanthanide‐induced shift (LIS) on the signals of the carbons and the splitting of signals allowing the enantiomeric differentiation. Some general features were found about their LIS behaviour: experimental data establishing distinct patterns for carvomenthone‐like compounds and menthone‐like compounds. The enantiomeric splitting was observed for the majority of signals in the spectrum of each compound. In the case of alcohols and acetates, the influence of the relative stereochemistry (cis vs trans) of isopropyl(ene) and the binding function was discussed. Copyright
Phytochemical Analysis | 2010
Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Félix Tomi; Joseph Casanova
INTRODUCTION The two enantiomers of hyoscyamine, an alkaloid found in many plant species, have distinct pharmacological and biological properties. Methods for the discrimination of both enantiomers are almost exclusively based on chiral HPLC/UV. Determination of the enantiomeric ratio (e.r.) of hyoscyamine is a challenging problem since this compound tends to racaemise, forming atropine during acid-base extraction. OBJECTIVE To develop a protocol for the calculation of enantiomeric ratio of hyoscyamine in a plant extract using a (13) C NMR method. METHODOLOGY Samples were prepared by extraction of dried Datura stramonium seeds. Observation of C12 and C15 NMR signals of hyoscyamine in the presence of one equivalent of TFA and sub-stoichiometric amount of Yb(hfc)(3) allowed the calculation of the e.r. of S-(-) and R-(+)-hyoscyamine.The method was optimised with various mixtures of (+) and (-)-hyoscyamine ranging from 50:50 (racaemic mixture, i.e. atropine) to 98.5:1.5. The e.r. measured by NMR on the signals of aromatic C12 and C15 were in agreement with the gravimetrically prepared samples. The method was then applied to an extract of Datura stramonium and S-(-)-hyoscyamine was the unique enantiomer. CONCLUSION The study showed that the e.r. determination of atropine/hyoscyamine was achieved with a routine NMR spectrometer, using CLSR/TFA on pure compounds as well as on the crude extract of Datura stramonium.
Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Emilie Evain-Bana; Lucie Schiavo; Christophe Bour; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Simone Berardozzi; Francesca Ghirga; Denyse Bagrel; Bruno Botta; Gilles Hanquet; Mattia Mori
Abstract The cell division cycle 25 phosphatases (CDC25A, B, and C; E.C. 3.1.3.48) are key regulator of the cell cycle in human cells. Their aberrant expression has been associated with the insurgence and development of various types of cancer, and with a poor clinical prognosis. Therefore, CDC25 phosphatases are a valuable target for the development of small molecule inhibitors of therapeutic relevance. Here, we used an integrated strategy mixing organic chemistry with biological investigation and molecular modeling to study novel quinonoid derivatives as CDC25 inhibitors. The most promising molecules proved to inhibit CDC25 isoforms at single digit micromolar concentration, becoming valuable tools in chemical biology investigations and profitable leads for further optimization.
Molecules | 2016
Birgit Viira; Thibault Gendron; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Sandrine Cojean; Dragos Horvath; Gilles Marcou; Alexandre Varnek; Louis Maes; Uko Maran; Philippe M. Loiseau; Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet
Malaria is a parasitic tropical disease that kills around 600,000 patients every year. The emergence of resistant Plasmodium falciparum parasites to artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) represents a significant public health threat, indicating the urgent need for new effective compounds to reverse ACT resistance and cure the disease. For this, extensive curation and homogenization of experimental anti-Plasmodium screening data from both in-house and ChEMBL sources were conducted. As a result, a coherent strategy was established that allowed compiling coherent training sets that associate compound structures to the respective antimalarial activity measurements. Seventeen of these training sets led to the successful generation of classification models discriminating whether a compound has a significant probability to be active under the specific conditions of the antimalarial test associated with each set. These models were used in consensus prediction of the most likely active from a series of curcuminoids available in-house. Positive predictions together with a few predicted as inactive were then submitted to experimental in vitro antimalarial testing. A large majority from predicted compounds showed antimalarial activity, but not those predicted as inactive, thus experimentally validating the in silico screening approach. The herein proposed consensus machine learning approach showed its potential to reduce the cost and duration of antimalarial drug discovery.
Spectroscopy Letters | 2010
Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Muriel Vellutini; Marie-Cécile Blanc; Pascale Bradesi; Joseph Casanova; Félix Tomi
ABSTRACT The 13C NMR behavior of 10 oxygenated compounds (ketones, alcohols, acetates) bearing the bicyclo[2.2.1]heptane skeleton was examined in the presence of a chiral lanthanide shift reagent (Yb(hfc)3). For each compound, we measured the lanthanide-induced shift (LIS) on the signals of the carbons and the splitting of signals, enabling the enantiomeric differentiation. The enantiomeric splitting was observed for the majority of signals in the spectrum of each compound.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Shainaz Landge; Ekatarina Tkatchouk; Diego Benitez; Don Antoine Lanfranchi; Mourad Elhabiri; William A. Goddard; Ivan Aprahamian