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Dive into the research topics where Fabio C. S. Galetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio C. S. Galetti.


Química Nova | 2007

Antimycobacterial and cytotoxicity activity of synthetic and natural compounds

Ana O. de Souza; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Célio Lopes Silva; Beatriz Bicalho; Márcia M. Parma; Sebastião Ferreira Fonseca; Anita Jocelyne Marsaioli; Angela Cristina Leal Badaró Trindade; Rossimiriam Pereira de Freitas Gil; Franciglauber Silva Bezerra; Manoel Andrade-Neto; Maria da Conceição F. de Oliveira

Antimycobacterial and cytotoxicity activity of synthetic and natural compounds. Secondary metabolites from Curvularia eragrostidis and Drechslera dematioidea, Clusia sp. floral resin, alkaloids from Pilocarpus alatus, salicylideneanilines, piperidine amides, the amine 1-cinnamylpiperazine and chiral pyridinium salts were assayed on Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. N-(salicylidene)-2-hydroxyaniline was the most effective compound with a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 8 µmol/L. Dihydrocurvularin was moderately effective with a MIC of 40 µmol/L. Clusia sp. floral resin and a gallocatechin-epigallocatechin mixture showed MIC of 0.02 g/L and 38 µmol/L, respectively. The cytotoxicity was evaluated for N-(salicylidene)-2-hydroxyaniline, curvularin, dihydrocurvularin and Clusia sp. floral resin, and the selectivity indexes were > 125, 0.47, 0.75 and 5, respectively.


Revista Brasileira De Farmacognosia-brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy | 2007

Antibiotic, cytotoxic and enzyme inhibitory activity of crude extracts from Brazilian marine invertebrates

Mirna H. R. Seleghim; Simone P. Lira; Miriam H. Kossuga; Tatiana Batista; Roberto G. S. Berlinck; Eduardo Hajdu; Guilherme Muricy; Rosana Moreira da Rocha; Gislene G. F. Nascimento; Márcio Luis Andrade e Silva; Eli F. Pimenta; Otavio Henrique Thiemann; Glaucius Oliva; Bruno C. Cavalcanti; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Moraes; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Célio Lopes Silva; Ana O. de Souza; Solange Peixinho

Herein we present the results of a screening with 349 crude extracts of Brazilian marine sponges, ascidians, bryozoans and octocorals, against 16 strains of susceptible and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, one yeast (Candida albicans), Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv, three cancer cell lines MCF-7 (breast), B16 (murine melanoma ) and HCT8 (colon), and Leishmania tarentolae adenine phosphoribosyl transferase (L-APRT) enzyme. Less than 15% of marine sponge crude extracts displayed antibacterial activity, both against susceptible and antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Up to 40% of marine sponge crude extracts displayed antimycobacterial activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv. Cytotoxicity was observed for 18% of marine sponge crude extracts. Finally, less than 3% of sponge extracts inhibited L-APRT. Less than 10% of ascidian crude extracts displayed antibacterial activity. More than 25% of ascidian crude extracts were active against M. tuberculosis and the three cancer cell lines. Only two crude extracts from the ascidian Polysyncraton sp. collected in different seasons (1995 and 1997) displayed activity against L-APRT. Less than 2% of bryozoan and octocoral crude extracts presented antibacterial activity, but a high percentage of crude extracts from bryozoan and octororal displayed cytotoxic (11% and 30%, respectively) and antimycobacterial (60%) activities. The extract of only one species of bryozoan, Bugula sp., presented inhibitory activity against L-APRT. Overall, the crude extracts of marine invertebrates herein investigated presented a high level of cytotoxic and antimycobacterial activities, a lower level of antibacterial activity and only a small number of crude extracts inhibited L-APRT. Taxonomic analysis of some of the more potently active crude extracts showed the occurrence of biological activity in taxa that have been previously chemically investigated. These include marine sponges belonging to genera Aaptos, Aplysina, Callyspongia, Haliclona, Niphates, Cliona, Darwinella, Dysidea, Ircinia, Monanchora and Mycale, ascidians of the genera Didemnum, Aplidium, Botrylloides, Clavelina, Polysyncraton and Symplegma, the bryozoan Bugula sp. and octocorals of the genera Carijoa and Lophogorgia. The subsequent chemical investigation of some of the active extracts led to the isolation of several new biologically active secondary metabolites. Our results are in agreement with previous screening programs carried out abroad, that showed a high percentage of bioactive extracts from Porifera, Ascidiacea, Cnidaria and Bryozoa.


Vaccine | 2009

DNAhsp65 vaccination induces protection in mice against Paracoccidioides brasiliensis infection

Alice Melo Ribeiro; Anamélia Lorenzetti Bocca; André C. Amaral; Lúcia Helena Faccioli; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Carlos R. Zárate-Bladés; F. J. C. Figueiredo; Célio Lopes Silva; Maria Sueli Soares Felipe

Heat-shock proteins are molecules with extensive data showing their potential as immunomodulators of different types of diseases. The gene of HSP65 from Mycobacterium leprae has shown prophylactic and immunotherapeutic effects against a broad arrays of experimental models including tuberculosis, leishmaniasis, arthritis and diabetes. With this in mind, we tested the DNAhsp65 vaccine using an experimental model of Paraccocidiodomycosis, an important endemic mycosis in Latin America. The intramuscular immunization with DNAhsp65 induced, in BALB/c mice, an increase of Th1-levels cytokines and a reduction of fungal burdens resulted in a marked reduction of collagen and lung remodeling. DNAhsp65 may be an attractive candidate for prevention, therapy and as an adjuvant for mycosis treatment.


Química Nova | 2008

A multi-screening approach for marine-derived fungal metabolites and the isolation of cyclodepsipeptides from Beauveria felina

Aline M. Vita-Marques; Simone P. Lira; Roberto G. S. Berlinck; Mirna Helena Regali Seleghim; Sandra Regina Pombeiro Sponchiado; Sâmia Maria Tauk-Tornisielo; Margarida Barata; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Moraes; Bruno C. Cavalcanti; Gislene G. F. Nascimento; Ana O. de Souza; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Célio Lopes Silva; Márcio Luis Andrade e Silva; Eli F. Pimenta; Otavio Henrique Thiemann; Michel R. Z. Passarini; Lara Durães Sette

Extracts obtained from 57 marine-derived fungal strains were analyzed by HPLC-PDA, TLC and 1H NMR. The analyses showed that the growth conditions affected the chemical profile of crude extracts. Furthermore, the majority of fungal strains which produced either bioactive of chemically distinctive crude extracts have been isolated from sediments or marine algae. The chemical investigation of the antimycobacterial and cytotoxic crude extract obtained from two strains of the fungus Beauveria felina have yielded cyclodepsipeptides related to destruxins. The present approach constitutes a valuable tool for the selection of fungal strains that produce chemically interesting or biologically active secondary metabolites.


Química Nova | 2007

Isolamento e atividades biológicas de produtos naturais das esponjas monanchora arbuscula, aplysina sp. petromica ciocalyptoides e topsentia ophiraphidites, da ascídia didemnum ligulum e do octocoral carijoa riisei

Miriam H. Kossuga; Simone P. Lira; Andréa Mendes do Nascimento; Maria Teresa do Prado Gambardella; Roberto G. S. Berlinck; Yohandra Reyes Torres; Gislene G. F. Nascimento; Eli F. Pimenta; Márcio Luis Andrade e Silva; Otavio Henrique Thiemann; Glaucius Oliva; Andre G. Tempone; Marcia de Souza Carvalho Melhem; Ana O. de Souza; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Célio Lopes Silva; Bruno C. Cavalcanti; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Moraes; Eduardo Hajdu; Solange Peixinho; Rosana Moreira da Rocha

The investigation of extracts from six species of marine invertebrates yielded one new and several known natural products. Isoptilocaulin from the sponge Monanchora aff. arbuscula displayed antimicrobial activity at 1.3 mg/mL against an oxacillin-resistant strain of Staphylococcus aureus. Five inactive known dibromotyrosine derivatives, 2 6, were isolated from a new species of marine sponge, Aplysina sp. The sponges Petromica ciocalyptoides and Topsentia ophiraphidites yielded the known halistanol sulfate A (7) as an inhibitor of the antileishmanial target adenosine phosphoribosyl transferase. The ascidian Didemnum ligulum yielded asterubin (10) and the new N,N-dimethyl-O-methylethanolamine (11). The octocoral Carijoa riisei yielded the known 18-acetoxypregna-1,4,20-trien-3-one (12), which displayed cytotoxic activity against the cancer cell lines SF295, MDA-MB435, HCT8 and HL60.The investigation of extracts from six species of marine invertebrates yielded one new and several known natural products. Isoptilocaulin from the sponge Monanchora aff. arbuscula displayed antimicrobial activity at 1.3 mg/mL against an oxacillin-resistant strain of Staphylococcus aureus. Five inactive known dibromotyrosine derivatives, 2 6, were isolated from a new species of marine sponge, Aplysina sp. The sponges Petromica ciocalyptoides and Topsentia ophiraphidites yielded the known halistanol sulfate A (7) as an inhibitor of the antileishmanial target adenosine phosphoribosyl transferase. The ascidian Didemnum ligulum yielded asterubin (10) and the new N,N-dimethyl-O-methylethanolamine (11). The octocoral Carijoa riisei yielded the known 18-acetoxypregna-1,4,20-trien-3-one (12), which displayed cytotoxic activity against the cancer cell lines SF295, MDA-MB435, HCT8 and HL60.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2008

Protective efficacy of different strategies employing Mycobacterium leprae heat-shock protein 65 against tuberculosis

Patricia R. M. Souza; Carlos R. Zárate-Bladés; Juliana I. Hori; Simone G. Ramos; Deison Soares de Lima; Tatiana Vieira de Moraes Schneider; Rogério Silva Rosada; Lucimara Gaziola de la Torre; Maria Helena Andrade Santana; Izaíra T. Brandão; Ana Paula Masson; Arlete A. M. Coelho-Castelo; Vania L. D. Bonato; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Eduardo Dc Gonçalves; Domingos A. Botte; Jeanne B. de M. Machado; Célio Lopes Silva

Background: Tuberculosis is a major threat to human health. The high disease burden remains unaffected and the appearance of extremely drug-resistant strains in different parts of the world argues in favor of the urgent need for a new effective vaccine. One of the promising candidates is heat-shock protein 65 when used as a genetic vaccine (DNAhsp65). Nonetheless, there are substantial data indicating that BCG, the only available anti-TB vaccine for clinical use, provides other important beneficial effects in immunized infants. Methods: We compared the protective efficacy of BCG and Hsp65 antigens in mice using different strategies: i) BCG, single dose subcutaneously; ii) naked DNAhsp65, four doses, intramuscularly; iii) liposomes containing DNAhsp65, single dose, intranasally; iv) microspheres containing DNAhsp65 or rHsp65, single dose, intramuscularly; and v) prime–boost with subcutaneous BCG and intramuscular DNAhsp65. Results: All the immunization protocols were able to protect mice against infection, with special benefits provided by DNAhsp65 in liposomes and prime–boost strategies. Conclusion: Among the immunization protocols tested, liposomes containing DNAhsp65 represent the most promising strategy for the development of a new anti-TB vaccine.


Journal of Liposome Research | 2009

In vitro uptake and antimycobacterial activity of liposomal usnic acid formulation

Mariane C. B. Lira; Marigilson P. Siqueira-Moura; Hercília M. L. Rolim-Santos; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Andreza R. Simioni; Noemia Pereira da Silva Santos; Eryvaldo Sócrates Tabosa do Egito; Célio Lopes Silva; Antonio C. Tedesco; Nereide S. Santos-Magalhães

The cellular uptake and antimycobacterial activity of usnic acid (UA) and usnic acid-loaded liposomes (UA-LIPOs) were assessed on J774 macrophages. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) and the minimal bactericidal concentration (MBC) of UA and UA-LIPO against Mycobacterium tuberculosis were determined. Concentrations required to inhibit 50% of cell proliferation (IC50) were 22.5 (±0.60) and 12.5 (±0.26) μg/ml, for UA and UA-LIPO, respectively. The MICs of UA and UA-LIPO were 6.5 and 5.8 μg/mL, respectively. The MBC of UA-LIPO was twice as low (16 μg/mL) as that of UA (32 μg/mL). An improvement in the intracellular uptake of UA-LIPO was found (21.6 × 104 ± 28.3 × 102 c.p.s), in comparison with UA (9.5 × 104 ± 11.4 × 102 c.p.s). In addition, UA-LIPO remains much longer inside macrophages (30 hours). All data obtained from the encapsulation of usnic acid into liposomes as a drug delivery system (DDS) indicate a strong interaction between UA-liposomes and J774 macrophages, thereby facilitating UA penetration into cells. Considering such a process as ruling the Mycobacterium-transfection by magrophages, we could state that associating UA with this DDS leads to an improvement in its antimycobacterial activity.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2009

Comprehensive gene expression profiling in lungs of mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis following DNAhsp65 immunotherapy

Carlos Rodrigo Zárate Bladés; Vânia Luiza Deperon Bonato; Eduardo Lani Volpe da Silveira; Marina Oliveira e Paula; Cristina M. Junta; Paula Sandrin-Garcia; Ana Lúcia Fachin; Stephano S. Mello; Renato Cardoso; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Arlete A. M. Coelho-Castelo; Simone G. Ramos; Eduardo A. Donadi; Elza T. Sakamoto-Hojo; Geraldo A. Passos; Célio Lopes Silva

The continued increase in tuberculosis (TB) rates and the appearance of extremely resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains (XDR‐TB) worldwide are some of the great problems of public health. In this context, DNA immunotherapy has been proposed as an effective alternative that could circumvent the limitations of conventional drugs. Nonetheless, the molecular events underlying these therapeutic effects are poorly understood.


Human Vaccines | 2010

A subunit vaccine based on biodegradable microspheres carrying rHsp65 protein and KLK protects BALB/c mice against tuberculosis infection

Sandra Aparecida dos Santos; Carlos R. Zárate-Bladés; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Izaíra T. Brandão; Ana Paula Masson; Edson Garcia Soares; Ana Paula Ulian Araújo; Célio Lopes Silva

Of the hundreds of new tuberculosis (TB) vaccine candidates, some have therapeutic value in addition to their prophylactic properties. This is the case for the DNA vaccine encoding heat-shock protein 65 (DNAhsp65) from Mycobacterium leprae. However, there are concerns about the use of DNA vaccines in certain populations such as newborns and pregnant women. Thus, the optimization of vaccination strategies that circumvent this limitation is a priority. This study evaluated the efficacy of a single dose subunit vaccine based on recombinant Hsp65 protein against infection with M. tuberculosis H37Rv. The Hsp65 protein in this study was either associated or not with immunostimulants, and was encapsulated in biodegradable PLGA microspheres. Our results demonstrate that the protein was entrapped in microspheres of adequate diameter to be engulfed by phagocytes. Mice vaccinated with a single dose of Hsp65-microspheres or Hsp65+CpG-microspheres developed both humoral and cellular-specific immune responses. However, they did not protect mice against challenge with M. tuberculosis. By contrast, Hsp65+KLK-microspheres induced specific immune responses that reduced bacilli loads and minimized lung parenchyma damage. These data suggest that a subunit vaccine based on recombinant protein Hsp65 is feasible.


Química Nova | 2010

Metabólitos secundários das esponjas Aplysina fistularis e Dysidea sp. e atividade antituberculose da 11-cetofistularina-3

Renata Cristina Gandolfi; Marina B. Medina; Roberto G. S. Berlinck; Simone P. Lira; Fabio C. S. Galetti; Célio Lopes Silva; Katyuscya Veloso; Antonio G. Ferreira; Eduardo Hajdu; Solange Peixinho

The present investigation reports the isolation of aeroplysinin-2, 2-(3,5-dibromo-4-methoxyphenyl)-N,N,N-trimethyletanamonium, 7,9-dibromo-10-hydroxy-8-methoxy-1-oxa-2-azaspiro[4.5]deca-2,6,8-trien-3-carboxylic acid and its methyl ester, 11-oxoaerothionin, aerothionin, 11-keto-12-hydroxyaerothionin, 11-ketofistularin-3 and fistularin-3 from Aplysina fistularis, as well as of furodysinin lactone and 9α,11α-epoxicholest-7-en-3β,5α,6α,10-tetrol-6-acetate from Dysidea sp. Although the extracts of both sponges displayed antituberculosis activity, only 11-ketofistularin-3 isolated from A. fistularis displayed antimycobacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H34Rv, with MIC at 16 μg/mL and SI of 40, a result that reinforce that fistularin-3 derivatives are interesting leads for the development of antituberculosis drugs.

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Eduardo Hajdu

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Simone P. Lira

University of São Paulo

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Solange Peixinho

Federal University of Bahia

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Bruno C. Cavalcanti

Federal University of Ceará

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Cláudia Pessoa

Federal University of Ceará

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Eli F. Pimenta

University of São Paulo

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