Fernanda das Neves Costa
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Featured researches published by Fernanda das Neves Costa.
Revista Brasileira De Ciencias Farmaceuticas | 2008
Daniela Fernandes Ramos; Gilda Guimarães Leitão; Fernanda das Neves Costa; Lisandra Ferreira de Abreu; Javier Vargas Villarreal; Suzana G. Leitão; Salvador Said Fernández; Pedro Eduardo Almeida da Silva
Thirty-six plant extracts from the brazilian Atlantic Forest were tested for their antimycobacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv and M. kansasii, using the method REMA in seriate concentrations of 100 to 0.20 µg/mL. Among the thirty six extracts tested, five were active against M. tuberculosis, and three of these extracts also showed activity against M. kansasii. Cytotoxicity test with VERO cells was performed with the five extracts active against M. tuberculosis. Only the extract of Peschiera affinis was identified as non-toxic in the concentration of 100µg/mL.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2015
Fernanda das Neves Costa; Gerold Jerz; Fabiana de Souza Figueiredo; Peter Winterhalter; Gilda Guimarães Leitão
For the development of an efficient two-stage isolation process for high-speed countercurrent chromatography (HSCCC) with focus on principal metabolites from the ethyl acetate extract of the halophyte plant Salicornia gaudichaudiana, separation selectivities of two different biphasic solvent systems with similar polarities were evaluated using the elution and extrusion approach. Efficiency in isolation of target compounds is determined by the solvent system selectivity and their chronological use in multiple separation steps. The system n-hexane-ethyl acetate-methanol-water (0.5:6:0.5:6, v/v/v/v) resulted in a comprehensive separation of polyphenolic glycosides. The system n-hexane-n-butanol-water (1:1:2, v/v/v) was less universal but was highly efficient in the fractionation of positional isomers such as di-substituted cinnamic acid quinic acid derivatives. Multiple metabolite detection performed on recovered HSCCC tube fractions was done with rapid mass-spectrometry profiling by sequential off-line injections to electrospray mass-spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). Selective ion traces of metabolites delivered reconstituted preparative HSCCC runs. Molecular weight distribution of target compounds in single HSCCC tube fractions and MS/MS fragment data were available. Chromatographic areas with strong co-elution effects and fractions of pure recoverable compounds were visualized. In total 11 metabolites have been identified and monitored. Result of this approach was a fast isolation protocol for S. gaudichaudiana metabolites using two solvent systems in a strategic sequence. The process could easily be scaled-up to larger lab-scale or industrial recovery.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2017
Fabiana de Souza Figueiredo; Rita Celano; Danila de Sousa Silva; Fernanda das Neves Costa; Peter Hewitson; Svetlana Ignatova; Anna Lisa Piccinelli; Luca Rastrelli; Suzana G. Leitão; Gilda Guimarães Leitão
Ampelozizyphus amazonicus Ducke (Rhamnaceae), a medicinal plant used to prevent malaria, is a climbing shrub, native to the Amazonian region, with jujubogenin glycoside saponins as main compounds. The crude extract of this plant is too complex for any kind of structural identification, and HPLC separation was not sufficient to resolve this issue. Therefore, the aim of this work was to obtain saponin enriched fractions from the bark ethanol extract by countercurrent chromatography (CCC) for further isolation and identification/characterisation of the major saponins by HPLC and MS. The butanol extract was fractionated by CCC with hexane - ethyl acetate - butanol - ethanol - water (1:6:1:1:6; v/v) solvent system yielding 4 group fractions. The collected fractions were analysed by UHPLC-HRMS (ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography/high resolution accurate mass spectrometry) and MSn. Group 1 presented mainly oleane type saponins, and group 3 showed mainly jujubogenin glycosides, keto-dammarane type triterpene saponins and saponins with C31 skeleton. Thus, CCC separated saponins from the butanol-rich extract by skeleton type. A further purification of group 3 by CCC (ethyl acetate - ethanol - water (1:0.2:1; v/v)) and HPLC-RI was performed in order to obtain these unusual aglycones in pure form.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2016
Fernanda das Neves Costa; Mariana Neves Vieira; Ian Garrard; Peter Hewitson; Gerold Jerz; Gilda Guimarães Leitão; Svetlana Ignatova
Countercurrent chromatography (CCC) is being widely used across the world for purification of various materials, especially in natural product research. The predictability of CCC scale-up has been successfully demonstrated using specially designed instruments of the same manufacturer. The reality is that the most of CCC users do not have access to such instruments and do not have enough experience to transfer methods from one CCC column to another. This unique study of three international teams is based on innovative approach to simplify the scale-up between different CCC machines using fractionation of Schinus terebinthifolius berries dichloromethane extract as a case study. The optimized separation methodology, recently developed by the authors (Part I), was repeatedly performed on CCC columns of different design available at most research laboratories across the world. Hexane - ethyl acetate - methanol - water (6:1:6:1, v/v/v/v) was used as solvent system with masticadienonic and 3β-masticadienolic acids as target compounds to monitor stationary phase retention and calculate peak resolution. It has been demonstrated that volumetric, linear and length scale-up transfer factors based on column characteristics can be directly applied to different i.d., volume and length columns independently on instrument make in an intra-apparatus scale-up and inter-apparatus method transfer.
Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology | 2015
Juliana Poglia Carini; Gilda Guimarães Leitão; Paulo H. Schneider; Cristiane C. Santos; Fernanda das Neves Costa; Maribete Holzschuh; Fábio Klamt; Valquiria Linck Bassani
Achyrobichalcone is a biflavonoid recently found in Achyrocline satureioides. This substance has unprecedented chemical structure and occurrence, but resembles other bioactive bichalcones, which have important pharmacological properties, such as anticancer activity. The major challenge for evaluation of the physicochemical and biological properties of this new molecule is the isolation step, which affects the purity and yield of the isolated product. Thus, the objective of this work was to develop a semi-preparative method for achyrobichalcone isolation from Achyrocline satureioides by high-speed countercurrent chromatography. The high-speed countercurrent chromatography separation was achieved in two steps. In the first step, an enriched fraction of achyrobichalcone from the freeze-dried extract was obtained, using the solvent system hexane-ethyl acetate-methanol-water 0.8:1:0.8:1, v/v. The purification of achyrobichalcone from the enriched fractions was achieved by further high-speed countercurrent chromatography fractionation with hexane-ethyl acetate-methanol-water 0.9:0.9:0.8:1, v/v. The final isolated product was obtained using preparative thin layer chromatography and crystallization procedure. A yellow semi-crystalline solid with purity close to 90% was obtained as the final product. The mass recovery of achyrobichalcone isolation was near 67%. The structural identification from spectroscopic and chromatographic techniques confirmed the achyrobichalcone structure. This is the first report of achyrobichalcone isolation on a semi-preparative scale by high-speed countercurrent chromatography. This method afforded achyrobichalcone in good yield and purity for further biopharmaceutical studies.
Planta Medica | 2015
Gilda Guimarães Leitão; Fernanda das Neves Costa
Countercurrent chromatography is a form of liquid-liquid partition chromatography in which the stationary liquid phase is retained in the apparatus without the use of a solid support. Gradient elution in countercurrent chromatography can be used in many different ways, such as linear gradients, stepwise elution gradients, pH gradients, etc. The main goal of using the gradient approach is to shorten the duration of the separation and improve resolution, especially when the retention range of the sample to be purified is broadening and, thus, the compounds cannot be purified by only one solvent system. The principle is based on modifying the mobile phase to increase the elution strength with no or minimum changes in the stationary phase, which can be a difficult task since both phases are in intimate contact all the time. The most common ways to perform gradients in countercurrent chromatography are changing the mobiles phase polarity, flow rate, and pH, what is called linear or step gradient, flow rate gradient, pH gradient, respectively.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2017
Fernanda das Neves Costa; Jane Hubert; Nicolas Borie; Alexis Kotland; Peter Hewitson; Svetlana Ignatova; Jean-Hugues Renault
Countercurrent chromatography (CCC) and centrifugal partition chromatography (CPC) are support free liquid-liquid chromatography techniques sharing the same basic principles and features. Method transfer has previously been demonstrated for both techniques but never from one to another. This study aimed to show such a feasibility using fractionation of Schinus terebinthifolius berries dichloromethane extract as a case study. Heptane - ethyl acetate - methanol -water (6:1:6:1, v/v/v/v) was used as solvent system with masticadienonic and 3β-masticadienolic acids as target compounds. The optimized separation methodology previously described in Part I and II, was scaled up from an analytical hydrodynamic CCC column (17.4mL) to preparative hydrostatic CPC instruments (250mL and 303mL) as a part of method development. Flow-rate and sample loading were further optimized on CPC. Mobile phase linear velocity is suggested as a transfer invariant parameter if the CPC column contains sufficient number of partition cells.
Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2012
Fernanda das Neves Costa; Alcides J.M. da Silva; Chaquip D. Netto; Jorge L. O. Domingos; Paulo R. R. Costa; Gilda Guimarães Leitão
Countercurrent chromatography (CCC) was employed as a useful, fast and economic alternative to conventional chromatography techniques for the purification of a synthetic pterocarpanquinone, LQB-118. The separation was performed in a two-step CCC with the solvent system hexane-chloroform-methanol-water 2:1.5:5:2 in both steps. Traditional purification of these reaction products by silica gel column chromatography demanded a large amount of solvent and time, besides allowing the irreversible adsorption of the compound in the column. The use of 1H NMR for the calculation of KD of target compound is proposed as an alternative for HPLC measurements.
Journal of Separation Science | 2010
Fernanda das Neves Costa; Gilda Guimarães Leitão
Journal of Chromatography A | 2015
Mariana Neves Vieira; Fernanda das Neves Costa; Gilda Guimarães Leitão; Ian Garrard; Peter Hewitson; Svetlana Ignatova; Peter Winterhalter; Gerold Jerz