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Dive into the research topics where Franco Delle Monache is active.

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Featured researches published by Franco Delle Monache.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1997

Chemical composition and antimicrobial activity of Croton urucurana Baillon (Euphorbiaceae).

Marize Terezinha Lopes Pereira Peres; Franco Delle Monache; Alexandre Bella Cruz; Moacir Geraldo Pizzolatti; Rosendo A. Yunes

In the methanolic extract of Croton urucurana Baillon (Euphorbiaceae) a number of known compounds, such as acetyl aleuritolic acid, stigmasterol, beta-sitosterol, campesterol, beta-sitosterol-O-glucoside, sonderianin, catechin and gallocatechin were isolated and identified by MS and NMR spectroscopy, HRGC and data from literature. The antibacterial activity of the aqueous-EtOH extract, some fractions of the methanolic extract and some of the isolated compounds, were tested against Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhimurium. Acetyl aleuritolic acid exhibits the best minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) against both Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhimurium.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2002

Anti-allodynic action of the tormentic acid, a triterpene isolated from plant, against neuropathic and inflammatory persistent pain in mice.

Léslei B Bortalanza; Juliano Ferreira; Sônia Corina Hess; Franco Delle Monache; Rosendo A Yunes; João B. Calixto

Experiments were designed to address whether the pentacyclic triterpene tormentic acid isolated from the stem bark of the plant Vochysia divergens exerts oral anti-allodynic properties in two models of chronic pain in mice: neuropathic pain caused by partial ligation of the sciatic nerve and inflammatory pain produced by intraplantar injection of Complete Freunds Adjuvant. Oral administration of tormentic acid (30 mg/kg) twice a day for several consecutive days produced time-dependent and pronounced anti-allodynia effect in both ispsilateral and contralateral paws after plantar injection of Complete Freunds Adjuvant. The inhibition observed was 82+/-9% and 100+/-11%, respectively. Interestingly, tormentic acid did not inhibit paw oedema formation following Complete Freunds Adjuvant plantar injection. Tormentic acid (30 mg/kg, p.o.) and gabapentin (70 mg/kg, p.o.), given twice a day, inhibited markedly the neuropathic allodynia induced by partial ligation of the sciatic nerve, with inhibition of 91+/-19% and 71+/-16%, respectively. The anti-allodynic action of tormentic acid was not associated with impairment of the motor activity of the animals. Together, the present results indicate that tormentic acid or its derivatives might be of potential interest in the development of new clinically relevant drugs for the management of persistent neuropathic and inflammatory allodynia.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung C | 2005

Antibacterial activity of coumarins.

Simone Machado de Souza; Franco Delle Monache; Artur Smânia

Abstract The antibacterial activity of coumarin per se and other 45 coumarin derivatives was tested against strains of Bacillus cereus MIP 96016, Escherichia coli ATCC 25922, Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853, and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923. The inhibitory effects of coumarins were affected by their substitution patterns. Osthenol (44) showed the most effective antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria with MIC values ranging between 125 and 62.5 μg/ml. These results suggested that the prenyl chain of 44 at position 8 and the presence of OH at position 7 of the benzenic ring are required for the antibacterial activity against these strains.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1998

Chemical and pharmacological examination of antinociceptive constituents of Wedelia paludosa

Luciana Catia Block; Adair R.S. Santos; Márcia Maria de Souza; Cristiano Scheidt; Rosendo A. Yunes; Mário Alves Santos; Franco Delle Monache; Valdir Cechinel Filho

The present work describes the antinociceptive effects of some fractions and two pure compounds obtained from the Wedelia paludosa, a Brazilian medicinal plant employed in folk medicine against a variety of diseases, including dolorous pathologies. It was found that such fractions as well as kaurenoic acid and luteolin exhibit marked antinociceptive action in mice using acetic acid-induced writhing. They were more active than some well-known analgesic drugs, such as acetyl salicylic acid, acetaminophen, dipyrone and indomethacin. The results confirm our previous studies conducted with this plant, suggesting that different chemical constituents are responsible for the antinociceptive activity shown by the extracts and fractions prepared from W. paludosa.


Life Sciences | 1997

ANTINOCICEPTIVE PROPERTIES OF THE HYDROALCOHOLIC EXTRACT AND PRELIMINARY STUDY OF A XANTHONE ISOLATED FROM POLYGALA CYPARISSIAS (POLYGALACEAE)

Rafael O.P De Campos; Adair R.S. Santos; Zulma R. Vaz; Tânia R. Pinheiro; Moacir Geraldo Pizzolatti; Valdir Cechinel Filho; Franco Delle Monache; Rosendo A. Yunes; João B. Calixto

Polygala cyparissias (Polygalaceae) grows abundantly on Brazils Atlantic coast, belonging to the typical underbrush vegetation of dunes and have been used in folk medicine for treatment of several diseases, such as disturbances of bowel and kidney. The hydroalcoholic extract of P. cyparissias (HE, 3 to 60 mg kg(-1), i.p. or 25 to 200 mg kg(-1), p.o.) produced significant and graded inhibition of acetic acid-induced abdominal constrictions, with mean ID50 values of 6 and 72 mg kg(-1), respectively. The HE (at this same range of doses) also produced dose-related inhibition of both the early and the late phase of formalin-induced licking. The calculated mean ID50 values for the early phase were: >60 and >200 mg kg(-1), while for the late phase they were 11 and 101 mg kg(-1), respectively, by i.p. and p.o. routes. The HE also caused dose-related inhibition of formalin-induced edema formation (P<0.01). The HE (3 to 60 mg kg(-1), i.p. or 50 to 200 mg kg(-1), p.o.) produced significant and dose-related inhibition of the neurogenic nociception caused by topical injection of capsaicin, with mean ID50 values of 12 and 71 mg kg(-1), respectively. Given orally, the HE (50 to 200 mg kg(-1)) prevented in a dose-dependent manner, bradykinin (3 nmol/paw) and substance P (10 nmol/paw)-induced hyperalgesia in the rat paw, with mean ED50 values of 122 and 121 mg kg(-1), respectively, but was ineffective in the hot-plate model of nociception. The antinociception caused by the HE, in contrast to that of morphine (5 mg kg(-1), s.c.), was not reversed by naloxone (5 mg kg(-1), i.p.) when assessed in the acetic acid writhing test. The HE, at antinociceptive doses, did not affect motor coordination of animals when assessed in the rota-rod model. The xanthone isolated from P. cyparissias, identified as 1,7-dihydroxy-2,3-dimethoxy xanthone (0.3 to 30 mg kg(-1), i.p.), produced dose-related inhibition of acetic acid-induced abdominal constriction, with mean ID50 value of 1.5 mg kg(-1). These data show that the active principle(s) present in the HE of P. cyparissias, elicited pronounced antinociception when assessed by i.p. or p.o. routes, against both inflammatory and neurogenic nociception, and was able to prevent bradykinin and substance P-induced hyperalgesia. Its precise mechanism of action still remains unclear.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1998

Isolation and identification of active compounds from Drimys winteri barks

Valdir Cechinel Filho; Valfredo Schlemper; Adair R.S. Santos; Tânia R. Pinheiro; Rosendo A. Yunes; Gilboé L. Mendes; João B. Calixto; Franco Delle Monache

The barks of Drimys winteri are used in folk medicine as a remedy to treat several diseases, including dolorous processes. Previous pre-clinical experiments carried out in our laboratories revealed that the hydroalcoholic extract of this plant showed anti-allergenic, anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive properties. Such promising results led us to determine the analgesic compounds present in D. winteri. Through conventional chromatographic procedures with fractions of CH2Cl2 and EtOAc obtained from methanolic extract, it was found that polygodial (1), 1-beta-(p-methoxycynnamyl) polygodial (2), taxifolin (3) and astilbin (4), are the main components of these fractions. Compounds 1 and 2 exhibited marked antinociceptive action by intraperitoneal and oral routes against acetic acid-induced abdominal constrictions in mice, suggesting that they are responsible, at least partially, for the antinociceptive effects of this plant. In addition, both compounds were notably more potent than aspirin and acetaminophen, two well-known drugs used here as comparison.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2002

Isolation of antifungal saponins from Phytolacca tetramera, an Argentinean species in critic risk

Andrea M. Escalante; Carina B. Santecchia; Silvia N. López; Martha Gattuso; Angel G. Ravelo; Franco Delle Monache; Manuel Gonzalez Sierra; Susana Zacchino

The methanolic extract of the berries of Phytolacca tetramera, an Argentinean species submitted to a great anthropic impact, and therefore in critic risk of extinction, not previously studied, showed antifungal activity against opportunistic pathogenic fungi. Through fractionation of the extract followed by agar dilution assays, three monodesmosidic triterpenoid saponins have been isolated from the butanolic extract of P. tetramera. The structures were established as phytolaccosides: B [3-O-beta-D-xylopiranosyl-phytolaccagenin], E [3-O-beta-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-beta-D-xylopiranosyl-phytolaccagenin]. and F [3-O-alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-D-xylopyranosyl-phytolaccagenic acid]. The three saponins belong to the olean-type triterpenoid saponins, with 28,30 dicarboxylic groups and an olefinic double bond on C-12. Phytolaccosides B and E but not phytolaccoside F, showed antifungal activities against a panel of human pathogenic opportunistic fungi. Phytolaccoside B was the most active compound and showed the broadest spectrum of action. The most sensitive fungus was Trichophyton mentagrophytes.


Phytochemistry | 2001

A sesquiterpene drimane with antinociceptive activity from Drimys winteri bark.

Angela Malheiros; Valdir Cechinel Filho; Clarisse B Schmitt; Adair R.S. Santos; Cristiano Scheidt; João B. Calixto; Franco Delle Monache; Rosendo A. Yunes

Along with three known drimanes, polygodial. 1-beta-(p-methoxycinnamoyl) polygodial and mukaadial, the sesquiterpene drimane named drimanial was isolated from the bark of Drimys winteri (Winteraceae). Its structure was elucidated based on spectroscopic evidence. Drimanial exhibited antinociceptive action against acetic acid induced pain, being about 3-fold less active than polygodial.


Phytochemistry | 1998

Three xanthones from Polygala cyparissias

Tânia R. Pinheiro; Valdir Cechinel Filho; Adair R.S. Santos; João B. Calixto; Franco Delle Monache; Moacir Geraldo Pizzolatti; Rosendo A. Yunes

The ethyl acetate extract of Polygala cyparissias afforded three unknown and three known simple xanthones. The structures of the former were established by spectroscopic methods as 1,7-dihydroxy-2,3-methylenedioxy-, 1,3,6,8-tetrahydroxy-2,7-dimethoxy- and 1,3,7-trihydroxy-2-methoxyxanthone. Moreover, the hexane extract gave an uncommon sterol (α-spinasterol) and high yields of methyl salicylate.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2008

Anti-inflammatory effects of hydroalcoholic extract and two biflavonoids from Garcinia gardneriana leaves in mouse paw oedema.

Jaqueline C. Castardo; Arthur da Silveira Prudente; Juliano Ferreira; Claudio L. Guimarães; Franco Delle Monache; Valdir Cechinel Filho; Michel Fleith Otuki; Daniela Almeida Cabrini

Garcinia gardneriana (Planch. & Triana) Zappi (Clusiaceae) is widely distributed in Brazil and used in folk medicine to treat inflammation, pain, and urinary tract and other infections. However, very few studies have analyzed these therapeutic effects. In this study, the anti-inflammatory effects of the hydroalcoholic extracts from Garcinia gardneriana (HEGG) and some of its isolated biflavonoids were evaluated. The results showed that HEGG from the leaves, bark and seeds reduced carrageenan-induced mouse paw inflammation, in addition to diminishing the myeloperoxidase activity in the stimulated tissues. The reduction of neutrophil infiltration by treatment with the HEGG from leaves was confirmed by histology. The leaf extract also reduced the paw oedema evoked by bradykinin, histamine, prostaglandin E2 and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol acetate. However, it partially decreased substance P and compound 48/80-caused paw oedema, without any influence on the arachidonic acid-induced oedema. Both of the isolated compounds, fukugetin and GB-2a, prevented the carrageenan-induced paw oedema. In conclusion, this study showed important anti-inflammatory effects of HEGG through its interaction with different intracellular signaling pathways, without interfering with the formation of arachidonic acid (AA) metabolites. These characteristics, in addition to the wide distribution and culturing ease of the plant, confirm its popular use and highlight its promise in the development of new anti-inflammatory drugs.

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Bruno Botta

Sapienza University of Rome

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G. B. Marini-Bettolo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Suzana G. Leitão

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Franco Ferrari

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Ivan Leoncio D'albuquerque

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Oswaldo Goncalves De Lima

Federal University of Pernambuco

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