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Dive into the research topics where Gloria Brusotti is active.

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Featured researches published by Gloria Brusotti.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2014

Isolation and characterization of bioactive compounds from plant resources: The role of analysis in the ethnopharmacological approach

Gloria Brusotti; I. Cesari; A. Dentamaro; Gabriele Caccialanza; Gabriella Massolini

The phytochemical research based on ethnopharmacology is considered an effective approach in the discovery of novel chemicals entities with potential as drug leads. Plants/plant extracts/decoctions, used by folklore traditions for treating several diseases, represent a source of chemical entities but no information are available on their nature. Starting from this viewpoint, the aim of this review is to address natural-products chemists to the choice of the best methodologies, which include the combination of extraction/sample preparation tools and analytical techniques, for isolating and characterizing bioactive secondary metabolites from plants, as potential lead compounds in the drug discovery process. The work is distributed according to the different steps involved in the ethnopharmacological approach (extraction, sample preparation, biological screening, etc.), discussing the analytical techniques employed for the isolation and identification of compound/s responsible for the biological activity claimed in the traditional use (separation, spectroscopic, hyphenated techniques, etc.). Particular emphasis will be on herbal medicines applications and developments achieved from 2010 up to date.


Farmaco | 2002

Solid-supported reagents for multi-step organic synthesis: preparation and application.

Steven V. Ley; Ian R. Baxendale; Gloria Brusotti; Marina Caldarelli; Alessandro Massi; M. Nesi

Since the early days of combinatorial chemistry solid-phase organic synthesis has been the method of choice for the production of large libraries. Solution-phase synthesis is again gaining importance especially for the synthesis of parallel arrays of smaller, focussed libraries containing single compounds with high degrees of purity. In the field of solution-phase library generation, the use of solid-supported reagents, catalysts and scavengers is emerging as a leading strategy, combining the advantages of both solid-phase organic synthesis (e.g. allowing the employment of an excess of reagent without the need for additional purification steps) and solution-phase chemistry (e.g. the ease of monitoring the progress of the reactions by applying LC-MS, TLC or standard NMR techniques). An account of some of the most recent advances in this area of research will be presented.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1995

Camphor-derived 2-stannyl-N-Boc-1,3-oxazolidine: A new chiral formylanion equivalent for the asymmetric synthesis of 1,2-diols

Lino Colombo; Marcello Di Giacomo; Gloria Brusotti; Ettore Milano

Abstract Optically pure 2-tributylstannyl-N-Boc-1,3-oxazolidine 6 , prepared from the camphor-derived aminoalcohol 5 , was converted to diastereomerically pure 2-acyl derivatives 8 in three steps. Reaction of these ketones with Grignard reagents at −78°C proceeded with high stereoselectivity affording tertiary carbinols which gave 1,2-diols with >96% ee after hydrolysis and reduction of the intermediate α-hydroxy aldehydes. A new deblocking procedure of the t-Boc group is also described.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1994

Chiral 2-lithio-13-dioxolanes and -2-lithiooxazolidines: New formyl anion equivalents

Lino Colombo; Marcello Di Giacomo; Gloria Brusotti; Giovanna Delogu

Abstract The preparation of enantiomerically pure 2-lithio-1,3-dioxolanes and 2-lithiooxazolidines and their use as formyl anion equivalents in addition reactions to aldehydes are described.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2013

Anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial and antioxidant activities of Diospyros bipindensis (Gurke) extracts and its main constituents

I. Cesari; Mélanie Hoerlé; Claudia Simões-Pires; P. Grisoli; Emerson Ferreira Queiroz; C. Dacarro; Laurence Marcourt; Paul F. Moundipa; Pierre-Alain Carrupt; Muriel Cuendet; Gabriele Caccialanza; Jean-Luc Wolfender; Gloria Brusotti

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Diospyros bipindensis (Gürke) stem bark is used in Cameroon by Baka Pygmies for the treatment of respiratory disorders. AIM OF THE STUDY To assess the anti-inflammatory, antibacterial and antioxidant properties of constituents from the bark extracts through bioassay-guided fractionation. MATERIALS AND METHODS The anti-inflammatory activity of extracts, fractions and pure compounds was assessed through the inhibition of the pro-inflammatory mediator nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) transcriptional activity and nitric oxide (NO) production. DPPH, ABTS and ORAC assays were used for determining the antioxidant properties. The activity against Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, was evaluated on the basis of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and the minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) by the macrodilution method. RESULTS The water extract showed antimicrobial activity against S. pneumoniae (MIC: 300 μg/ml) and S. pyogenes (MIC: 300 μg/ml). The dichloromethane extract efficiently inhibited NF-κB transcriptional activity and NO production and exhibited significant antioxidant activity in the ORAC assay. An interesting activity was also found against S. pneumoniae (MIC: 200 μg/ml), S. aureus (MIC: 400 μg/ml) and S. pyogenes (MIC: 200 μg/ml). The phytochemical investigation of the dichloromethane extract afforded plumbagin, canaliculatin, ismailin, betulinic acid and 4-hydroxy-5-methyl-coumarin as the main constituents. Plumbagin and ismailin were found to be responsible for the main biological activities observed. CONCLUSIONS These results may provide a rational support for the traditional use of Diospyros bipindensis stem bark in the treatment of respiratory disorders, since the anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial and antioxidant compounds isolated from the dichloromethane extract were also present in the traditional water extract.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2012

Chemical composition and antimicrobial activity of Phyllanthus muellerianus (Kuntze) Excel essential oil.

Gloria Brusotti; I. Cesari; Gianluca Gilardoni; Solveig Tosi; Pietro Grisoli; Anna Maria Picco; Gabriele Caccialanza

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Phyllanthus muellerianus (Kuntze) Excel (family Euphorbiaceae) stem bark is used in Cameroon by Baka pygmies as a remedy for wound healing and tetanus. AIM OF THE STUDY To characterize the chemical composition and to evaluate the antimicrobial properties of the essential oil of the plant. MATERIALS AND METHODS The essential oil was extracted from the stem bark by dynamic head space and by hydrodistillation and characterized by GC and GC-MS analyses. The antimicrobial activity was evaluated on the basis of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and the minimum bactericidal-fungicidal concentration (MBC-MFC) by the micro and macrodilution methods. The following bacteria and fungi were used: Clostridium sporogenes ATCC 3584, Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6538, Streptococcus mutans ATCC 25175, Streptococcus pyogenes ATCC 19615, Escherichia coli ATCC 10536, Candida albicans ATCC 10231, Candida albicans LM 450, Trichophyton mentagrophytes LM 230, Trichophyton rubrum LM 237, Microsporum canis LM 324. RESULTS The hydrodistillation afforded 0.06% (dry weight basis) of pale yellow oil. Thirty-eight compounds representing 90.69% were identified. The major component (36.40%) was found to be (E)-isoelemicin, identified by comparison of its (1)H-NMR experimental data, with literature data. The oil showed good antibacterial activity against Clostridium Sporogenes, Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus pyogenes with MIC ranging from 13.5 to 126 μg/ml. A weak antifungal activity (MIC 250 μg/ml) was found against Trichophyton rubrum, only. CONCLUSIONS The antimicrobial activity and the chemical composition of Phyllanthus muellerianus stem bark essential oil are reported for the first time.


Talanta | 2016

Cyclodextrin- and solvent-modified micellar electrokinetic chromatography for the determination of captopril, hydrochlorothiazide and their impurities: A Quality by Design approach.

Benedetta Pasquini; Serena Orlandini; Claudia Caprini; Massimo Del Bubba; Massimo Innocenti; Gloria Brusotti; Sandra Furlanetto

A fast and selective capillary electrophoresis method has been developed for the simultaneous determination of the antihypertensive drugs captopril and hydrochlorothiazide and their related impurities in a combined dosage form. Method development was carried out implementing each step of Quality by Design workflow, the new paradigm of quality outlined in International Conference on Harmonisation Guidelines. Captopril is characterized by the lack of a strong chromophore and contains a proline-similar moiety, which gives rise to the presence of interconverting cis-trans isomers and leads to the possible interference between electrophoretic migration and reaction of isomerization. The scouting phase was dedicated to the investigation of several operative modes in order to overcome detection and isomerization issues. The best performances were obtained with sodium cholate-based micellar electrokinetic chromatography with the addition of n-butanol and γ-cyclodextrin. Critical quality attributes were represented by the critical resolution values and by analysis time. Critical process parameters were defined as temperature, voltage, concentration and pH of borate buffer, concentration of sodium cholate, n-butanol and γ-cyclodextrin. Screening experimental design was applied for investigating knowledge space. Response surface methodology pointed out several significant interaction effects, and with Monte-Carlo simulations led to map out the design space at a selected probability level. Robustness testing was carried out and a control strategy based on system suitability tests was defined. The selected working conditions gave a complete separation of the analytes in less than three minutes. The method was validated and applied to the analysis of a real sample of coformulation tablets.


Journal of Separation Science | 2010

Optimum extraction process of polyphenols from Bridelia grandis stem bark using experimental design.

Gloria Brusotti; Tatiana Ngueyem; Raffaela Biesuz; Gabriele Caccialanza

Euphorbiaceae barks are known to contain an appreciable amount of polyphenolic compounds responsible for several biological activities. Preliminary extraction from Bridelia grandis stem bark afforded high content of polyphenols, determined by spectrophotometric methods such as Folin-Ciocalteu (for total phenols, TP) and n-butanol-HCl (for condensed tannins, CT). A preliminary Plackett-Burman screening design was used to identify the key factors that influence the TP and CT extraction. Between all the variables known to influence the extraction from vegetable matrixes, six were selected; maceration was chosen as traditional extraction methodology. To investigate the effect of solvents and extraction method, methanol, acetone 70% (v/v in water), centrifugation and ultrasound were chosen. A full factorial design 2(3) was applied to optimize the extraction procedure. The responses were obtained analyzing the extracts for their TP and CT contents determined by the above-mentioned spectrophotometric methods. The results confirm that, within the explored domain, the optimum solvent is methanol and the optimum method is one-cycle centrifugation. Finally, it was also compared with the effect of maceration on the considered responses. It has never given results better than centrifugation, whereas in the case of CT it represents an advantage to employ a three-cycle centrifugation instead of one.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2008

Validation of use of a traditional remedy from Bridelia grandis (Pierre ex Hutch) stem bark against oral Streptococci

T.A. Ngueyem; Gloria Brusotti; G. Marrubini; Pietro Grisoli; Cesare Dacarro; Giovanni Vidari; P. Vita Finzi; Gabriele Caccialanza

AIM OF THE STUDY Bridelia grandis (Pierre ex Hutch) (Euphorbiaceae) is a medicinal plant traditionally used in Cameroon by pygmies Baka as a remedy for oral cavity affection. Bioassay-guided stem bark extracts were investigated for their in vitro antimicrobial properties as well as their phytochemical constituents. MATERIALS AND METHODS The first extraction was carried out according to the traditional use. Further extractions were carried out with solvents of different polarity such as methanol (MeOH), ethyl acetate (EtOAc) and mixtures of MeOH-H2O. The antimicrobial activity of the extracts against oral Streptococci was evaluated on the basis of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and the minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) by the macrodilution method; the bacterial surface hydrophobicity was also evaluated. RESULTS Water, methanol and mixtures methanol-water extracts, exhibited antibacterial activity with MIC between 0.5 and 2mg/ml justifying the traditional use of Bridelia grandis stem bark for oral cavity affection. Preliminary phytochemical analysis was performed on the most active extract (methanol) using appropriate tests and well established analytical screening methods, such as TLC and RP-HPLC/DAD. CONCLUSIONS The data obtained indicate that tannins constitute the chemical family responsible for the biological activity.


Tetrahedron | 1998

Stereoselective synthesis of 6,5-bicyclic reverse-turn peptidomimetics

Lino Colombo; Marcello Di Giacomo; Gloria Brusotti; Nicola Sardone; Mauro Angiolini; Laura Belvisi; Sonia Maffioli; Leonardo Manzoni; Carlo Scolastico

Abstract A flexible stereoselective synthetic scheme was developed to prepare 6,5-fused bicyclic lactams, that molecular mechanics calculations revealed to have a potential as reverse-turn mimetics. The convergence of the synthetic sequence was achieved by attachment of a properly substituted malonate unit to the (2S)-cis-5-(2-hydroxyethyl)proline tert-butyl ester. Stereoselective intramolecular alkylation of the malonate afforded the 6-membered lactam fused to the 2-carbalkoxy pyrrolidine nucleus. X-ray diffraction analysis of a more advanced synthetic derivative allowed the unequivocal assignment of the configuration at the newly created quaternary stereocenter as R.

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