Laura Brandolini
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
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Featured researches published by Laura Brandolini.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2007
Pasquale Buanne; Emma Di Carlo; Lorenzo Caputi; Laura Brandolini; Marco Mosca; Franca Cattani; Luigi Pellegrini; Leda Biordi; Gino Coletti; Carlo Sorrentino; Guido Fedele; Francesco Colotta; Gabriella Melillo; Riccardo Bertini
Polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration and activation into colonic mucosa are believed to play a pivotal role in mediating tissue damage in human ulcerative colitis (UC). Ligands of human CXC chemokine receptor 1 and 2 (CXCR1/R2) are chemoattractants of PMN, and high levels were found in the mucosa of UC patients. To investigate the pathophysiological role played by CXCR2 in experimental UC, we induced chronic experimental colitis in WT and CXCR2−/− mice by two consecutive cycles of 4% dextran sulfate sodium administration in drinking water. In wild‐type (WT) mice, the chronic relapsing of DSS‐induced colitis was characterized by clinical signs and histopathological findings that closely resemble human disease. CXCR2−/− mice failed to show PMN infiltration into the mucosa and, consistently with a key role of PMN in mediating tissue damage in UC, showed limited signs of mucosal damage and reduced clinical symptoms. Our data demonstrate that CXCR2 plays a key pathophysiological role in experimental UC, suggesting that CXCR2 activation may represent a relevant pharmacological target for the design of novel pharmacological treatments in human UC.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 1996
Laura Brandolini; Riccardo Bertini; Cinzia Bizzarri; Rita Sergi; Gianfranco Caselli; Dan Zhou; Massimo Locati; Silvano Sozzani
Interleukin‐8 (IL‐8), the prototype of the α (i.e., C‐X‐C branch) chemokine family, induced elastase release in a concentration‐dependent manner (50‐1000 ng/mL) in cytochalasin B‐treated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). This response was potentiated about twofold if PMNs were preexposed to interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β) at concentrations that were by themselves inactive. The effect of IL‐1β was clearly observed after 5 min and was maximal after a 30‐min preincubation of the cells. The effect was present over the whole active concentration range of IL‐8 and was completely blocked by the presence of IL‐1 receptor antagonist. Priming of elastase release by IL‐1β was not associated with a change in receptor number or affinity for IL‐8. On the contrary, it was correlated with priming of phospholipase D activity and calcium flux activated by IL‐8. Preincubation of the cells with ethanol and/or La3+ inhibited IL‐8‐induced degranulation, suggesting that activation of phospholipase D and increase of [Ca2+]i were important for this response. In contrast, ethanol and La3+ did not decrease the priming effect of IL‐1β. IL‐8 and IL‐1β have been shown to be released by the same cell types and may be concomitantly present at sites of inflammation, giving rise to an amplification of the inflammatory response.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Alessio Moriconi; Thiago M. Cunha; Guilherme R. Souza; Alexandre H. Lopes; Fernando Q. Cunha; Victor L. Carneiro; Larissa G. Pinto; Laura Brandolini; Andrea Aramini; Cinzia Bizzarri; Gianluca Bianchini; Andrea Beccari; Marco Fanton; Agostino Bruno; Gabriele Costantino; Riccardo Bertini; Emanuela Galliera; Massimo Locati; Sérgio H. Ferreira; Mauro M. Teixeira; Marcello Allegretti
Significance Persistent pain in inflammatory and neuropathic conditions is often refractory to conventional analgesic therapy, with most patients suffering with unrelieved pain and serious treatment-related side effects. There is still a tremendous need to identify novel therapeutics for pain control with innovative biological mechanisms and minimal side effects. In this paper we challenge the hypothesis that a conserved structural motif across the G protein-coupled receptor family plays a regulatory role in the negative modulation of receptor activation and use a multidisciplinary approach to the rational drug design and characterization of a novel potent allosteric inhibitor of the C5a anaphylatoxin receptor (C5aR), thus providing a new promising avenue for the improvement of pharmacotherapy of chronic pain. Chronic pain resulting from inflammatory and neuropathic disorders causes considerable economic and social burden. Pharmacological therapies currently available for certain types of pain are only partially effective and may cause severe adverse side effects. The C5a anaphylatoxin acting on its cognate G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), C5aR, is a potent pronociceptive mediator in several models of inflammatory and neuropathic pain. Although there has long been interest in the identification of C5aR inhibitors, their development has been complicated, as for many peptidomimetic drugs, mostly by poor drug-like properties. Herein, we report the de novo design of a potent and selective C5aR noncompetitive allosteric inhibitor, DF2593A, guided by the hypothesis that an allosteric site, the “minor pocket,” previously characterized in CXC chemokine receptors-1 and -2, is functionally conserved in the GPCR class. In vitro, DF2593A potently inhibited C5a-induced migration of human and rodent neutrophils. In vivo, oral administration of DF2593A effectively reduced mechanical hyperalgesia in several models of acute and chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain, without any apparent side effects. Mechanical hyperalgesia after spared nerve injury was also reduced in C5aR−/− mice compared with WT mice. Furthermore, treatment of C5aR−/− mice with DF2593A did not produce any further antinociceptive effect compared with C5aR−/− mice treated with vehicle. The successful medicinal chemistry strategy confirms that a conserved minor pocket is amenable for the rational design of selective inhibitors and the pharmacological results support that the allosteric blockade of the C5aR represents a highly promising therapeutic approach to control chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain.
Oncotarget | 2015
Laura Brandolini; Loredana Cristiano; Alessia Fidoamore; Maria De Pizzol; Erica Di Giacomo; Tiziana Florio; Giuseppina Confalone; Angelo Galante; Benedetta Cinque; Elisabetta Benedetti; Pier Adelchi Ruffini; Maria Grazia Cifone; Antonio Giordano; Marcello Alecci; Marcello Allegretti; Annamaria Cimini
In breast cancer it has been proposed that the presence of cancer stem cells may drive tumor initiation, progression and recurrences. IL-8, up-regulated in breast cancer, and associated with poor prognosis, increases CSC self-renewal in cell line models. It signals via two cell surface receptors, CXCR1 and CXCR2. Recently, the IL-8/CXCR1 axis was proposed as an attractive pathway for the design of specific therapies against breast cancer stem cells. Reparixin, a powerful CXCR1 inhibitor, was effective in reducing in vivo the tumour-initiating population in several NOD/SCID mice breast cancer models, showing that the selective targeting of CXCR1 and the combination of reparixin and docetaxel resulted in a concomitant reduction of the bulk tumour mass and CSC population. The available data indicate that IL-8, expressed by tumour cells and induced by chemotherapeutic treatment, is a key regulator of the survival and self-renewal of the population of CXCR1-expressing CSC. Consequently, this investigation on the mechanism of action of the reparixin/paclitaxel combination, was based on the observation that reparixin treatment contained the formation of metastases in several experimental models. However, specific data on the formation of breast cancer brain metastases, which carry remarkable morbidity and mortality to a substantial proportion of advanced breast cancer patients, have not been generated. The obtained data indicate a beneficial use of the drug combination reparixin and paclitaxel to counteract brain tumour metastasis due to CSC, probably due to the combined effects of the two drugs, the pro-apoptotic action of paclitaxel and the cytostatic and anti-migratory effects of reparixin.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2015
Annamaria Cimini; Laura Brandolini; Roberta Gentile; Loredana Cristiano; Paola Menghini; Alessia Fidoamore; Andrea Antonosante; Elisabetta Benedetti; Antonio Giordano; Marcello Allegretti
Ketoprofen L‐lysine salt (KLS), a NSAID, is widely used for its analgesic efficacy and tolerability. L‐lysine salification was reported to increase the solubility and the gastric absorption and tolerance of ketoprofen. Since the management of NSAIDs gastrotoxicity still represents a major limitation in prolonged therapies, mainly when gastric lesions are present, this study investigated the gastro‐protective activity of L‐lysine by using a well‐established model of gastric mucosa injury, the ethanol‐gastric injury model. Several evidences show that the damaging action of ethanol could be attributed to the increase of ROS, which plays a key role in the increase of lipid peroxidation products, including malonyldialdehyde and 4‐hydroxy‐2‐nonenal. With the aim to unravel the mechanism of L‐lysine gastroprotection, cellular MDA levels and 4‐HNE protein adducts as markers of lipid peroxidation and a panel of key endogenous gastro‐protective proteins were assayed. The data obtained indicate a gastroprotective effect of L‐lysine on gastric mucosa integrity. J. Cell. Physiol. 230: 813–820, 2015.
Pharmacological Research | 2016
Alexandre H. Lopes; Laura Brandolini; Andrea Aramini; Gianluca Bianchini; Rangel L. Silva; Ana C. Zaperlon; Waldiceu A. Verri; José C. Alves-Filho; Fernando Q. Cunha; Mauro M. Teixeira; Marcello Allegretti; Thiago M. Cunha
The activation of CXCR1/2 has been implicated in the genesis of inflammatory and postoperative pain. Here, we investigated a novel orally acting allosteric inhibitor of CXCR1/2 (DF2755A) and evaluated its antinociceptive effect in several models of inflammatory and post-operatory pain. DF2755A was tested in vitro for efficacy in the chemotaxis assay, selectivity and toxicity. In vivo, C57Bl/6 mice were treated orally with DF2755A and the following experiments were performed: pharmacokinetic profile; inflammatory hyperalgesia models using electronic pressure meter test; neutrophil migration assay assessed by myeloperoxidase assay. DF2755A selectively inhibited neutrophil chemotaxis induced by CXCR1/2 ligands without effect on CXCL8 binding to neutrophils. A single mutation of the allosteric site at CXCR1 abrogated the inhibitory effect of DF2755A on CXCL8-induced chemotaxis. DF2755A given orally was well absorbed (88.2%), and it was able to reduce, in a dose (3-30mg/kg)-dependent manner, inflammatory hyperalgesia induced by carrageenan, LPS and CXCL1/KC as well as neutrophil recruitment and IL-1β production. In addition, DF2755A was able to reduce post-incisional nociception. Therapeutic treatment with DF2755A reduced CFA-induced inflammatory hyperalgesia even when injected intrathecally. The present results indicate that DF2755A is a novel selective allosteric inhibitor of CXCR1/2 with a favorable oral pharmacokinetic profile. Furthermore, the results might suggest that DF2755A might be a candidate of a novel therapeutic option to control inflammatory and post-operative pain.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2015
Francesco Mistretta; Andrea Russo; Fabio Castiglione; Arianna Bettiga; Giorgia Colciago; Francesco Montorsi; Laura Brandolini; Andrea Aramini; Gianluca Bianchini; Marcello Allegretti; Silvia Bovolenta; Roberto Russo; Fabio Benigni; Petter Hedlund
The transient receptor potential melastin 8 ion channel (TRPM8) is implicated in bladder sensing but limited information on TRPM8 antagonists in bladder overactivity is available. This study characterizes a new TRPM8-selective antagonist (DFL23448 [5-(2-ethyl-2H-tetrazol-5-yl)-2-(3-fluorophenyl)-1,3-thiazol-4-ol]) and evaluates it in cold-induced behavioral tests and tests on bladder function and experimental bladder overactivity in vivo in rats. DFL23448 displayed IC50 values of 10 and 21 nM in hTRPM8 human embryonic kidney 293 cells activated by Cooling Agent 10 or cold, but it had limited activity (IC50 > 10 μM) at transient receptor potential vanilloids TRPV1, TRPA1, or TRPV4 or at various G protein–coupled receptors. In rats, DFL23448 administered intravenously or orally had a half-life of 37 minutes or 4.9 hours, respectively. DLF23448 (10 mg/kg i.v.) reduced icilin-induced “wet dog–like” shakes in rats. Intravesical DFL23448 (10 mg/l), but not vehicle, increased micturition intervals, micturition volume, and bladder capacity. During bladder overactivity by intravesical prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), vehicle controls exhibited reductions in micturition intervals, micturition volumes, and bladder capacity by 37%–39%, whereas the same parameters only decreased by 12%–15% (P < 0.05–0.01 versus vehicle) in DFL23448-treated rats. In vehicle-treated rats, but not in DFL23448-treated rats, intravesical PGE2 increased bladder pressures. Intravenous DFL23448 at 10 mg/kg, but not 1 mg/kg DFL23448 or vehicle, increased micturition intervals, micturition volumes, and bladder capacity. During bladder overactivity by intravesical PGE2, micturition intervals, micturition volumes, and bladder capacity decreased in vehicle– and 1 mg/kg DFL23448–treated rats, but not in 10 mg/kg DFL23448–treated rats. Bladder pressures increased less in rats treated with DFL23448 10 mg/kg than in vehicle– or 1 mg/kg DFL23448–treated rats. DFL23448 (10 mg/kg i.v.), but not vehicle, prevented cold stress–induced bladder overactivity. Our results support a role for bladder TRPM8-mediated signals in experimental bladder overactivity.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2018
Thiago Henrique Caldeira de Oliveira; Pedro Marques; Fariba Poosti; Pieter Ruytinx; Flávio A. Amaral; Laura Brandolini; Marcello Allegretti; Paul Proost; Mauro M. Teixeira
Background Ischemia–reperfusion (IR) is a major contributor to graft rejection after liver transplantation. During IR injury, an intense inflammatory process occurs in the liver. Neutrophils are considered central players in the events that lead to liver injury. CXC chemokines mediate hepatic inflammation following reperfusion. However, few studies have demonstrated in real-time the behavior of recruited neutrophils. We used confocal intravital microscopy (IVM) to image neutrophil migration in the liver and to analyze in real-time parameters of neutrophil recruitment in the inflamed tissue in animals treated or not with reparixin, an allosteric antagonist of CXCR1/2 receptors. Materials and methods WT and LysM-eGFP mice treated with reparixin or saline were subjected to 60 min of ischemia followed by different times of reperfusion. Mice received Sytox orange intravenously to show necrotic DNA in IVM. The effect of reparixin on parameters of local and systemic reperfusion-induced injury was also investigated. Results IR induced liver injury and inflammation, as evidenced by high levels of alanine aminotransferase and myeloperoxidase activity, chemokine and cytokine production, and histological outcome. Treatment with reparixin significantly decreased neutrophil influx. Moreover, reparixin effectively suppressed the increase in serum concentrations of TNF-α, IL-6, and CCL3, and the reperfusion-associated tissue damage. The number of neutrophils in the liver increased between 6 and 24 h of reperfusion, whereas the distance traveled, velocity, neutrophil size and shape, and cluster formation reached a maximum 6 h after reperfusion and then decreased gradually. In vivo imaging revealed that reparixin significantly decreased neutrophil infiltration and movement and displacement of recruited cells. Moreover, neutrophils had a smaller size and less elongated shape in treated mice. Conclusion Imaging of the liver by confocal IVM was successfully implemented to describe neutrophil behavior in vivo during liver injury by IR. Treatment with reparixin decreased not only the recruitment of neutrophils in tissues but also their activation state and capacity to migrate within the liver. CXCR1/2 antagonists may be a promising therapy for patients undergoing liver transplantation.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2018
Carmen De Caro; Roberto Russo; Carmen Avagliano; Claudia Cristiano; Antonio Calignano; Andrea Aramini; Gianluca Bianchini; Marcello Allegretti; Laura Brandolini
Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are a superfamily of non‐selective cation permeable channels involved in peripheral sensory signalling. Animal studies have shown that several TRPs are important players in pain modulation. Among them, the TRP melastatin 8 (TRPM8) has elicited more interest for its controversial role in nociception. This channel, expressed by a subpopulation of sensory neurons in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and trigeminal ganglia (TG), is activated by cold temperatures and cooling agents. In experimental neuropathic pain models, an up‐regulation of this receptor in DRG and TG has been observed, suggesting a key role for TRPM8 in the development and maintenance of pain. Consistent with this hypothesis, TRPM8 knockout mice are less responsive to pain stimuli.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Luciana P. Tavares; Cristiana C. Garcia; Marina G. Machado; Celso Martins Queiroz-Junior; Adeline Barthelemy; François Trottein; Marilda M. Siqueira; Laura Brandolini; Marcello Allegretti; Alexandre M. Machado; Lirlândia P. de Sousa; Mauro M. Teixeira
Rationale Influenza A infections are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide especially when associated with secondary pneumococcal infections. Inflammation is important to control pathogen proliferation but may also cause tissue injury and death. CXCR1/2 are chemokine receptors relevant for the recruitment of neutrophils. We investigated the role of CXCR1/2 during influenza, pneumococcal, and post-influenza pneumococcal infections. Methods Mice were infected with influenza A virus (IAV) or Streptococcus pneumoniae and then treated daily with the CXCR1/2 antagonist DF2162. To study secondary pneumococcal infection, mice were infected with a sublethal inoculum of IAV then infected with S. pneumoniae 14 days later. DF2162 was given in a therapeutic schedule from days 3 to 6 after influenza infection. Lethality, weight loss, inflammation, virus/bacteria counts, and lung injury were assessed. Results CXCL1 and CXCL2 were produced at high levels during IAV infection. DF2162 treatment decreased morbidity and this was associated with decreased infiltration of neutrophils in the lungs and reduced pulmonary damage and viral titers. During S. pneumoniae infection, DF2162 treatment decreased neutrophil recruitment, pulmonary damage, and lethality rates, without affecting bacteria burden. Therapeutic treatment with DF2162 during sublethal IAV infection reduced the morbidity associated with virus infection and also decreased the magnitude of inflammation, lung damage, and number of bacteria in the blood of mice subsequently infected with S. pneumoniae. Conclusion Modulation of the inflammatory response by blocking CXCR1/2 improves disease outcome during respiratory influenza and pneumococcal infections, without compromising the ability of the murine host to deal with infection. Altogether, inhibition of CXCR1/2 may be a valid therapeutic strategy for treating lung infections caused by these pathogens, especially controlling secondary bacterial infection after influenza.