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Dive into the research topics where Maria Conceição M. Torres is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Conceição M. Torres.


Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2009

Antitumor Activity of the Essential Oil from the Leaves of Croton regelianus and Its Component Ascaridole

Daniel P. Bezerra; José Delano Barreto Marinho Filho; Ana Paula Negreiros Nunes Alves; Cláudia Pessoa; Manoel Odorico de Moraes; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Edilberto R. Silveira; Francisco Arnaldo Viana; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo

Croton regelianus Muell. Arg., popularly known as ‘velame‐de‐cheiro’, is a native plant from the Northeast of Brazil used in folk medicine to treat diseases of different kinds, including malignant tumors. In this study, the in vitro and in vivo antitumor effects of the essential oil from the leaves of C. regelianus and ascaridole, one of the main constituents, were investigated. In vitro, the essential oil and ascaridole displayed cytotoxicity, showing IC50 values in the range of 22.2 to 48.0 μg/ml in HL‐60 and SF‐295 cell lines for the essential oil, and 6.3 to 18.4 μg/ml in HL‐60 and HCT‐8 cells lines for ascaridole, respectively. The in vivo study, using sarcoma 180 as a tumor model, demonstrated inhibition rates of 28.1 and 31.8% for essential oil, at the 50 and 100 mg/kg, while ascaridole inhibition rates were 33.9% at 10 mg/kg and 33.3% at 20‐mg/kg doses. Histopathological examination showed that the organs were only weakly affected by the treatment. In conclusion, ascaridole has an interesting antitumor activity in sarcoma 180 murine model, probably related to the described cytotoxic activity, and, moreover, its presence in the essential oil from the leaves of C. regelianus could explain, at least in part, the ethnopharmacological use of this plant in the treatment of cancer.


Chemistry & Biodiversity | 2008

Larvicidal and Nematicidal Activities of the Leaf Essential Oil of Croton regelianus

Maria Conceição M. Torres; João Carlos da Costa Assunção; Gilvandete Maria Pinheiro Santiago; Manoel Andrade-Neto; Edilberto R. Silveira; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo; Daniel P. Bezerra; José Delano Barreto Marinho Filho; Francisco Arnaldo Viana; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa

The chemical composition of the leaf essential oil of Croton regelianus collected from wild plants growing in two different sites at Ceará State (Brazil) was analyzed by GC/MS and GC‐FID. Twenty monoterpenoids, representing more than 96% of the chemical composition of the oils, were identified and quantified. The oils showed similar chemical composition but considerable variation in the levels of each constituent. Ascaridole (33.9–17.0%), p‐cymene (22.3–21.6%), and camphor (13.0–3.1%) were the predominant constituents. The monoterpene ascaridole was isolated and characterized by spectroscopic data. The essential oils and the isolated compounds were tested against Aedes aegypti and Artemia sp. larvae, and the root knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita. The bioassay results show that the essential oil of C. regelianus and ascaridole were moderately active against the M. incognita, but strongly effective against both A. aegypti and Artemia sp. larvae.


Química Nova | 2010

Óleos essenciais das folhas de Vernonia Remotiflora e Vernonia Brasiliana: composição química e atividade biológica

Ana Isabel V. Maia; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa; Jane Eire Silva Alencar de Menezes; Sônia Maria O. Costa; Vanessa Lúcia Rodrigues Nogueira; Vânia Maria Maciel Melo; Elnatan Bezerra de Souza; Maria Gilvânia B. Cavalcante; Maria Rose Jane R. Albuquerque

The chemical composition of the essential oils, obtained by hidrodistillation, from leaves of two Vernonia species (V. remotiflora and V. brasiliana), was determined by GC-FID and GC-MS. Both essential oils were predominantly constituted by sesquiterpenes (92.0 - 93.4%). The main constituents of the oil from V. brasilana were (E)-caryophyllene (36.7%), germacrene D (35.5%), and α-humulene (11.7%), while (E)-caryophyllene (42.2%) and bicyclogermacrene (20.0%) were the major ones in the oil from V. remotiflora. Although with moderate activity both oils showed acetylcholinesterase and antibacterial activities.


Journal of Natural Products | 2015

Cytotoxic Plakortides from the Brazilian Marine Sponge Plakortis angulospiculatus.

Evelyne A. Santos; Amanda L. Quintela; Elthon G. Ferreira; Thiciana S. Sousa; Francisco das Chagas L. Pinto; Eduardo Hajdu; Mariana de S. Carvalho; Sula Salani; Danilo D. Rocha; Diego Veras Wilke; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Paula C. Jimenez; Edilberto R. Silveira; James J. La Clair; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo

Three new plakortides, 7,8-dihydroplakortide E (1), 2, and 10, along with known natural products 3, 4, spongosoritin A (5), 6-8, and plakortide P (9), were isolated from Brazilian specimens of Plakortis angulospiculatus. Compounds 2, 3, 5, and 7-9 displayed cytotoxic activities with IC50 values ranging from 0.2 to 10 μM. Compounds that contained a dihydrofuran ring were generally less active and displayed time dependence in their activity. The activities of compounds 2 and 7-9, carboxylic acids bearing a common six-membered endoperoxide, were higher overall than for compounds 3 and 5. The modes underlying the cytotoxic actions of plakortides 2, 3, 5, 7, and 9 were further investigated using HCT-116 cells. While dihydrofurans 3 and 5 induce a G0/G1 arrest, six-membered peroxides 2, 7, and 9 delivered a G2/M arrest and an accumulation of mitotic figures, indicating a distinctly different antimitotic response. Confocal analysis indicated that microtubules were not altered after treatment with 2, 7, or 9, therein suggesting that the mitotic arrest may be unrelated to cytoskeletal targets. Overall, we find that two related classes of natural products obtained from the same extract offer cytostatic activity, yet they do so through discrete pathways.


Natural Product Research | 2015

Cytotoxic compounds from the marine-derived fungus Aspergillus sp. recovered from the sediments of the Brazilian coast.

Natália N. Saraiva; Bárbara S.F. Rodrigues; Paula C. Jimenez; Larissa A. Guimarães; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Edson Rodrigues-Filho; Ludwig H. Pfenning; Lucas M. Abreu; Jair Mafezoli; Marcos Carlos de Mattos; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo; Maria da Conceição F. de Oliveira

A fungal strain of Aspergillus sp. (BRF 030) was isolated from the sediments collected in the northeast coast of Brazil, and the cytotoxic activity of its secondary metabolites was investigated against HCT-116 tumour cell line. The cytotoxicity-guided fractionation of the extracts from this fungus cultured in potato-dextrose-sea water for 14 days at room temperature yielded the hetero-spirocyclic γ-lactams pseurotin A (1), pseurotin D (2) and pseurotin FD-838 (7), the alkaloids fumitremorgin C (5), 12,13-dihydroxy fumitremorgin C (6), methylsulochrin (4) and bis(dethio)bis(methylthio)gliotoxin (3). Among them, fumitremorgin C (5) and 12,13-dihydroxy fumitremorgin C (6) were the most active. The cytotoxic activities of the extracts from Aspergillus sp. grown from 7 to 28 days were investigated, and they were associated with the kinetic production of the compounds. The most active extracts (14 and 21 days) were those with the highest relative concentrations of the compounds fumitremorgin C (5) and 12,13-dihydroxy fumitremorgin C (6).


Journal of Natural Products | 2011

Antiophidic Solanidane Steroidal Alkaloids from Solanum campaniforme

Maria Conceição M. Torres; Francisco das Chagas L. Pinto; Raimundo Braz-Filho; Edilberto R. Silveira; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa; Roberta Jeane Bezerra Jorge; Rafael Matos Ximenes; Helena Serra Azul Monteiro; Janaina Serra Azul Monteiro Evangelista; Eduardo B. S. Diz-Filho; Marcos H. Toyama

Three new solanidane alkaloids bearing a 22,23-epoxy ring (1-3) and four known compounds were isolated from leaves of Solanum campaniforme. The structures were determined using spectroscopic techniques, including 1D and 2D NMR, and HRESIMS experiments. The antiophidic activity of the alkaloids was tested against Bothrops pauloensis venom. Compounds 1-3 completely inhibited myotoxicity without inhibiting phospholipase A2 activity of the venom, while hemorrhage and skin necrosis were significantly reduced in the presence of alkaloids 1 and 2.


Journal of Natural Products | 2016

Dinoflagellate-Related Amphidinolides from the Brazilian Octocoral Stragulum bicolor

Genoveffa Nuzzo; Bruno A. Gomes; Elvira Luongo; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Evelyne A. Santos; Adele Cutignano; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo; Angelo Fontana

Benthic cnidarians are colonial marine animals that host a rich population of associated and symbiotic microorganisms. In a recent paper we described for the first time the isolation of amphidinolide P (1) from the Brazilian octocoral Stragulum bicolor. Amphidinolides and similar compounds had been previously reported only from dinoflagellates of the genus Amphidinium; thus the presence of 1 in the invertebrate opens intriguing questions on the role and occurrence of these molecules in marine ecosystems. Here we report the identification of four further amphidinolides from the same soft coral, including the known amphidinolide T1 (2) and the new analogues here named amphidinolides C4 (3), B8 (4), and B9 (5). The chemical structures have been elucidated mainly by extensive study of spectroscopic data. Cytotoxic activities of 3 and 4 were evaluated against the colon adenocarcinoma cell line HCT-116.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2009

1H and 13C NMR assignments for two new cordiaquinones from roots of Cordia leucocephala.

Jaécio Carlos Diniz; Francisco Arnaldo Viana; Odaci Fernandes de Oliveira; Maria Aparecida M. Maciel; Maria Conceição M. Torres; Raimundo Braz-Filho; Edilberto R. Silveira; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa

From the roots of Cordia leucocephala (Boraginaceae), two new meroterpenoid naphthoquinones, 6‐[10‐(12,12‐dimethyl‐13α‐hydroxy‐16‐methenyl‐cyclohexyl)ethyl]‐1,4‐naphthalenedione (cordiaquinone L) and 5‐methyl‐6‐[10‐(12,12‐dimethyl‐13β‐hydroxy‐16‐methenyl‐cyclohexyl)methyl‐1,4‐naphthalenedione (cordiaquinone M) were isolated. Their structures were elucidated after detailed 1D and 2D NMR (COSY, HSQC, HMBC and NOESY) data analyses and comparison with literature data for analogous compounds. Copyright


Molecules | 2013

Lepidotrichilins A and B, New Protolimonoids with Cytotoxic Activity from Trichilia Lepidota (Meliaceae)

Wagner da Silva Terra; Ivo José Curcino Vieira; Raimundo Braz-Filho; William Rodrigues de Freitas; Milton M. Kanashiro; Maria Conceição M. Torres

Two novel protolimonoids, named lepidotrichilins A (1) and B (2), four known protolimonoids, 21,23-epoxy-7α-21α-dihydroxyapotirucalla-14,24-dien-3-one (3), 21,23-epoxy-7α-21β-dihydroxyapotiru-calla-14,24-dien-3-one (4), dysorone D (5), deoxy-flindissone (6), and the two steroids β-sitosterol (7) and stigmasterol (8) were identified in leaves of Trichilia lepidota subsp. schumanniana (Harms) T.D. Pennington. From wood the coumarin scopoletin (9) was isolated. The structures were established by NMR (1D 1H and 13C-NMR and 2D 1H-1H COSY, HMQC and HMBC), mass spectroscopy and infrared (IR) spectral data. The hexane and methanol extracts of the leaves, the protolimonoids lepidotrichilins A (1) and B (2) (IC50 42.7 µg mL−1) and the protolimonoid deoxy-flindissone (6; IC50 9.3 µgmL−1) exhibited significant cytotoxic activity against the MOLT-4 and U937 leukemic cell lines.


Journal of Essential Oil Bearing Plants | 2009

Chemical Composition of the Essential Oils of Raphiodon echinus (Nees & Mart.) Schauer

Maria Conceição M. Torres; Luiz Cláudio M. Florêncio; Edilberto R. Silveira; Otília Deusdênia L. Pessoa

Abstract The chemical composition of the essential oils from leaves and fruits of Raphiodon echinus (Nees & Mart.) Schauer (Lamiaceae), collected during the fructification stage, was analyzed by GC-MS and GC-FID. A total of nineteen constituents were identified. From the leaf oi1 93.8 % of the chemical composition was identified, while for the fruits oi1 82.4 % was identified. Both oils were predominantly constituted by sesquiterpenes, being bicyclogermacrene (31.9 % and 19.7 %) and trans-caryophyllene (21.5 % and 21.2 %) the predominant compounds.

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Raimundo Braz-Filho

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

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Paula C. Jimenez

Federal University of São Paulo

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Diego Veras Wilke

Federal University of Ceará

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Alison B. da Silva

Federal University of Ceará

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