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Dive into the research topics where Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

New N-(phenoxydecyl)phthalimide derivatives displaying potent inhibition activity towards α-glucosidase

Rossana Pascale; Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Giovanni Lentini; Anna Spagnoletta; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Francesco De Santis; Annalisa De Palma; Vito Scalera; Carlo Franchini

Several members of a new family of non-sugar-type alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, bearing a phthalimide moiety connected to a variously substituted phenoxy ring by an alkyl chain, were synthesized and their activities were investigated. The efficacy of the inhibition activity appeared to be governed by the chain length of the substrate. Substrates possessing 10 carbons afforded the highest levels of activity, which were one to two orders of magnitude more potent than the known inhibitor 1-deoxynojirimycin (dNM). Furthermore, structure-activity relationship studies indicated a critical role of electron-withdrawing substituents at the phenoxy group for the activity. Derivatives bearing a chlorine atom along with a strong electron-withdrawing group, such as a nitro group, were the most potent of the series.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2006

Evaluation of the pharmacological activity of the major mexiletine metabolites on skeletal muscle sodium currents

M. De Bellis; A. De Luca; Francesco Rana; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Alessia Catalano; Giovanni Lentini; Carlo Franchini; Vincenzo Tortorella; D. Conte Camerino

Mexiletine (Mex), an orally effective antiarrhythmic agent used to treat ventricular arrhythmias, has also been found to be effective for myotonia and neuropathic pain. It is extensively metabolized in humans but little information exists about the pharmacodynamic properties of its metabolites.


Molecules | 2016

The Chemistry and Pharmacology of Citrus Limonoids

Roberta Gualdani; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Giovanni Lentini; Solomon Habtemariam

Citrus limonoids (CLs) are a group of highly oxygenated terpenoid secondary metabolites found mostly in the seeds, fruits and peel tissues of citrus fruits such as lemons, limes, oranges, pumellos, grapefruits, bergamots, and mandarins. Represented by limonin, the aglycones and glycosides of CLs have shown to display numerous pharmacological activities including anticancer, antimicrobial, antioxidant, antidiabetic and insecticidal among others. In this review, the chemistry and pharmacology of CLs are systematically scrutinised through the use of medicinal chemistry tools and structure-activity relationship approach. Synthetic derivatives and other structurally-related limonoids from other sources are include in the analysis. With the focus on literature in the past decade, the chemical classification of CLs, their physico-chemical properties as drugs, their biosynthesis and enzymatic modifications, possible ways of enhancing their biological activities through structural modifications, their ligand efficiency metrics and systematic graphical radar plot analysis to assess their developability as drugs are among those discussed in detail.


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Combined Modifications of Mexiletine Pharmacophores for New Lead Blockers of Nav1.4 Channels

Michela De Bellis; Annamaria De Luca; Jean François Desaphy; Roberta Carbonara; Judith A. Heiny; Ann Kennedy; Alessia Carocci; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Giovanni Lentini; Carlo Franchini; Diana Conte Camerino

Previously identified potent and/or use-dependent mexiletine (Mex) analogs were used as template for the rational design of new Na(v)-channel blockers. The effects of the novel analogs were tested on sodium currents of native myofibers. Data and molecular modeling show that increasing basicity and optimal alkyl chain length enhance use-dependent block. This was demonstrated by replacing the amino group with a more basic guanidine one while maintaining a proper distance between positive charge and aromatic ring (Me13) or with homologs having the chirality center nearby the amino group or the aromatic ring. Accordingly, a phenyl group on the asymmetric center in the homologated alkyl chain (Me12), leads to a further increase of use-dependent behavior versus the phenyl Mex derivative Me4. A fluorine atom in paraposition and one ortho-methyl group on the xylyloxy ring (Me15) increase potency and stereoselectivity versus Me4. Charge delocalization and greater flexibility of Me15 may increase its affinity for Tyr residues influencing steric drug interaction with the primary Phe residue of the binding site. Me12 and Me15 show limited selectivity against Na(v)-isoforms, possibly due to the highly conserved binding site on Na(v). To our knowledge, the new compounds are the most potent Mex-like Na(v) blockers obtained to date and deserve further investigation.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Searching for new antiarrhythmic agents: Evaluation of meta-hydroxymexiletine enantiomers

Alessia Catalano; Roberta Budriesi; Claudio Bruno; Antonia Di Mola; Ivana Defrenza; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Matteo Micucci; Alessia Carocci; Carlo Franchini; Giovanni Lentini

Mexiletine is a very well-known class IB antiarrhythmic drug, whose enantiomers differ in both pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, the (R)-isomer being the eutomer on experimental arrhythmias and in binding studies on cardiac voltage-gated sodium channels. meta-Hydroxymexiletine (MHM) is a minor metabolite of mexiletine, which has demonstrated to be more potent than the parent compound. Herein we report the synthesis and biological evaluation of MHM enantiomers for their potential antiarrhythmic activity. The same stereoselectivity pattern observed for mexiletine was found for MHM: the (R)-enantiomer of MHM was the eutomer on ac-arrhythmia also showing a negative inotropism higher than the one displayed by mexiletine and, at the same time, a decreased vasorelaxant activity on guinea-pig left atrium and guinea-pig ileum longitudinal smooth muscle.


ChemMedChem | 2010

Chiral Aryloxyalkylamines: Selective 5‐HT1B/1D Activation and Analgesic Activity

Alessia Carocci; Giovanni Lentini; Alessia Catalano; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Claudio Bruno; Marilena Muraglia; Nicola Antonio Colabufo; Nicoletta Galeotti; Filomena Corbo; Rosanna Matucci; Carla Ghelardini; Carlo Franchini

A series of chiral 2,3‐dichlorophenoxy and 1‐naphthyloxy alkylamines were synthesized, and their binding affinities towards 5‐HT1D and h5‐HT1B receptors were evaluated. In the naphthyloxy series, the (R)‐prolinol derivative was the most selective 5‐HT1D ligand, while (S)‐N‐methyl‐2‐(1‐naphthyloxy)propan‐1‐amine showed the highest selectivity for h5‐HT1B. Both compounds performed as 5‐HT1D agonists in the isolated guinea pig assay and showed higher analgesic activity than both sumatriptan and the achiral analogue 20 b in the mouse hot‐plate test. Neither ligand displayed any affinity for nicotinic ACh receptors present in mouse brain membranes, thus indicating that their analgesic activity does not arise through interaction with these receptors.


Archiv Der Pharmazie | 2010

Hydroxylated Analogs of Mexiletine as Tools for Structural‐Requirements Investigation of the Sodium Channel Blocking Activity

Alessia Catalano; Alessia Carocci; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Antonia Di Mola; Giovanni Lentini; Angelo Lovece; Antonella Dipalma; Teresa Costanza; Jean-François Desaphy; Diana Conte Camerino; Carlo Franchini

[2‐(2‐Aminopropoxy)‐1,3‐phenylene]dimethanol 1 and 4‐(2‐aminopropoxy)‐3‐(hydroxymethyl)‐5‐methylphenol 2, two dihydroxylated analogs of mexiletine – a well known class IB anti‐arrhythmic drug – were synthesized and used as pharmacological tools to investigate the blocking‐activity requirements of human skeletal muscle, voltage‐gated sodium channel. The very low blocking activity shown by newly synthesized compounds corroborates the hypothesis that the presence of a phenolic group in the para‐position to the aromatic moiety and/or benzylic hydroxyl groups on the aromatic moiety of local anesthetic‐like drugs impairs either the transport to or the interaction with the binding site in the pore of Na+ channels.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2013

Molecular Dissection of Lubeluzole Use–Dependent Block of Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels Discloses New Therapeutic Potentials

Jean-François Desaphy; Roberta Carbonara; Teresa Costanza; Giovanni Lentini; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Claudio Bruno; Carlo Franchini; Diana Conte Camerino

Lubeluzole, which acts on various targets in vitro, including voltage-gated sodium channels, was initially proposed as a neuroprotectant. The lubeluzole structure contains a benzothiazole moiety [N-methyl-1,3-benzothiazole-2-amine (R-like)] related to riluzole and a phenoxy-propranol-amine moiety [(RS)-1-(3,4-difluorophenoxy)-3-(piperidin-1-yl)propan-2-ol (A-core)] recalling propranolol. Both riluzole and propranolol are efficient sodium channel blockers. We studied in detail the effects of lubeluzole (racemic mixture and single isomers), the aforementioned lubeluzole moieties, and riluzole on sodium channels to increase our knowledge of drug-channel molecular interactions. Compounds were tested on hNav1.4 sodium channels, and on F1586C or Y1593C mutants functionally expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, using the patch-clamp technique. Lubeluzole blocked sodium channels with a remarkable effectiveness. No stereoselectivity was found. Compared with mexiletine, the dissociation constant for inactivated channels was ∼600 times lower (∼11 nM), conferring to lubeluzole a huge use-dependence of great therapeutic value. The F1586C mutation only partially impaired the use-dependent block, suggesting that additional amino acids are critically involved in high-affinity binding. Lubeluzole moieties were modest sodium channel blockers. Riluzole blocked sodium channels efficiently but lacked use dependence, similar to R-like. F1586C fully abolished A-core use dependence, suggesting that A-core binds to the local anesthetic receptor. Thus, lubeluzole likely binds to the local anesthetic receptor through its phenoxy-propranol-amine moiety, with consequent use-dependent behavior. Nevertheless, compared with other known sodium channel blockers, lubeluzole adds a third pharmacophoric point through its benzothiazole moiety, which greatly enhances high-affinity binding and use-dependent block. If sufficient isoform specificity can be attained, the huge use-dependent block may help in the development of new sodium channel inhibitors to provide pharmacotherapy for membrane excitability disorders, such as myotonia, epilepsy, or chronic pain.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

A convenient synthesis of lubeluzole and its enantiomer: Evaluation as chemosensitizing agents on human ovarian adenocarcinoma and lung carcinoma cells

Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Maurizio Viale; Claudio Bruno; Alessia Carocci; Alessia Catalano; Antonio Carrieri; Carlo Franchini; Giovanni Lentini

Lubeluzole, a neuroprotective anti-ischemic drug, and its enantiomer were prepared following a convenient procedure based on hydrolytic kinetic resolution. The ee values were >99% and 96%, respectively, as assessed by HPLC analysis. The chemosensitizing effects of both enantiomers were evaluated in combination with either doxorubicin (human ovarian adenocarcinoma A2780 cells) or paclitaxel (human lung carcinoma A549 cells) by the MTT assay. At the lowest concentrations used, lubeluzole showed an overall and remarkable tendency to synergize with both anticancer drugs. In ovarian cancer cells a clear prevalence of antagonistic effect was observed for the R-enantiomer. The synergistic effects of lubeluzole for both drugs were observed over a wide concentration window (0.005-5 μM), the lowest limit being at least 40 times lower than human plasma concentrations previously reported as causing serious side effects.


Drug Metabolism Letters | 2012

An Improved Synthesis of m-Hydroxymexiletine, a Potent Mexiletine Metabolite

Alessia Catalano; Alessia Carocci; Giovanni Lentini; Ivana Defrenza; Maria Maddalena Cavalluzzi; Carlo Franchini

m-Hydroxymexiletine (MHM), a minor metabolite of the class IB anti-arrhythmic drug mexiletine, is about two fold more potent than the parent compound on human cardiac voltage-gated sodium channels (hNav1.5), and equipotent to mexiletine on human skeletal-muscle voltage-gated sodium channels (hNav1.4). Herein, an alternative and simplified synthesis of this promising compound has been accomplished. This route, as well as being more efficient, has the advantage, over the first, to avoid the use of oxidizing agents, such as the meta-chloroperoxybenzoic acid.

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