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Dive into the research topics where Renan Galaverna is active.

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Featured researches published by Renan Galaverna.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Vapors from Ionic Liquids: Reconciling Simulations with Mass Spectrometric Data.

Brenno A. D. Neto; Eduardo C. Meurer; Renan Galaverna; Benjamin J. Bythell; Jairton Dupont; R. Graham Cooks; Marcos N. Eberlin

The species involved in the distillation of aprotic ionic liquids are discussed in light of recent simulations and mass spectrometric data obtained by various techniques. New mass spectrometric data collected via laser-induced acoustic desorption and the thermal desorption of ionic liquids are also presented as well as additional DFT calculations. The available evidence of theoretical simulations and mass spectrometric data suggests that the distillation of ionic liquids occurs mainly via neutral ion pairs of composition CnAn [C(+) = cation and A(-) = anion], followed by gas-phase dissociation to lower order ion pairs and then dissociation of hot CA to C(+) and A(-), followed by ion/molecule association events to give [CnAn-1](+) or [Cn-1An](-) ions to a degree that depends on the amount of internal energy deposited into the neutral CnAn clusters upon evaporation.


Analytical Methods | 2015

Petroleomics by ion mobility mass spectrometry: resolution and characterization of contaminants and additives in crude oils and petrofuels

Jandyson M. Santos; Renan Galaverna; Marcos A. Pudenzi; Eduardo Morgado Schmidt; Nathaniel L. Sanders; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Alex Mordehai; George Stafford; Alberto Wisniewski; Marcos N. Eberlin

Ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS), performed with exceptional resolution and sensitivity in a new uniform-field drift tube ion mobility quadrupole time-of-flight (IM-QTOF) instrument, is shown to provide a useful tool for resolving and characterizing crude oils and their contaminants, as well as petrofuels and their additives. Whereas direct analysis of a crude oil sample contaminated with demulsifiers by the classical ESI(±)-FTICR-MS petroleomic approach was unsatisfactory since it responds only with abundance and m/z, and ionization is impaired due to suppression of polar compounds of crude oil by additives likely used in petroleum industry, IM-MS enables mobility separation of ions, particularly of double bond equivalent (DBE) series for a giving CnX class providing separated spectra which are typical obtained either for the crude oil or the contaminants, even suffering of ion suppression or low ionization efficiency. The combination of improved IM resolution and high mass resolving power (40,000@400) of the QTOF instrument provides useful information on class (N, NO, NS, etc.), carbon number (Cn), and unsaturation (DBE) levels for crude oils, allowing one to infer geochemical properties from DBE trends that can be compared with IM-MS data. As demonstrated by results of gasoline samples with additives, the IM-MS system also allows efficient separation and characterization of additives and contaminants in petrofuels.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

Genomic and chemical insights into biosurfactant production by the mangrove-derived strain Bacillus safensis CCMA-560

Daniela Ferreira Domingos; Andreia Fonseca de Faria; Renan Galaverna; Marcos N. Eberlin; Paul Greenfield; Tiago Domingues Zucchi; Itamar Soares de Melo; Nai Tran-Dinh; David J. Midgley; Valéria Maia de Oliveira

Many Bacillus species can produce biosurfactant, although most of the studies on lipopeptide production by this genus have been focused on Bacillus subtilis. Surfactants are broadly used in pharmaceutical, food and petroleum industry, and biological surfactant shows some advantages over the chemical surfactants, such as less toxicity, production from renewable, cheaper feedstocks and development of novel recombinant hyperproducer strains. This study is aimed to unveil the biosurfactant metabolic pathway and chemical composition in Bacillus safensis strain CCMA-560. The whole genome of the CCMA-560 strain was previously sequenced, and with the aid of bioinformatics tools, its biosurfactant metabolic pathway was compared to other pathways of closely related species. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and high-resolution TOF mass spectrometry (MS) were used to characterize the biosurfactant molecule. B. safensis CCMA-560 metabolic pathway is similar to other Bacillus species; however, some differences in amino acid incorporation were observed, and chemical analyses corroborated the genetic results. The strain CCMA-560 harbours two genes flanked by srfAC and srfAD not present in other Bacillus spp., which can be involved in the production of the analogue gramicidin. FTIR and MS showed that B. safensis CCMA-560 produces a mixture of at least four lipopeptides with seven amino acids incorporated and a fatty acid chain with 14 carbons, which makes this molecule similar to the biosurfactant of Bacillus pumilus, namely, pumilacidin. This is the first report on the biosurfactant production by B. safensis, encompassing the investigation of the metabolic pathway and chemical characterization of the biosurfactant molecule.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2016

Direct Visualization of Neurotransmitters in Rat Brain Slices by Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry Imaging (DESI - MS)

Anna Maria A. P. Fernandes; Pedro H. Vendramini; Renan Galaverna; Nicolas V. Schwab; Luciane C. Alberici; Rodinei Augusti; Roger F. Castilho; Marcos N. Eberlin

AbstractMass spectrometry imaging (MSI) of neurotransmitters has so far been mainly performed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) where derivatization reagents, deuterated matrix and/or high resolution, or tandem MS have been applied to circumvent problems with interfering ion peaks from matrix and from isobaric species. We herein describe the application of desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging (DESI)-MSI in rat brain coronal and sagittal slices for direct spatial monitoring of neurotransmitters and choline with no need of derivatization reagents and/or deuterated materials. The amino acids γ-aminobutyric (GABA), glutamate, aspartate, serine, as well as acetylcholine, dopamine, and choline were successfully imaged using a commercial DESI source coupled to a hybrid quadrupole-Orbitrap mass spectrometer. The spatial distribution of the analyzed compounds in different brain regions was determined. We conclude that the ambient matrix-free DESI-MSI is suitable for neurotransmitter imaging and could be applied in studies that involve evaluation of imbalances in neurotransmitters levels. Graphical Abstractᅟ


Analytical Methods | 2015

Differentiation of two morphologically similar Amazonian Aniba species by mass spectrometry leaf fingerprinting

Renan Galaverna; Paulo de Tarso Barbosa Sampaio; L. E. S. Barata; Marcos N. Eberlin; Carlos H.V. Fidelis

The wood of the Amazonian tree Aniba rosaeodora Ducke has been intensively exploited since the 1920s and remains a much valued material in the perfume industry, leading to its classification as a plant at risk of extinction. Another Amazonian tree, Aniba parviflora, is morphologically highly similar to the much more valuable A. rosaeodora and is illegally commercialized in the seedling stage as counterfeit samples of the much more valuable A. rosaeodora. A technique that would be able to perform rapid, versatile and reliable differentiation of the two species would therefore be valuable to detect such illegal practice. Herein we describe unequivocal differentiation between the two morphologically similar Amazonian Aniba species by leaf mass spectrometry fingerprinting using a small fragment of the leaf. Two ionization techniques were tested (ESI and VL-EASI), and mass spectra obtained from many leaves and at different points on the leaf surface belonging to the same species were very similar and reproducible, whereas spectra between the two species were markedly different. Marker ions detected in each spectrum were structurally characterized based on the accurate mass measurements, MS/MS fragmentation patterns and comparison of the results with reported data. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to validate the differentiation of the spectra. MS leaf fingerprinting using both ESI and VL-EASI offers therefore a rapid, versatile and reliable method to differentiate morphologically similar plant species, as demonstrated herein for the two Amazonian Aniba species at the seedling stage.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016

Charge Tags for Most Comprehensive ESI-MS Monitoring of Morita-Baylis-Hillman (MBH)/aza-MBH Reactions: Solid Mechanistic View and the Dualistic Role of the Charge Tagged Acrylate

Renan Galaverna; Nilton S. Camilo; Marla N. Godoi; Fernando Coelho; Marcos N. Eberlin

Neutral and charge tagged reagents were used to investigate the mechanism of the classical Morita-Baylis-Hillman (MBH) reaction as well as its aza-version using mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization (ESI-MS). The use of an acrylate (activated alkene) with a methylimidazolium ion as a charge tag eliminates the requirement for adding acids as ESI(+) additives, which are normally used to favor protonation and therefore detection of reaction partners (reagents, intermediates, and products) by ESI(+)-MS. For both charge tagged reactions (MBH/aza-MBH), most reactants, intermediates, and the final adducts were efficiently detected in the form of abundant doubly and singly charged ions. Characterization of the reactions partners was performed via both tandem mass spectrometry (ESI(+)-MS/MS) and accurate m/z measurements. The charge tagged reactions also showed faster conversion rates when compare to the neutral reaction, indicating a dualistic role for the charge tagged acrylate. It acts as both the reagent and a cocatalyst due to the inherent ionic-coordination nature of the methylimidazolium ion, which stabilizes the zwitterionic intermediates and reagents through different types of coordination ion pairs. Hemiacetal intermediates for the rate-limiting proton transfer step were also intercepted and characterized for both classical and aza-MBH charge tagged reactions.


Analytical Methods | 2016

Profiles of phenolic compounds by FT-ICR MS and antioxidative and antiproliferative activities of Stryphnodendron obovatum Benth leaf extracts

M. F. da Costa; Renan Galaverna; Marcos A. Pudenzi; Altg Ruiz; J.E. de Carvalho; Marcos N. Eberlin; C. A. M. dos Santos

Stryphnodendron obovatum Benth is a Brazilian Cerrado tree, which is rich in catechin derivatives, being therefore widely used in folk medicine. Its seeds, beans and bark have been used for various medicinal purposes, but few reports have tried to correlate their biological activity with their chemical composition. In this study, we have profiled the main phenolic constituents of S. obovatum leaf extracts by ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS), and tried to establish a correlation of metabolites and antioxidant and in vitro antiproliferative activities. In the methanolic extract flavonoid derivatives were detected and they presented the most promising scavenging activities for methanolic extracts (EC50 0.86 ± 0.01 μg mL−1), being slightly more active than Trolox (EC50 1.13 ± 0.09 μg mL−1). In the hydroethanolic extract, catechin derivatives as well as protocatechuic acid-glucoside were detected and found to be a little less active than the control (EC50 1.39 ± 0.01 μg mL−1). The best performance in terms of antiproliferative activity was found for the methanolic extract for renal cell lines (TGI 40.6 g mL−1).


Molecules | 2018

Antioxidative, Antiproliferative and Antimicrobial Activities of Phenolic Compounds from Three Myrcia Species

Catarina dos Santos; Renan Galaverna; Célio Fernando Figueiredo Angolini; Vania V A Nunes; Luiz Fernando Rolim de Almeida; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Regina M T Duarte; Marta Cristina Teixeira Duarte; Marcos N. Eberlin

Myrcia bella Cambess., Myrcia fallax (Rich.) DC. and Myrcia guianensis (Aubl.) DC. (Myrtaceae) are trees found in Brazilian Cerrado. They have been widely used in folk medicine for the treatment of gastrointestinal disorders, hemorrhagic and infectious diseases. Few reports have been found in the literature connecting their phenolic composition and biological activities. In this regard, we have profiled the main phenolic constituents of Myrcia spp. leaves extracts by ESI(−)Q-TOF-MS. The main constituents found were ellagic acid (M. bella), galloyl glucose isomers (M. guianensis) and hexahydroxydiphenic (HHDP) acid derivatives (M. fallax). In addition, quercetin and myricetin derivatives were also found in all Myrcia spp. extracts. The most promising antioxidant activity, measured by 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) scavenging activity, was found for M. fallax extracts (EC50 8.61 ± 0.22 µg·mL−1), being slightly less active than quercetin and gallic acid (EC50 2.96 ± 0.17 and 2.03 ± 0.02 µg·mL−1, respectively). For in vitro antiproliferative activity, M. guianensis showed good activity against leukemia (K562 TGI = 7.45 µg·mL−1). The best antimicrobial activity was observed for M. bella and M. fallax to Escherichia coli (300 and 250 µg·mL−1, respectively). In conclusion, the activities found are closely related to the phenolic composition of these plants.


Phytochemistry | 2018

Guaianolide sesquiterpene lactones and aporphine alkaloids from the stem bark of Guatteria friesiana

Emmanoel Vilaça Costa; Liviane do Nascimento Soares; Maria Lúcia B. Pinheiro; Beatriz Helena L. N. Sales Maia; Francisco A. Marques; Andersson Barison; Jackson Roberto Guedes da Silva Almeida; Iran L. Sousa; Renan Galaverna; Gabriel Heerdt; Nelson H. Morgon; Leonard D.R. Acho; Emerson Silva Lima; Felipe M.A. da Silva; Hector H.F. Koolen

Three guaianolide sesquiterpenes, denoted guatterfriesols A-C, and four aporphine alkaloid derivatives were isolated from the stem bark of the Amazonian plant Guatteria friesiana. Thus far, sesquiterpene lactones have not been described in Annonaceae. Structures of the previously undescribed compounds were established by using 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy in combination with MS. The absolute stereochemistry was assigned via NOE NMR experiments, ECD spectroscopy, and theoretical calculations using the TDDFT approach. Among the isolated compounds, the alkaloid guatterfriesidine showed anti-glycation activity by inhibiting the formation of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) through the prevention of oxidation in both BSA/methylglyoxal and BSA/fructose systems.


Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2018

Impact of continuous flow chemistry in the synthesis of natural products and active pharmaceutical ingredients

Juliana M. de Souza; Renan Galaverna; Aline A.N. De Souza; Timothy J. Brocksom; Julio C. Pastre; Rodrigo O. M. A. de Souza; Kleber T. de Oliveira

We present a comprehensive review of the advent and impact of continuous flow chemistry with regard to the synthesis of natural products and drugs, important pharmaceutical products and definitely responsible for a revolution in modern healthcare. We detail the beginnings of modern drugs and the large scale batch mode of production, both chemical and microbiological. The introduction of modern continuous flow chemistry is then presented, both as a technological tool for enabling organic chemistry, and as a fundamental research endeavor. This part details the syntheses of bioactive natural products and commercial drugs.

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Marcos N. Eberlin

State University of Campinas

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Julio C. Pastre

State University of Campinas

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Fernando Coelho

State University of Campinas

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Gabriel Heerdt

State University of Campinas

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Jairton Dupont

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Marcos A. Pudenzi

State University of Campinas

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Marla N. Godoi

State University of Campinas

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Nelson H. Morgon

State University of Campinas

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