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Featured researches published by Riccardo Castelli.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents | 2015

Fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibitors: a patent review (2009 – 2014)

Alessio Lodola; Riccardo Castelli; Marco Mor; Silvia Rivara

Introduction: Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is a key enzyme responsible for the degradation of the endocannabinoid anandamide. FAAH inactivation is emerging as a strategy to treat several CNS and peripheral diseases, including inflammation and pain. The search for effective FAAH inhibitors has thus become a key focus in present drug discovery. Areas covered: Patents and patent applications published from 2009 to 2014 in which novel chemical classes are claimed to inhibit FAAH. Expert opinion: FAAH is a promising target for treating many disease conditions including pain, inflammation and mood disorders. In the last few years, remarkable efforts have been made to develop new FAAH inhibitors (either reversible and irreversible) characterized by excellent potency and selectivity, to complete the arsenal of tools for modulating FAAH activity. The failure of PF-04457845 in a Phase II study on osteoarthritis pain has not flattened the interest in FAAH inhibitors. New clinical trials on ‘classical’ FAAH inhibitors are now ongoing, and new strategies based on compounds with peculiar in vivo distribution (e.g., peripheral) or with multiple pharmacological activities (e.g., FAAH and COX) are under investigation and could boost the therapeutic potential of this class in the next future.


Molecules | 2013

Synthesis and structure-activity relationships of amino acid conjugates of cholanic acid as antagonists of the EphA2 receptor.

Simonetta Russo; Matteo Incerti; Massimiliano Tognolini; Riccardo Castelli; Daniele Pala; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Carmine Giorgio; Francesca De Franco; Antimo Gioiello; Paola Vicini; Elisabetta Barocelli; Silvia Rivara; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The Eph–ephrin system plays a critical role in tumor growth and vascular functions during carcinogenesis. We had previously identified cholanic acid as a competitive and reversible EphA2 antagonist able to disrupt EphA2-ephrinA1 interaction and to inhibit EphA2 activation in prostate cancer cells. Herein, we report the synthesis and biological evaluation of a set of cholanic acid derivatives obtained by conjugation of its carboxyl group with a panel of naturally occurring amino acids with the aim to improve EphA2 receptor inhibition. Structure-activity relationships indicate that conjugation of cholanic acid with linear amino acids of small size leads to effective EphA2 antagonists whereas the introduction of aromatic amino acids reduces the potency in displacement studies. The β-alanine derivative 4 was able to disrupt EphA2-ephrinA1 interaction in the micromolar range and to dose-dependently inhibit EphA2 activation on PC3 cells. These findings may help the design of novel EphA2 antagonists active on cancer cell lines.


ChemMedChem | 2014

Target Hopping as a Useful Tool for the Identification of Novel EphA2 Protein–Protein Antagonists

Massimiliano Tognolini; Matteo Incerti; Daniele Pala; Simonetta Russo; Riccardo Castelli; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Carmine Giorgio; Alessio Lodola

Lithocholic acid (LCA), a physiological ligand for the nuclear receptor FXR and the G‐protein‐coupled receptor TGR5, has been recently described as an antagonist of the EphA2 receptor, a key member of the ephrin signalling system involved in tumour growth. Given the ability of LCA to recognize FXR, TGR5, and EphA2 receptors, we hypothesized that the structural requirements for a small molecule to bind each of these receptors might be similar. We therefore selected a set of commercially available FXR or TGR5 ligands and tested them for their ability to inhibit EphA2 by targeting the EphA2‐ephrin‐A1 interface. Among the selected compounds, the stilbene carboxylic acid GW4064 was identified as an effective antagonist of EphA2, being able to block EphA2 activation in prostate carcinoma cells, in the micromolar range. This finding proposes the “target hopping” approach as a new effective strategy to discover new protein–protein interaction inhibitors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Synthesis, Structural Elucidation, and Biological Evaluation of NSC12, an Orally Available Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) Ligand Trap for the Treatment of FGF-Dependent Lung Tumors

Riccardo Castelli; Arianna Giacomini; Mattia Anselmi; Nicole Bozza; Federica Vacondio; Silvia Rivara; Sara Matarazzo; Marco Presta; Marco Mor; Roberto Ronca

NSC12 is an orally available pan-FGF trap able to inhibit FGF2/FGFR interaction and endowed with promising antitumor activity. It was identified by virtual screening from a NCI small molecule library, but no data were available about its synthesis, stereochemistry, and physicochemical properties. We report here a synthetic route that allowed us to characterize and unambiguously identify the structure of the active compound by a combination of NMR spectroscopy and in silico conformational analysis. The synthetic protocol allowed us to sustain experiments aimed at assessing its therapeutic potential for the treatment of FGF-dependent lung cancers. A crucial step in the synthesis generated a couple of diastereoisomers, with only one able to act as a FGF trap molecule and to inhibit FGF-dependent receptor activation, cell proliferation, and tumor growth when tested in vitro and in vivo on murine and human lung cancer cells.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Amino Acid Derivatives as Palmitoylethanolamide Prodrugs: Synthesis, In Vitro Metabolism and In Vivo Plasma Profile in Rats

Federica Vacondio; Michele Bassi; Claudia Silva; Riccardo Castelli; Caterina Carmi; Laura Scalvini; Alessio Lodola; Valentina Vivo; Lisa Flammini; Elisabetta Barocelli; Marco Mor; Silvia Rivara

Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) has antinflammatory and antinociceptive properties widely exploited in veterinary and human medicine, despite its poor pharmacokinetics. Looking for prodrugs that could progressively release PEA to maintain effective plasma concentrations, we prepared carbonates, esters and carbamates at the hydroxyl group of PEA. Chemical stability (pH 7.4) and stability in rat plasma and liver homogenate were evaluated by in vitro assays. Carbonates and carbamates resulted too labile and too resistant in plasma, respectively. Ester derivatives, prepared by conjugating PEA with various amino acids, allowed to modulate the kinetics of PEA release in plasma and stability in liver homogenate. L-Val-PEA, with suitable PEA release in plasma, and D-Val-PEA, with high resistance to hepatic degradation, were orally administered to rats and plasma levels of prodrugs and PEA were measured at different time points. Both prodrugs showed significant release of PEA, but provided lower plasma concentrations than those obtained with equimolar doses of PEA. Amino-acid esters of PEA are a promising class to develop prodrugs, even if they need further chemical optimization.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Δ(5)-Cholenoyl-amino acids as selective and orally available antagonists of the Eph-ephrin system.

Riccardo Castelli; Massimiliano Tognolini; Federica Vacondio; Matteo Incerti; Daniele Pala; Donatella Callegari; Simona Bertoni; Carmine Giorgio; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Ilaria Zanotti; Antonella Bugatti; Marco Rusnati; Claudio Festuccia; Silvia Rivara; Elisabetta Barocelli; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The Eph receptor-ephrin system is an emerging target for the development of novel anti-angiogenic therapies. Research programs aimed at developing small-molecule antagonists of the Eph receptors are still in their initial stage as available compounds suffer from pharmacological drawbacks, limiting their application in vitro and in vivo. In the present work, we report the design, synthesis and evaluation of structure-activity relationships of a class of Δ(5)-cholenoyl-amino acid conjugates as Eph-ephrin antagonists. As a major achievement of our exploration, we identified N-(3β-hydroxy-Δ(5)-cholen-24-oyl)-L-tryptophan (UniPR1331) as the first small molecule antagonist of the Eph-ephrin system effective as an anti-angiogenic agent in endothelial cells, bioavailable in mice by the oral route and devoid of biological activity on G protein-coupled and nuclear receptors targeted by bile acid derivatives.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2014

Combining Ligand- and Structure-Based Approaches for the Discovery of New Inhibitors of the EPHA2–ephrin-A1 Interaction

Daniele Pala; Riccardo Castelli; Matteo Incerti; Simonetta Russo; Massimiliano Tognolini; Carmine Giorgio; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Ilaria Zanotti; Federica Vacondio; Silvia Rivara; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The EPH receptor A2 (EPHA2) represents an attractive anticancer target. With the aim to identify novel EPHA2 receptor antagonists, a virtual screening campaign, combining shape-similarity and docking calculations, was conducted on a set of commercially available compounds. A combined score, taking into account both ligand- and structure-based results, was then used to identify the most promising candidates. Two compounds, selected among the best-ranked ones, were identified as EPHA2 receptor antagonists with micromolar affinity.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Metadynamics for Perspective Drug Design: Computationally Driven Synthesis of New Protein–Protein Interaction Inhibitors Targeting the EphA2 Receptor

Matteo Incerti; Simonetta Russo; Donatella Callegari; Daniele Pala; Carmine Giorgio; Ilaria Zanotti; Elisabetta Barocelli; Paola Vicini; Federica Vacondio; Silvia Rivara; Riccardo Castelli; Massimiliano Tognolini; Alessio Lodola

Metadynamics (META-D) is emerging as a powerful method for the computation of the multidimensional free-energy surface (FES) describing the protein-ligand binding process. Herein, the FES of unbinding of the antagonist N-(3α-hydroxy-5β-cholan-24-oyl)-l-β-homotryptophan (UniPR129) from its EphA2 receptor was reconstructed by META-D simulations. The characterization of the free-energy minima identified on this FES proposes a binding mode fully consistent with previously reported and new structure-activity relationship data. To validate this binding mode, new N-(3α-hydroxy-5β-cholan-24-oyl)-l-β-homotryptophan derivatives were designed, synthesized, and tested for their ability to displace ephrin-A1 from the EphA2 receptor. Among them, two antagonists, namely compounds 21 and 22, displayed high affinity versus the EphA2 receptor and resulted endowed with better physicochemical and pharmacokinetic properties than the parent compound. These findings highlight the importance of free-energy calculations in drug design, confirming that META-D simulations can be used to successfully design novel bioactive compounds.


Oncotarget | 2018

UniPR1331, a small molecule targeting Eph/ephrin interaction, prolongs survival in glioblastoma and potentiates the effect of antiangiogenic therapy in mice

Claudio Festuccia; Giovanni Luca Gravina; Carmine Giorgio; Andrea Mancini; Cristina Pellegrini; Alessandro Colapietro; Simona Delle Monache; Maria Giovanna Maturo; Roberta Sferra; Paola Chiodelli; Marco Rusnati; Annamaria Cantoni; Riccardo Castelli; Federica Vacondio; Alessio Lodola; Massimiliano Tognolini

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most malignant brain tumor, showing high resistance to standard therapeutic approaches that combine surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. As opposed to healthy tissues, EphA2 has been found highly expressed in specimens of glioblastoma, and increased expression of EphA2 has been shown to correlate with poor survival rates. Accordingly, agents blocking Eph receptor activity could represent a new therapeutic approach. Herein, we demonstrate that UniPR1331, a pan Eph receptor antagonist, possesses significant in vivo anti-angiogenic and anti-vasculogenic properties which lead to a significant anti-tumor activity in xenograft and orthotopic models of GBM. UniPR1331 halved the final volume of tumors when tested in xenografts (p<0.01) and enhanced the disease-free survival of treated animals in the orthotopic models of GBM both by using U87MG cells (40 vs 24 days of control, p<0.05) or TPC8 cells (52 vs 16 days, p<0.01). Further, the association of UniPR1331 with the anti-VEGF antibody Bevacizumab significantly increased the efficacy of both monotherapies in all tested models. Overall, our data promote UniPR1331 as a novel tool for tackling GBM.


European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Hierarchical Self‐Assembly of Luminescent EuIII Complexes on Silicon

Kasjan Misztal; Cristina Tudisco; Andrea Sartori; Joanna M. Malicka; Riccardo Castelli; Guglielmo G. Condorelli; Enrico Dalcanale

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Alessio Lodola

Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A.

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