Serena Pasquini
University of Siena
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Publication
Featured researches published by Serena Pasquini.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Serena Pasquini; Claudia Mugnaini; Cristina Tintori; Maurizio Botta; Alejandro Trejos; Riina K. Arvela; Mats Larhed; Myriam Witvrouw; Martine Michiels; Frauke Christ; Zeger Debyser; Federico Corelli
A set of 4-quinolone-3-carboxylic acids bearing different substituents on the condensed benzene ring was designed and synthesized as potential HIV-1 integrase inhibitors structurally related to elvitegravir. Some of the new compounds proved to be able to inhibit the strand transfer step of the virus integration process in the micromolar range. Docking studies and quantum mechanics calculations were used to rationalize these data.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Serena Pasquini; Lorenzo Botta; Teresa Semeraro; Claudia Mugnaini; Alessia Ligresti; Enza Palazzo; Sabatino Maione; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Federico Corelli
Quinolone-3-carboxamides 11 bearing at position 5, 6, 7, or 8 diverse substituents such as halides, alkyl, aryl, alkoxy, and aryloxy groups differing in their steric/electronic properties, were prepared. The new compounds were tested in vitro for CB1 and CB2 receptor affinity in comparison with the reference compounds rimonabant and SR144528. The tested compounds exhibited CB2 affinity in the range from 55.9 to 0.8 nM and CB1 affinity in the range from >10,000 to 5.3 nM, with selectivity indeces [Ki(CB1)/Ki(CB2)] varying from >2666.6 to 1.23. On the basis of the structure-selectivity relationship developed, the presence of a substituent at C6/C8 or C7 well accounts for the high or low CB2 selectivity, respectively. Compound 11c, characterized by high CB2 affinity and selectivity, showed analgesic activity in the formalin test of acute peripheral and inflammatory pain in mice as a result of selective CB2 agonistic activity.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Serena Pasquini; Maria Cristina De Rosa; Valentina Pedani; Claudia Mugnaini; Francesca Guida; Livio Luongo; Maria De Chiaro; Sabatino Maione; Stefania Dragoni; Maria Frosini; Alessia Ligresti; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Federico Corelli
Experimental evidence suggests that selective CB2 receptor modulators may provide access to antihyperalgesic agents devoid of psychotropic effects. Taking advantage of previous findings on structure-activity/selectivity relationships for a class of 4-quinolone-3-carboxamides, further structural modifications of the heterocyclic scaffold were explored, leading to the discovery of the 8-methoxy derivative 4a endowed with the highest affinity and selectivity ever reported for a CB2 ligand. The compound, evaluated in vivo in the formalin test, behaved as an inverse agonist by reducing at a dose of 6 mg/kg the second phase of the formalin-induced nocifensive response in mice.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2012
Maria Paola Castelli; Angelo Casu; Paola Casti; Carla Lobina; Giancarlo Colombo; Maurizio Solinas; Daniela Giunta; Claudia Mugnaini; Serena Pasquini; Andrea Tafi; Simone Brogi; Gian Luigi Gessa; Federico Corelli
The potential efficacy of GABAB receptor agonists in the treatment of pain, drug addiction, epilepsy, cognitive dysfunctions, and anxiety disorders is supported by extensive preclinical and clinical evidence. However, the numerous side effects produced by the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen considerably limit the therapeutic use of this compound. The identification of positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of the GABAB receptor may constitute a novel approach in the pharmacological manipulation of the GABAB receptor, leading to fewer side effects. The present study reports the identification of two novel compounds, methyl 2-(1-adamantanecarboxamido)-4-ethyl-5-methylthiophene-3-carboxylate (COR627) and methyl 2-(cyclohexanecarboxamido)-4-ethyl-5-methylthiophene-3-carboxylate (COR628), which act as GABAB PAMs in 1) rat cortical membranes and 2) in vivo assay. Both compounds potentiated GABA- and baclofen-stimulated guanosine 5′-O-(3-[35S]thio)-triphosphate binding to native GABAB receptors, while producing no effect when given alone. GABA concentration-response curves in the presence of fixed concentrations of COR627 and COR628 revealed an increase of potency of GABA rather than its maximal efficacy. In radioligand binding experiments [displacement of the GABAB receptor antagonist, 3-N-[1-((S)-3,4dichlorophenyl)-ethylaminol]-2-(S)hydroxypropyl cyclo-hexylmethyl phosphinic acid ([3H]CGP54626)], both COR627 and COR628 increased the affinity of high- and low-affinity binding sites for GABA, producing no effect when administered alone up to a concentration of 1 mM. In vivo experiments indicated that pretreatment with per se ineffective doses of COR627 and COR628 potentiated the sedative/hypnotic effect of baclofen. In conclusion, COR627 and COR628 may represent two additional tools for use in investigating the roles and functions of positive allosteric modulatory binding sites of the GABAB receptor.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Serena Pasquini; Alessia Ligresti; Claudia Mugnaini; Teresa Semeraro; Lavinia Cicione; Maria Cristina De Rosa; Francesca Guida; Livio Luongo; Maria De Chiaro; Maria Grazia Cascio; Daniele Bolognini; Pietro Marini; Roger G. Pertwee; Sabatino Maione; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Federico Corelli
A set of quinolone-3-carboxamides 2 bearing diverse substituents at position 1, 3, and 6 of the bicyclic nucleus was prepared. Except for six compounds exhibiting Ki>100 nM, all the quinolone-3-carboxamides 2 proved to be high affinity CB2 ligands, with Ki values ranging from 73.2 to 0.7 nM and selectivity [SI=Ki(CB1)/Ki(CB2)] varying from >14285 to 1.9, with only 2ah exhibiting a reverse selectivity (SI<1). In the formalin test of peripheral acute and inflammatory pain in mice, 2ae showed analgesic activity that was antagonized by a selective CB2 antagonist. By contrast, 2e was inactive per se and antagonized the effect of a selective CB2 agonist. Finally, 2g and 2p exhibited CB2 inverse agonist-like behavior in this in vivo test. However, two different functional assays carried out in vitro on 2e and 2g indicated for both compounds an overall inverse agonist activity at CB2 receptors.
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011
Simone Brogi; Federico Corelli; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Alessia Ligresti; Claudia Mugnaini; Serena Pasquini; Andrea Tafi
This paper describes a three-dimensional quantitative structure-selectivity relationships (3D-QSSR) study for selectivity of a series of ligands for cannabinoid CB1 and CB2 receptors. 3D-QSSR exploration was expected to provide design information for drugs with high selectivity toward the CB2 receptor. The proposed 3D computational model was performed by Phase and generated taking into account a number of structurally diverse compounds characterized by a wide range of selectivity index values. The model proved to be predictive, with r2 of 0.95 and Q2 of 0.63. In order to get prospective experimental validation, the selectivity of an external data set of 39 compounds reported in the literature was predicted. The correlation coefficient (r2=0.56) obtained on this unrelated test set provided evidence that the correlation shown by the model was not a chance result. Subsequently, we essayed the ability of our approach to help the design of new CB2-selective ligands. Accordingly, based on our interest in studying the cannabinergic properties of quinolones, the N-(adamantan-1-yl)-4-oxo-8-methyl-1-pentyl-1,4-dihydroquinoline-3-carboxamide (65) was considered as a potential synthetic target. The log(SI) value predicted by using our model was indicative of high CB2 selectivity for such a compound, thus spurring us to synthesize it and to evaluate its CB1 and CB2 receptor affinity. Compound 65 was found to be an extremely selective CB2 ligand as it displayed high CB2 affinity (Ki=4.9 nM), while being devoid of CB1 affinity (Ki>10,000 nM). The identification of a new selective CB2 receptor ligand lends support for the practicability of quantitative ligand-based selectivity models for cannabinoid receptors. These drug discovery tools might represent a valuable complementary approach to docking studies performed on homology models of the receptors.
Pharmacological Research | 2010
Maria Grazia Cascio; Daniele Bolognini; Roger G. Pertwee; Enza Palazzo; Federico Corelli; Serena Pasquini; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Sabatino Maione
We have previously developed quinolone-3-carboxamides with the aim of obtaining new ligands for both cannabinoid receptors, CB1 and CB2. Our preliminary screening led to the identification of cannabinoid receptor ligands characterized by high affinity and, in some cases, also selectivity for CB(2) receptors. Specifically, three compounds, 1, 2 and 3 showed high affinity for CB2 as well as high selectivity over CB1 receptors. In addition, the activity shown by 1 against the formalin-induced nocifensive response in mice, reported in our previous paper, suggests that quinolone-3-carboxamides possess anti-nociceptive properties. In the present work, we have performed functional in vitro bioassays with the aim of investigating the functional activity in the [35S]GTPgammaS binding assay of the other two compounds that, like 1, behave as CB2 selective ligands, and their potential analgesic actions in vivo. We found that both 2 and 3 behave in vitro as CB2 inverse agonists and are able to decrease nociceptive behaviour in the late phase of the formalin test only at the highest dose tested, although, at lower doses, they prevent the anti-nociceptive effects of a selective CB2 partial agonist in the formalin test. These results identify in 2 and 3 two novel, potent and selective CB2 antagonists/inverse agonists and confirm previous reports in the literature that, in addition to agonists at cannabinoid CB2 receptors, also inverse agonists/antagonists at these receptors show promise as anti-inflammatory agents.
Pharmacological Research | 2012
Antonella Contartese; Massimo Valoti; Federico Corelli; Serena Pasquini; Claudia Mugnaini; Federica Pessina; Carlo Aldinucci; Giampietro Sgaragli; Maria Frosini
Cannabinoid CB2 receptor activation has been shown to have many pharmacological but not psychotropic effects. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential protection of brain tissues afforded by the novel substituted 4-quinolone-3-carboxylic acid derivative COR167, a selective CB2 agonist, toward ischemia and reperfusion-induced injury, as well as the mechanism of this potential effect. Rat brain cortical slices subjected to oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) followed by re-oxygenation were used. Cell damage was quantified by measuring at the end of the reperfusion phase the release into the artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), glutamate, IL-6 and TNF-α and by evaluating in tissue the lipid-peroxides (thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances, TBARS), the free, reduced glutathione content (GSH) and the water gain (TWG), taken as an index of cell swelling. COR167 (10nM or 100 nM), added to ACSF during the entire reperfusion phase, markedly reduced LDH and glutamate release, as well as TWG. Lower (0.1-1 nM) or higher concentrations (1,000 nM) were ineffective, suggesting thereby an hormetic behavior. COR167 at 10nM concentration markedly reverted in tissues TBARS increase and GSH decrease, while reducing IL-6 and TNF-α release into ACSF. COR167 effects on glutamate and LDH release were abrogated by the selective CB2 inverse-agonists COR170 (1 nM) and AM630 (1μM) but not by the CB1 antagonist AM251 (1 μM). COR170 as well as AM630 per se were able to revert TWG. The CB2 receptor agonist COR167 potently protected rat brain cortical slices against OGD and reperfusion injury, partly through CB2 receptors activation.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Serena Pasquini; Claudia Mugnaini; Alessia Ligresti; Andrea Tafi; Simone Brogi; Chiara Falciani; Valentina Pedani; Nicolo ̀ Pesco; Francesca Guida; Livio Luongo; Katia Varani; Pier Andrea Borea; Sabatino Maione; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Federico Corelli
In our search for new cannabinoid receptor modulators, we describe herein the design and synthesis of three sets of indole-based ligands characterized by an acetamide, oxalylamide, or carboxamide chain, respectively. Most of the compounds showed affinity for CB2 receptors in the nanomolar range, with K(i) values spanning 3 orders of magnitude (377-0.37 nM), and moderate to good selectivity over CB1 receptors. Their in vitro functional activity as inverse agonists was confirmed in vivo in the formalin test of acute peripheral and inflammatory pain in mice, in which compounds 10a and 11e proved to be able to reverse the effect of the CB2 selective agonist COR167.
ChemMedChem | 2012
Claudia Mugnaini; Stefania Nocerino; Valentina Pedani; Serena Pasquini; Andrea Tafi; Maria De Chiaro; Luca Bellucci; Massimo Valoti; Francesca Guida; Livio Luongo; Stefania Dragoni; Alessia Ligresti; Avraham Rosenberg; Daniele Bolognini; Maria Grazia Cascio; Roger G. Pertwee; Ruin Moaddel; Sabatino Maione; Vincenzo Di Marzo; Federico Corelli
Three heterocyclic systems were selected as potential bioisosteres of the amide linker for a series of 1,6‐disubstituted‐4‐quinolone‐3‐carboxamides, which are potent and selective CB2 ligands that exhibit poor water solubility, with the aim of improving their physicochemical profile and also of clarifying properties of importance for amide bond mimicry. Among the newly synthesized compounds, a 1,2,3‐triazole derivative (1‐(adamantan‐1‐yl)‐4‐[6‐(furan‐2‐yl)‐1,4‐dihydro‐4‐oxo‐1‐pentylquinolin‐3‐yl]‐1H‐1,2,3‐triazole) emerged as the most promising in terms of both physicochemical and pharmacodynamic properties. When assayed in vitro, this derivative exhibited inverse agonist activity, whereas, in the formalin test in mice, it produced analgesic effects antagonized by a well‐established inverse agonist. Metabolic studies allowed the identification of a side chain hydroxylated derivative as its only metabolite, which, in its racemic form, still showed appreciable CB2 selectivity, but was 150‐fold less potent than the parent compound.