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Dive into the research topics where Simonetta Russo is active.

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Featured researches published by Simonetta Russo.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Irreversible inhibition of epidermal growth factor receptor activity by 3-aminopropanamides.

Caterina Carmi; Elena Galvani; Federica Vacondio; Silvia Rivara; Alessio Lodola; Simonetta Russo; Stefania Aiello; Fabrizio Bordi; Gabriele Costantino; Andrea Cavazzoni; Roberta R. Alfieri; Andrea Ardizzoni; Pier Giorgio Petronini; Marco Mor

Irreversible epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors contain a reactive warhead which covalently interacts with a conserved cysteine residue in the kinase domain. The acrylamide fragment, a commonly employed warhead, effectively alkylates Cys797 of EGFR, but its reactivity can cause rapid metabolic deactivation or nonspecific reactions with off-targets. We describe here a new series of irreversible inhibitors containing a 3-aminopropanamide linked in position 6 to 4-anilinoquinazoline or 4-anilinoquinoline-3-carbonitrile driving portions. Some of these compounds proved to be as efficient as their acrylamide analogues in inhibiting EGFR-TK (TK = tyrosine kinase) autophosphorylation in A549 lung cancer cells. Moreover, several 3-aminopropanamides suppressed proliferation of gefitinib-resistant H1975 cells, harboring the T790M mutation in EGFR, at significantly lower concentrations than did gefitinib. A prototypical compound, N-(4-(3-bromoanilino)quinazolin-6-yl)-3-(dimethylamino)propanamide (5), did not show covalent binding to cell-free EGFR-TK in a fluorescence assay, while it underwent selective activation in the intracellular environment, releasing an acrylamide derivative which can react with thiol groups.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Amino Acid Conjugates of Lithocholic Acid As Antagonists of the EphA2 Receptor

Matteo Incerti; Massimiliano Tognolini; Simonetta Russo; Daniele Pala; Carmine Giorgio; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Roberta Noberini; Elena B. Pasquale; Paola Vicini; Silvia Piersanti; Silvia Rivara; Elisabetta Barocelli; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The Eph receptor-ephrin system is an emerging target for the development of novel antiangiogenetic agents. We recently identified lithocholic acid (LCA) as a small molecule able to block EphA2-dependent signals in cancer cells, suggesting that its (5β)-cholan-24-oic acid scaffold can be used as a template to design a new generation of improved EphA2 antagonists. Here, we report the design and synthesis of an extended set of LCA derivatives obtained by conjugation of its carboxyl group with different α-amino acids. Structure-activity relationships indicate that the presence of a lipophilic amino acid side chain is fundamental to achieve good potencies. The l-Trp derivative (20, PCM126) was the most potent antagonist of the series disrupting EphA2-ephrinA1 interaction and blocking EphA2 phosphorylation in prostate cancer cells at low μM concentrations, thus being significantly more potent than LCA. Compound 20 is among the most potent small-molecule antagonists of the EphA2 receptor.


ChemMedChem | 2012

Structure-activity relationships and mechanism of action of Eph-ephrin antagonists: interaction of cholanic acid with the EphA2 receptor

Massimiliano Tognolini; Matteo Incerti; Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Carmine Giorgio; Simonetta Russo; Renato Bruni; Barbara Lelli; Luisa Bracci; Roberta Noberini; Elena B. Pasquale; Elisabetta Barocelli; Paola Vicini; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The Eph–ephrin system, including the EphA2 receptor and the ephrinA1 ligand, plays a critical role in tumor and vascular functions during carcinogenesis. We previously identified (3α,5β)‐3‐hydroxycholan‐24‐oic acid (lithocholic acid) as an Eph–ephrin antagonist that is able to inhibit EphA2 receptor activation; it is therefore potentially useful as a novel EphA2 receptor‐targeting agent. Herein we explore the structure–activity relationships of a focused set of lithocholic acid derivatives based on molecular modeling investigations and displacement binding assays. Our exploration shows that while the 3‐α‐hydroxy group of lithocholic acid has a negligible role in recognition of the EphA2 receptor, its carboxylate group is critical for disrupting the binding of ephrinA1 to EphA2. As a result of our investigation, we identified (5β)‐cholan‐24‐oic acid (cholanic acid) as a novel compound that competitively inhibits the EphA2–ephrinA1 interaction with higher potency than lithocholic acid. Surface plasmon resonance analysis indicates that cholanic acid binds specifically and reversibly to the ligand binding domain of EphA2, with a steady‐state dissociation constant (KD) in the low micromolar range. Furthermore, cholanic acid blocks the phosphorylation of EphA2 as well as cell retraction and rounding in PC3 prostate cancer cells, two effects that depend on EphA2 activation by the ephrinA1 ligand. These findings suggest that cholanic acid can be used as a template structure for the design of effective EphA2 antagonists, and may have potential impact in the elucidation of the role played by this receptor in pathological conditions.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2014

UniPR129 is a competitive small molecule Eph‐ephrin antagonist blocking in vitro angiogenesis at low micromolar concentrations

Iftiin Hassan-Mohamed; Carmine Giorgio; Matteo Incerti; Simonetta Russo; Daniele Pala; Elena B. Pasquale; Ilaria Zanotti; Paola Vicini; Elisabetta Barocelli; Silvia Rivara; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola; Massimiliano Tognolini

The Eph receptor tyrosine kinases and their ephrin ligands are key players in tumorigenesis and many reports have correlated changes in their expression with a poor clinical prognosis in many solid tumours. Agents targeting the Eph‐ephrin system might emerge as new tools useful for the inhibition of different components of cancer progression. Even if different classes of small molecules targeting Eph‐ephrin interactions have been reported, their use is hampered by poor chemical stability and low potency. Stable and potent ligands are crucial to achieve robust pharmacological performance.


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.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Exploiting Free-Energy Minima to Design Novel EphA2 Protein-Protein Antagonists: From Simulation to Experiment and Return.

Simonetta Russo; Donatella Callegari; Matteo Incerti; Daniele Pala; Carmine Giorgio; Jlenia Brunetti; Luisa Bracci; Paola Vicini; Elisabetta Barocelli; Luigi Capoferri; Silvia Rivara; Massimiliano Tognolini; Marco Mor; Alessio Lodola

The free-energy surface (FES) of protein-ligand binding contains information useful for drug design. Here we show how to exploit a free-energy minimum of a protein-ligand complex identified by metadynamics simulations to design a new EphA2 antagonist with improved inhibitory potency.


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.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2018

Pharmacological evaluation of new bioavailable small molecules targeting Eph/ephrin interaction

Carmine Giorgio; Matteo Incerti; Miriam Corrado; Marco Rusnati; Paola Chiodelli; Simonetta Russo; Donatella Callegari; Francesca Ferlenghi; Vigilio Ballabeni; Elisabetta Barocelli; Alessio Lodola; Massimiliano Tognolini

ABSTRACT Eph/ephrin system is an emerging target for cancer therapy but the lack of potent, stable and orally bioavailable compounds is impairing the development of the field. Since 2009 our research group has been devoted to the discovery and development of small molecules targeting Eph/ephrin system and our research culminated with the synthesis of UniPR129, a potent but problematic Eph/ephrin antagonist. Herein, we describe the in vitro pharmacological properties of two derivatives (UniPR139 and UniPR502) stemmed from structure of UniPR129. These two compounds acted as competitive and reversible antagonists of all Eph receptors reducing both ephrin‐A1 and ‐B1 binding to EphAs and EphBs receptors in the low micromolar range. The compounds acted as antagonists inhibiting ephrin‐A1‐dependent EphA2 activation and UniPR139 exerted an anti‐angiogenic effect, inhibiting HUVEC tube formation in vitro and VEGF‐induced vessel formation in the chick chorioallantoic membrane assay. Finally, the oral bioavailability of UniPR139 represents a step forward in the search of molecules targeting the Eph/ephrin system and offers a new pharmacological tool useful for future in vivo studies.

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