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Dive into the research topics where Stefania Benvenuti is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefania Benvenuti.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2004

Analysis of phenolic compounds and radical scavenging activity of Echinacea spp.

Federica Pellati; Stefania Benvenuti; Lara Magro; M. Melegari; Fabrizia Soragni

The aim of this study was to set up and validate an RP-LC method with DAD-detection to quantify caffeic acid derivatives in various Echinacea spp. Samples were extracted with 80% methanol. The analyses were carried out on a Lichrospher RP-18 column (125 mm x 4 mm i.d., 5 microm), with a mobile phase gradient, which increases the acetonitrile level in a phosphoric acid solution (0.1%). The flow rate was 1.5 ml/min. Detection was set at 330 nm. This method allowed the identification and quantification of caftaric acid, chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, cynarin, echinacoside and cichoric acid in Echinacea roots and derivatives. The total phenolic content was 10.49 mg/g for E. angustifolia, 17.83 mg/g for E. pallida and 23.23 mg/g for E. purpurea. Among Echinacea commercial herbal medicines, a certain variability in the concentrations of phenolic compounds was observed. The radical scavenging activity of Echinacea methanolic extracts was evaluated in vitro with a spectrophotometric method based on the reduction of an alcoholic 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH*) radical solution at 517 nm in the presence of a hydrogen donating antioxidant. As for pure compounds, echinacoside had the highest capacity to quench DPPH* radicals (EC50 = 6.6 microM), while caftaric acid had the lowest (EC50 = 20.5 microM). The average EC50 values for E. purpurea, E. pallida and E. angustifolia were 134, 167 and 231 microg/ml, respectively. The radical scavenging activity of Echinacea root extracts reflected their phenolic composition. The results indicate that Echinacea roots and derivatives are a good source of natural antioxidants and could be used to prevent free-radical-induced deleterious effects.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2002

Determination of adrenergic agonists from extracts and herbal products of Citrus aurantium L. var. amara by LC

Federica Pellati; Stefania Benvenuti; M. Melegari; Fabio Firenzuoli

The purpose of this study was to set up a HPLC method to separate adrenergic amines (dl-octopamine, dl-synephrine and tyramine) and to determine their content in fruits, extracts and herbal products of Citrus aurantium L. var. amara. A rapid method for the quantitative analysis of these amines is described, based on their separation by RP-HPLC technique with UV detection. The analysis were conducted on a Lichrospher RP-18 column at room temperature, using a mobile phase consisting of 0.02 M citric acid-0.02 M NaH2PO4 (7:3 v/v) and adjusted to a final pH of 3. The detection was at 220 nm. Since some of these amines are chiral compounds and their enantiomers showed different pharmacological activity, the direct separation of synephrine enantiomers was carried out with HPLC on a beta-cyclodextrin stationary phase. The mobile phase consisted of methanol-NaH2PO4 25 mM pH 3.5 (20:80 v/v) and tetrabutylammonium hydrogen sulfate 10 mM in ratio of 30:70 v/v in isocratic condition and the detection was at 220 nm. The two proposed methods were applied to the analysis of fruits, extracts and herbal products of C. aurantium L. var. amara. Taking into account that some authors have reported that l-synephrine may be converted into its d-form by high temperature, this optical isomerization was monitored by the same HPLC method used for the separation of enantiomers.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2011

HPLC-DAD and HPLC-ESI-MS/MS methods for metabolite profiling of propolis extracts.

Federica Pellati; Giulia Orlandini; Diego Pinetti; Stefania Benvenuti

In this study, the composition of polyphenols (phenolic acids and flavonoids) in propolis extracts was investigated by HPLC-DAD and HPLC-ESI-MS/MS by comparing the performance of ion trap and triple quadrupole mass analyzers. The analyses were carried out on an Ascentis C(18) column (250mm×4.6mm I.D., 5μm), with a mobile phase composed by 0.1% formic acid in water and acetonitrile. Overall, the UV spectra, the MS and MS/MS data allowed the identification of 40 compounds. In the case of flavonoids, the triple quadrupole mass analyzer provided more collision energy if compared with the ion trap, originating product ions at best sensitivity. The HPLC method was validated in agreement with ICH guidelines: the correlation coefficients were >0.998; the limit of detection was in the range 1.6-4.6μg/ml; the recovery range was 96-105%; the intra- and inter-day %RSD values for retention times and peak areas were found to be <0.3 and 1.9%, respectively. The developed technique was applied to the analysis of hydroalcoholic extracts of propolis available on the Italian market. Although the chromatographic profile of the analyzed samples was similar, the quantitative analysis indicated that there is a great variability in the amount of the active compounds: the content of total phenolic acids ranged from 0.17 to 16.67mg/ml and the level of total flavonoids from 2.48 to 41.10mg/ml. The proposed method can be considered suitable for the phytochemical analysis of propolis extracts used in phytotherapy.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1998

Synthesis and activity of a new series of chalcones as aldose reductase inhibitors

Fabio Severi; Stefania Benvenuti; Luca Costantino; Gabriella Vampa; M. Melegari; Luciano Antolini

A new series of chalcone derivatives has been synthesized and tested in vitro in order to assess their ability to inhibit aldose reductase enzyme (ALR2) and their specificity towards the target enzyme with respect to other oxidoreductases, such as aldehyde reductase, sorbitol dehydrogenase, and glutathione reductase. All the compounds display affinity for ALR2. The X-ray crystal structure of 1-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-3-(2-methoxyphenyl)propen-1-one was determined.


Biomaterials | 2010

PLGA nanoparticles surface decorated with the sialic acid, N-acetylneuraminic acid.

Lucia Bondioli; Luca Costantino; Antonio Ballestrazzi; Davide Lucchesi; Diana Boraschi; Federica Pellati; Stefania Benvenuti; Giovanni Tosi; Maria Angela Vandelli

There is a broad interest in the development of nanoparticles (NPs) carrying on their surface carbohydrates such as sialic acids. It is known that these carbohydrates influence the biological and physical properties of biopharmaceutical proteins and living cells. Macromolecular compounds containing these carbohydrates showed an anti-recognition effect, exert an antiviral effect and also are able to be recognized by the cell surface of some kind of cancer cells. Thus, in the present research we performed two different approaches in order to obtain polymeric (poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide), PLGA) NPs surface decorated with the sialic acid N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac). The first strategy that has been followed is based on the derivatization of the polyester PLGA with the thioderivative of Neu5Ac, starting material for the preparation of the NPs; the second is based on the synthesis of compounds potentially able to insert their lipophilic moiety into the underivatized PLGA NPs during their preparation, and to display their hydrophilic moiety (Neu5Ac) on their surface. The first approach allowed the obtainment of NPs surface decorated with Neu5Ac, as evidenced by ESCA spectroscopy and interaction with the lectin Wheat Germ Agglutinin. Moreover, a formulation of these NPs suitable for in vitro assays showed that they are phagocytosed by human monocytes with an apparently different mechanism with respect of those made of underivatized PLGA. The second strategy led to NPs in which their surface appears to be very different with respect to the NPs obtained following the first strategy, with the carboxylic groups of Neu5Ac markedly shielded. Thus, the new Neu5Ac-modified PLGA polyester represent a useful starting material for the preparation of NPs surface decorated with this sialic acid.


Journal of Essential Oil Research | 2004

Chemical Composition and Fungicidal Activity of Commercial Essential Oils of Thymus vulgaris L.

A. Zambonelli; Aldo Zechini D'Aulerio; Aldo Severi; Stefania Benvenuti; Loretta Maggi; A. Bianchi

Abstract The antifungal activity of commercial Thymus vulgaris oils on the development of mycelium of the the phytopathogenic fungi Fusariumsolani (Mart.) Sacc., Rhizoctoniasolani Kühn and Colletotrichumlindemuthianum (Sacc. et Magn.) Briosi et Cav. was studied. The gas chromatography data showed that the essential oils were rich in thymol (22–38%) and its biogenetic precursors γ-terpinene and p-cymene. The carvacrol content was relatively low in all the oils tested, ranging between 1% and 2%. The fungicidal activity of the oils was correlated with their thymol content. The principal chemical components of thyme oils were then tested using the same concentrations as in the thyme oils. Only the fungicidal activity of thymol was high and close to that of the oils with the same thymol content. The effects of the thyme oils and thymol on the hyphae cytomorphology of the studied fungi was an increased vacuolization of the cytoplasm and accumulation of lipid bodies, undulations of the plasmalemma, and alterations of the mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2008

Cytotoxic activity of polyacetylenes and polyenes isolated from roots of Echinacea pallida

Andrea Chicca; Federica Pellati; Barbara Adinolfi; A. Matthias; Ilaria Massarelli; Stefania Benvenuti; Enrica Martinotti; Am Bianucci; K. M. Bone; R. P. Lehmann; Paola Nieri

The n‐hexane extracts of the roots of three medicinally used Echinacea species exhibited cytotoxic activity on human cancer cell lines, with Echinacea pallida found to be the most cytotoxic. Acetylenes are present in E. pallida lipophilic extracts but essentially absent in extracts from the other two species. In the present study, the cytotoxic effects of five compounds, two polyacetylenes (namely, 8‐hydroxy‐pentadeca‐(9E)‐ene‐11,13‐diyn‐2‐one (1) and pentadeca‐(9E)‐ene‐11,13‐diyne‐2,8‐dione (3)) and three polyenes (namely, 8‐hydroxy‐pentadeca‐(9E,13Z)‐dien‐11‐yn‐2‐one (2), pentadeca‐(9E,13Z)‐dien‐11‐yne‐2,8‐dione (4) and pentadeca‐(8Z,13Z)‐dien‐11‐yn‐2‐one (5)), isolated from the n‐hexane extract of E. pallida roots by bioassay‐guided fractionation, were investigated and the potential bioavailability of these compounds in the extract was studied.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2013

An efficient chemical analysis of phenolic acids and flavonoids in raw propolis by microwave-assisted extraction combined with high-performance liquid chromatography using the fused-core technology.

Federica Pellati; Francesco Pio Prencipe; Davide Bertelli; Stefania Benvenuti

A closed-vessel microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) technique was optimized for the first time for the extraction of polyphenols from raw propolis. The results obtained by means of response surface experimental design methodology showed that the best global response was reached when the extraction temperature was set at 106 °C, the solvent composition close to EtOH-H2O 80:20 (v/v), with an extraction time of 15 min. In comparison with other techniques, such as maceration, heat reflux extraction (HRE) and ultrasound-assisted extraction (UAE), the extraction with MAE was improved by shorter extraction time and lower volume of solvent needed. The HPLC analyses of propolis extracts were carried out on a fused-core Ascentis Express C18 column (150 mm × 3.0 mm I.D., 2.7 μm), with a gradient mobile phase composed by 0.1% formic acid in water and acetonitrile. Detection was performed by DAD and MS. The method validation indicated that the correlation coefficients were >0.999; the limit of detection was in the range 0.5-0.8 μg/ml for phenolic acids and 1.2-3.0 μg/ml for flavonoids; the recovery range was 95.3-98.1% for phenolic acids and 94.1-101.3% for flavonoids; the intra- and inter-day %RSD values for retention times and peak areas were ≤ 0.3 and 2.2%, respectively. The quali- and quantitative analysis of polyphenols in Italian samples of raw propolis was performed with the validated method. Total phenolic acids ranged from 5.0 to 120.8 mg/g and total flavonoids from 2.5 to 168.0mg/g. The proposed MAE procedure and HPLC method can be considered reliable and useful tools for the comprehensive multi-component analysis of polyphenols in propolis extracts to be used in apitherapy.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

Structural bases for the inhibition of aldose reductase by phenolic compounds.

Giulio Rastelli; Luciano Antolini; Stefania Benvenuti; Luca Costantino

Aldose reductase (ALR2) is an enzyme involved in the development of long-term diabetic complications. In the search for aldose reductase inhibitors less acidic than carboxylic acids, phenolic compounds related to benzopyran-4-one and chalcone are particularly interesting because they possess good inhibitory properties. In order to investigate the similarities between these two classes of compounds and to provide a structural basis for their inhibition of ALR2, the existing structure-activity relationships were reconsidered. To this end, the acidity constants of a set of chalcones were measured and compared with those of benzopyran-4-one derivatives. Then, having established the relevant protonation state of these phenolics at physiological pH, a conformational analysis was performed on the most active benzopyran-4-one and chalcone derivatives and the results were compared with the crystal structures of some analogues. Finally, molecular docking of the most active chalcone into the ALR2 binding site was performed, and the structure of the enzyme-inhibitor complex was compared with that of the complex formed between ALR2 and a previously-obtained benzopyran-4-one derivative.


Planta Medica | 2008

P-Glycoprotein inhibitory activity of lipophilic constituents of Echinacea pallida roots in a human proximal tubular cell line.

Nadia Romiti; Federica Pellati; Paola Nieri; Stefania Benvenuti; Barbara Adinolfi; Elisabetta Chieli

The N-hexane root extracts from Echinacea pallida, Echinacea angustifolia and Echinacea purpurea were evaluated for inhibition of the multidrug transporter P-glycoprotein (Pgp) activity, the product of the ABCB1 gene, involved in cancer multidrug resistance (MDR) and in herb-drug or drug-drug interactions. The biological assay was performed using the human proximal tubule HK-2 cell line that constitutively expresses ABCB1. The N-hexane extracts of all three species reduced the efflux of the Pgp probe calcein-AM from HK-2 cells two-fold in a concentration-dependent manner, and E. pallida was found to be the most active species. For the first time, two polyacetylenes and three polyenes, isolated from the N-hexane extract of E. pallida roots by a bioassay-guided fractionation, were found to be able to reduce Pgp activity. Pentadeca-(8 Z,13 Z)-dien-11-yn-2-one was the most efficient compound, being able to decrease the calcein-AM efflux about three-fold with respect to the control at 30 microg/mL.

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Federica Pellati

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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M. Melegari

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Francesco Pio Prencipe

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Giulia Orlandini

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Roberta Tardugno

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Virginia Brighenti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Luca Costantino

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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