Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Susan Lepri is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Susan Lepri.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2012

Rotational barriers of biphenyls having heavy heteroatoms as ortho-substituents: experimental and theoretical determination of steric effects

Lodovico Lunazzi; Michele Mancinelli; Andrea Mazzanti; Susan Lepri; Renzo Ruzziconi; Manfred Schlosser

The free energies of activation for the aryl-aryl rotation of 17 biphenyl derivatives, bearing a heavy heteroatom (S, Se, Te, P, Si, Sn) as ortho substituent, have been measured by variable temperature NMR. These numbers, so called B values, represent a meaningful measure of the steric hindrance exerted by the selected substituents. DFT computations match quite satisfactorily the experimental barriers and the ground state geometries as well (determined, in two cases, by X-ray diffraction). The present values extend the available list of B values and thus provide an enlarged basis for the compilation of the space requirements of standard substituents, based solely on experimental determinations.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Optimization of Small-Molecule Inhibitors of Influenza Virus Polymerase: From Thiophene-3-Carboxamide to Polyamido Scaffolds

Susan Lepri; Giulio Nannetti; Giulia Muratore; Gabriele Cruciani; Renzo Ruzziconi; Beatrice Mercorelli; Giorgio Palù; Arianna Loregian; Laura Goracci

Influenza virus infections represent a serious concern to public health, being characterized by high morbidity and significant mortality. To date, compounds targeting the viral ion-channel M2 or the viral neuraminidase are the drugs available for treatment of influenza, but the emergence of drug-resistant viral mutants renders the search for novel targets and their possible inhibitors a major priority. Recently, we demonstrated that the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) complex can be an optimal target of protein-protein disruption by small molecules, with thiophene-3-carboxamide derivatives emerging as promising candidates for the development of new anti-influenza drugs with broad-spectrum activity. Here, we report a further dissection of the thiophene-3-carboxamide structure. By using a GRID molecular interaction field (MIF)-based scaffold-hopping approach, more potent and nontoxic polyamido derivatives were identified, highlighting a new space in the chemical variability of RdRP inhibitors. Finally, a possible pharmacophoric model highlighting the key features required for RdRP inhibition is proposed.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Indole Based Weapons to Fight Antibiotic Resistance: A Structure–Activity Relationship Study

Susan Lepri; Federica Buonerba; Laura Goracci; Irene Velilla; Renzo Ruzziconi; Bryan D. Schindler; Susan M. Seo; Glenn W. Kaatz; Gabriele Cruciani

Antibiotic resistance represents a worldwide concern, especially regarding the outbreak of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, a common cause for serious skin and soft tissues infections. A major contributor to Staphylococcus aureus antibiotic resistance is the NorA efflux pump, which is able to extrude selected antibacterial drugs and biocides from the membrane, lowering their effective concentrations. Thus, the inhibition of NorA represents a promising and challenging strategy that would allow recycling of substrate antimicrobial agents. Among NorA inhibitors, the indole scaffold proved particularly effective and suitable for further optimization. In this study, some unexplored modifications on the indole scaffold are proposed. In particular, for the first time, substitutions at the C5 and N1 positions have been designed to give 48 compounds, which were synthesized and tested against norA-overexpressing S. aureus. Among them, 4 compounds have NorA IC50 values lower than 5.0 μM proving to be good efflux pump inhibitor (EPI) candidates. In addition, preliminary data on their ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) profile is reported.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Importance of C*–H Based Modes and Large Amplitude Motion Effects in Vibrational Circular Dichroism Spectra: The Case of the Chiral Adduct of Dimethyl Fumarate and Anthracene

Marco Passarello; Sergio Abbate; Giovanna Longhi; Susan Lepri; Renzo Ruzziconi; Valentin Paul Nicu

The role played by the C*-H based modes (C* being the chiral carbon atom) and the large amplitude motions in the vibrational absorption (VA) and vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectra is investigated. The example of an adduct of dimethyl fumarate and anthracene, i.e., dimethyl-(+)-(11R,12R)-9,10-dihydro-9,10-ethanoanthracene-11,12-dicarboxylate, and two deuterated isotopomers thereof specially synthesized for this goal, are considered. By comparing the experimental and DFT calculated spectra of the undeuterated and deuterated species, we demonstrate that the C*-H bending, rocking, and stretching modes in the VA and VCD spectra are clearly identified in well defined spectroscopic features. Further, significant information about the conformer distribution is gathered by analyzing the VA and VCD data of both the fingerprint and the C-H stretching regions, with particular attention paid to the band shape data. Effects related to the large amplitude motions of the two methoxy moieties have been simulated by performing linear transit (LT) calculations, which consists of varying systematically the relative positions of the two methoxy moieties and calculating VCD spectra for the partially optimized structures obtained in this way. The LT method allows one to improve the quality of calculated spectra, as compared to experimental results, especially in regard to relative intensities and bandwidths.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis of new indole-based bisphosphonates and evaluation of their chelating ability in PE/CA-PJ15 cells.

Carlo Alberto Palmerini; Francesco Tartacca; Michela Mazzoni; Letizia Granieri; Laura Goracci; Angela Scrascia; Susan Lepri

Bisphosphonates are the most important class of antiresorptive agents used against osteoclast-mediated bone loss, and, more recently, in oncology. These compounds have high affinity for calcium ions (Ca(2+)) and therefore target bone mineral, where they appear to be internalized selectively by bone-resorbing osteoclasts and inhibit osteoclast function. They are extensively used in healthcare, however they are affected by severe side effects; pharmacological properties of bisphosphonates depend on their molecular structure, which is frequently the cause of poor intestinal adsorption and low distribution. In this work we synthesized six novel bisphosphonate compounds having a variably substituted indole moiety to evaluate their extra- and intracellular calcium chelating ability in PE/CA-PJ15 cells. Preliminary in silico and in vitro ADME studies were also performed and the results suggested that the indole moiety plays an important role in cell permeability and metabolism properties.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Improved Potency of Indole-Based NorA Efflux Pump Inhibitors: From Serendipity toward Rational Design and Development

Federica Buonerba; Susan Lepri; Laura Goracci; Bryan D. Schindler; Susan M. Seo; Glenn W. Kaatz; Gabriele Cruciani

The NorA efflux pump is a potential drug target for reversal of resistance to selected antibacterial agents, and recently we described indole-based inhibitor candidates. Herein we report a second class of inhibitors derived from them but with significant differences in shape and size. In particular, compounds 13 and 14 are very potent inhibitors in that they demonstrated the lowest IC50 values (2 μM) ever observed among all indole-based compounds we have evaluated.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Structure–metabolism relationships in human-AOX: Chemical insights from a large database of aza-aromatic and amide compounds

Susan Lepri; Martina Ceccarelli; Nicolò Milani; Sara Tortorella; Andrea Cucco; Aurora Valeri; Laura Goracci; Andreas Brink; Gabriele Cruciani

Significance The metabolism of xenobiotics is a critical aspect of drug discovery; nowadays, aldehyde oxidase (AOX) has emerged as a key metabolic enzyme having a pivotal role in the failures of several clinical candidates. The lack of homogenous data on possible substrates and not substrates of this enzyme represents a serious limit for the development of an in silico model for metabolism prediction. Here, we present a database of 270 chemically diverse compounds containing aza-aromatic and/or amide moieties (susceptible to human AOX), experimentally tested in vitro. The results herein reported should be useful in the development of a reliable prediction model, which should be of wide interest in chemistry, biology, biotechnology, and medicine. Aldehyde oxidase (AOX) is a metabolic enzyme catalyzing the oxidation of aldehyde and aza-aromatic compounds and the hydrolysis of amides, moieties frequently shared by the majority of drugs. Despite its key role in human metabolism, to date only fragmentary information about the chemical features responsible for AOX susceptibility are reported and only “very local” structure–metabolism relationships based on a small number of similar compounds have been developed. This study reports a more comprehensive coverage of the chemical space of structures with a high risk of AOX phase I metabolism in humans. More than 270 compounds were studied to identify the site of metabolism and the metabolite(s). Both electronic [supported by density functional theory (DFT) calculations] and exposure effects were considered when rationalizing the structure–metabolism relationship.


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2018

Synthesis and phospholipidosis effect of a series of cationic amphiphilic compounds: a case study to evaluate in silico and in vitro assays

Susan Lepri; Aurora Valeri; Sandra Buratta; Martina Ceccarelli; Desirée Bartolini; Renzo Ruzziconi; Laura Goracci

In recent years, a large number of in silico and in vitro assays have been developed for safety assessment in early drug discovery. These methods are usually validated using datasets of known drugs with large chemical diversity, while application to homologous series has been rarely explored. Here we report a case study about phospholipidosis (PLD) risk evaluation for a dataset of nine compounds, designed and synthesized to modulate the physico-chemical properties typical of cationic amphiphilic compounds (CADs), representing the main class of PLD inducers. Our aim was to investigate the effect of structure modification on PLD induction according to a number of standard in silico and in vitro methods. As a result, we found that different in silico methods lead to conflicting results when applied to our series of weak PLD inducers, thus the apparently easy-to-use definition of CADs requires special attention. Moreover, when weak inducers are tested in vitro, the revealed PLD effect may vary based on the purity grade of the tested compound and the features of the selected assay. Finally, we have shown that slight modifications on a chemical scaffold can have an impact on the PLD effect. This study also exemplifies that current in silico methods possibly overestimate the PLD induction effect of cationic amphiphilic compounds compared to the in vitro, with the risk of discarding promising compounds based on incorrect safety liabilities.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

From Experiments to a Fast Easy-to-Use Computational Methodology to Predict Human Aldehyde Oxidase Selectivity and Metabolic Reactions

Gabriele Cruciani; Nicolò Milani; Paolo Benedetti; Susan Lepri; Lucia Cesarini; Massimo Baroni; Francesca Spyrakis; Sara Tortorella; Edoardo Mosconi; Laura Goracci

Aldehyde oxidase (AOX) is a molibdo-flavoenzyme that has raised great interest in recent years, since its contribution in xenobiotic metabolism has not always been identified before clinical trials, with consequent negative effects on the fate of new potential drugs. The fundamental role of AOX in metabolizing xenobiotics is also due to the attempt of medicinal chemists to stabilize candidates toward cytochrome P450 activity, which increases the risk for new compounds to be susceptible to AOX nucleophile attack. Therefore, novel strategies to predict the potential liability of new entities toward the AOX enzyme are urgently needed to increase effectiveness, reduce costs, and prioritize experimental studies. In the present work, we present the most up-to-date computational method to predict liability toward human AOX (hAOX), for applications in drug design and pharmacokinetic optimization. The method was developed using a large data set of homogeneous experimental data, which is also disclosed as Supporting Information .


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Metabolism study and biological evaluation of bosentan derivatives

Susan Lepri; Laura Goracci; Aurora Valeri; Gabriele Cruciani

Bosentan, the first-in-class drug used in treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension, is principally metabolized by the cytochromes P450, and it is responsible for cytochromes induction and drug-drug interaction events with moderate to severe consequences. A strategy to reduce drug-drug interactions consists of increasing the metabolic stability of the perpetrator, and fluorinated analogues are often designed to block the major sites of metabolism. In this paper bosentan analogues were synthesized, and their metabolism and biological activity were evaluated. All synthesized compounds showed an improved metabolic stability towards CYP2C9, with one maintaining a moderate antagonist effect towards the ETA receptor.

Collaboration


Dive into the Susan Lepri's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge