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Dive into the research topics where Sveva Pelliccia is active.

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Featured researches published by Sveva Pelliccia.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Toward highly potent cancer agents by modulating the C-2 group of the arylthioindole class of tubulin polymerization inhibitors

Giuseppe La Regina; Ruoli Bai; Whilelmina Maria Rensen; Erica Di Cesare; Antonio Coluccia; Francesco Piscitelli; Valeria Famiglini; Alessia Reggio; Marianna Nalli; Sveva Pelliccia; Eleonora Da Pozzo; Barbara Costa; Ilaria Granata; Amalia Porta; Bruno Maresca; Alessandra Soriani; Maria Luisa Iannitto; Angela Santoni; Junjie Li; Marlein Miranda Cona; Feng Chen; Yicheng Ni; Andrea Brancale; Giulio Dondio; Stefania Vultaggio; Mario Varasi; Ciro Mercurio; Claudia Martini; Ernest Hamel; Patrizia Lavia

New arylthioindole derivatives having different cyclic substituents at position 2 of the indole were synthesized as anticancer agents. Several compounds inhibited tubulin polymerization at submicromolar concentration and inhibited cell growth at low nanomolar concentrations. Compounds 18 and 57 were superior to the previously synthesized 5. Compound 18 was exceptionally potent as an inhibitor of cell growth: it showed IC₅₀ = 1.0 nM in MCF-7 cells, and it was uniformly active in the whole panel of cancer cells and superior to colchicine and combretastatin A-4. Compounds 18, 20, 55, and 57 were notably more potent than vinorelbine, vinblastine, and paclitaxel in the NCI/ADR-RES and Messa/Dx5 cell lines, which overexpress P-glycoprotein. Compounds 18 and 57 showed initial vascular disrupting effects in a tumor model of liver rhabdomyosarcomas at 15 mg/kg intravenous dosage. Derivative 18 showed water solubility and higher metabolic stability than 5 in human liver microsomes.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

New pyrrole derivatives with potent tubulin polymerization inhibiting activity as anticancer agents including hedgehog-dependent cancer

Giuseppe La Regina; Ruoli Bai; Antonio Coluccia; Valeria Famiglini; Sveva Pelliccia; Sara Passacantilli; Carmela Mazzoccoli; Vitalba Ruggieri; Lorenza Sisinni; Alessio Bolognesi; Whilelmina Maria Rensen; Andrea Miele; Marianna Nalli; Romina Alfonsi; Lucia Di Marcotullio; Alberto Gulino; Andrea Brancale; Ettore Novellino; Giulio Dondio; Stefania Vultaggio; Mario Varasi; Ciro Mercurio; Ernest Hamel; Patrizia Lavia; Romano Silvestri

We synthesized 3-aroyl-1-arylpyrrole (ARAP) derivatives as potential anticancer agents having different substituents at the pendant 1-phenyl ring. Both the 1-phenyl ring and 3-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)carbonyl moieties were mandatory to achieve potent inhibition of tubulin polymerization, binding of colchicine to tubulin, and cancer cell growth. ARAP 22 showed strong inhibition of the P-glycoprotein-overexpressing NCI-ADR-RES and Messa/Dx5MDR cell lines. Compounds 22 and 27 suppressed in vitro the Hedgehog signaling pathway, strongly reducing luciferase activity in SAG treated NIH3T3 Shh-Light II cells, and inhibited the growth of medulloblastoma D283 cells at nanomolar concentrations. ARAPs 22 and 27 represent a new potent class of tubulin polymerization and cancer cell growth inhibitors with the potential to inhibit the Hedgehog signaling pathway.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Indolylarylsulfones carrying a heterocyclic tail as very potent and broad spectrum HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors

Valeria Famiglini; Giuseppe La Regina; Antonio Coluccia; Sveva Pelliccia; Andrea Brancale; Giovanni Maga; Emmanuele Crespan; Roger Badia; Eva Riveira-Muñoz; José A. Esté; Rosella Ferretti; Roberto Cirilli; Claudio Zamperini; Maurizio Botta; Dominique Schols; Vittorio Limongelli; Bruno D’Agostino; Ettore Novellino; Romano Silvestri

We synthesized new indolylarylsulfone (IAS) derivatives carrying a heterocyclic tail at the indole-2-carboxamide nitrogen as potential anti-HIV/AIDS agents. Several new IASs yielded EC50 values <1.0 nM against HIV-1 WT and mutant strains in MT-4 cells. The (R)-11 enantiomer proved to be exceptionally potent against the whole viral panel; in the reverse transcriptase (RT) screening assay, it was remarkably superior to NVP and EFV and comparable to ETV. The binding poses were consistent with the one previously described for the IAS non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Docking studies showed that the methyl group of (R)-11 points toward the cleft created by the K103N mutation, different from the corresponding group of (S)-11. By calculating the solvent-accessible surface, we observed that the exposed area of RT in complex with (S)-11 was larger than the area of the (R)-11 complex. Compounds 6 and 16 and enantiomer (R)-11 represent novel robust lead compounds of the IAS class.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Design, Synthesis, and Biological Evaluation of 1-Phenylpyrazolo[3,4-e]pyrrolo[3,4-g]indolizine-4,6(1H,5H)-diones as New Glycogen Synthase Kinase-3β Inhibitors

Valeria La Pietra; Giuseppe La Regina; Antonio Coluccia; Valeria Famiglini; Sveva Pelliccia; Batya Plotkin; Hagit Eldar-Finkelman; Andrea Brancale; Carlo Ballatore; Alex Crowe; Kurt R. Brunden; Luciana Marinelli; Ettore Novellino; Romano Silvestri

Compound 5 was selected from our in-house library as a suitable starting point for the rational design of new GSK-3β inhibitors. MC/FEP calculations of 5 led to the identification of a structural class of new GSK-3β inhibitors. Compound 18 inhibited GSK-3β with an IC50 of 0.24 μM and inhibited tau phosphorylation in a cell-based assay. It proved to be a selective inhibitor of GSK-3 against a panel of 17 kinases and showed >10-fold selectivity against CDK2. Calculated physicochemical properties and Volsurf predictions suggested that compound 18 has the potential to diffuse passively across the blood-brain barrier.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

New Indole Tubulin Assembly Inhibitors Cause Stable Arrest of Mitotic Progression, Enhanced Stimulation of Natural Killer Cell Cytotoxic Activity, and Repression of Hedgehog-Dependent Cancer

Giuseppe La Regina; Ruoli Bai; Antonio Coluccia; Valeria Famiglini; Sveva Pelliccia; Sara Passacantilli; Carmela Mazzoccoli; Vitalba Ruggieri; Annalisa Verrico; Andrea Miele; Ludovica Monti; Marianna Nalli; Romina Alfonsi; Lucia Di Marcotullio; Alberto Gulino; Biancamaria Ricci; Alessandra Soriani; Angela Santoni; Michele Caraglia; Stefania Porto; Eleonora Da Pozzo; Claudia Martini; Andrea Brancale; Luciana Marinelli; Ettore Novellino; Stefania Vultaggio; Mario Varasi; Ciro Mercurio; Chiara Bigogno; Giulio Dondio

We designed 39 new 2-phenylindole derivatives as potential anticancer agents bearing the 3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl moiety with a sulfur, ketone, or methylene bridging group at position 3 of the indole and with halogen or methoxy substituent(s) at positions 4-7. Compounds 33 and 44 strongly inhibited the growth of the P-glycoprotein-overexpressing multi-drug-resistant cell lines NCI/ADR-RES and Messa/Dx5. At 10 nM, 33 and 44 stimulated the cytotoxic activity of NK cells. At 20-50 nM, 33 and 44 arrested >80% of HeLa cells in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, with stable arrest of mitotic progression. Cell cycle arrest was followed by cell death. Indoles 33, 44, and 81 showed strong inhibition of the SAG-induced Hedgehog signaling activation in NIH3T3 Shh-Light II cells with IC50 values of 19, 72, and 38 nM, respectively. Compounds of this class potently inhibited tubulin polymerization and cancer cell growth, including stimulation of natural killer cell cytotoxic activity and repression of Hedgehog-dependent cancer.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

New indolylarylsulfones as highly potent and broad spectrum HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors

Valeria Famiglini; Giuseppe La Regina; Antonio Coluccia; Sveva Pelliccia; Andrea Brancale; Giovanni Maga; Emmanuele Crespan; Roger Badia; Bonaventura Clotet; José A. Esté; Roberto Cirilli; Ettore Novellino; Romano Silvestri

New indolylarylsulfone HIV-1 NNRTIs were synthesized to evaluate unexplored substitutions of the benzyl/phenylethyl group linked at the indole-2-carboxamide. Against the NL4-3 HIV-1 WT strain, 17 out 20 compounds were superior to NVP and EFV. Several compounds inhibited the K103N HIV-1 mutant strain at nanomolar concentration and were superior to EFV. Some derivatives were superior to EFV against the Y181C and L100I HIV-1 mutant strains. Against the NL4-3 HIV-1 strain, the enantiomers 24 and 25 showed small differences of activity. In contrast, 24 turned out significantly more potent than 25 against the whole panel of mutant HIV-1 strains. The docking studies suggested that the difference in the observed inhibitory activities of 24 and 25 against the K03N mutation could be due to a kinetic rather than affinity differences.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

New 1-phenyl-5-(1H-pyrrol-1-yl)-1H-pyrazole-3-carboxamides inhibit hepatitis C virus replication via suppression of cyclooxygenase-2

Dinesh Manvar; Sveva Pelliccia; Giuseppe La Regina; Valeria Famiglini; Antonio Coluccia; Anna Ruggieri; Simona Anticoli; Jin Ching Lee; Amartya Basu; Ozge Cevik; Lucia Nencioni; Anna Teresa Palamara; Claudio Zamperini; Maurizio Botta; Johan Neyts; Pieter Leyssen; Neerja Kaushik-Basu; Romano Silvestri

We report here the synthesis and mechanism of inhibition of pyrazolecarboxamide derivatives as a new class of HCV inhibitors. Compounds 6, 7, 8 and 16 inhibited the subgenomic HCV replicon 1b genotype at EC50 values between 5 and 8 μM and displayed an even higher potency against the infectious Jc1 HCV 2a genotype. Compound 6 exhibited an EC50 of 6.7 μM and selectivity index of 23 against HCV 1b, and reduced the RNA copies of the infectious Jc1 chimeric 2a clone by 82% at 7 μM. Evaluation of the mode of anti-HCV activity of 6 revealed that it suppressed HCV-induced COX-2 mRNA and protein expression, displaying an IC50 of 3.2 μM in COX-2 promoter-linked luciferase reporter assay. Conversely, the anti-HCV activity of 6 was abrogated upon over-expression of COX-2. These findings suggest that 6 as a representative of these pyrazolecarboxamides function as anti-HCV agents via targeting COX-2 at both the transcription and translation levels.


Future Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Arylsulfone-based HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.

Valeria Famiglini; Antonio Coluccia; Andrea Brancale; Sveva Pelliccia; Giuseppe La Regina; Romano Silvestri

HIV-1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) represent one of the most significant classes of drugs for the treatment of AIDS/HIV infection. Over the past two decades several potent arylsulfone-based HIV-1 NNRTIs and related analogs have been developed. This review provides an essential overview of the structure-activity relationships of the arylsulfone-based HIV-1 NNRTIs. Furthermore, structural information useful for the design and development of new sulfur containing NNRTIs with enhanced antiretroviral activity against HIV-1 wild type and clinically relevant drug resistant HIV-1 mutant strains will be discussed.


Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Exploring the first Rimonabant analog-opioid peptide hybrid compound, as bivalent ligand for CB1 and opioid receptors

Adriano Mollica; Sveva Pelliccia; Valeria Famiglini; Azzurra Stefanucci; Giorgia Macedonio; Annalisa Chiavaroli; Giustino Orlando; Luigi Brunetti; Claudio Ferrante; Stefano Pieretti; Ettore Novellino; Sándor Benyhe; Ferenc Zádor; Anna Erdei; Edina Szucs; Reza Samavati; Szalbolch Dvrorasko; Csaba Tömböly; Rino Ragno; Alexandros Patsilinakos; Romano Silvestri

Abstract Cannabinoid (CB) and opioid systems are both involved in analgesia, food intake, mood and behavior. Due to the co-localization of µ-opioid (MOR) and CB1 receptors in various regions of the central nervous system (CNS) and their ability to form heterodimers, bivalent ligands targeting to both these systems may be good candidates to investigate the existence of possible cross-talking or synergistic effects, also at sub-effective doses. In this work, we selected from a small series of new Rimonabant analogs one CB1R reverse agonist to be conjugated to the opioid fragment Tyr-D-Ala-Gly-Phe-NH2. The bivalent compound (9) has been used for in vitro binding assays, for in vivo antinociception models and in vitro hypothalamic perfusion test, to evaluate the neurotransmitters release.


MedChemComm | 2016

Pro-apoptotic and pro-differentiation induction by 8-quinolinecarboxaldehyde selenosemicarbazone and its Co(III) complex in human cancer cell lines

Nenad R. Filipović; Snežana Bjelogrlić; Gustavo Portalone; Sveva Pelliccia; Romano Silvestri; Olivera R. Klisurić; Milan Senćanski; Dalibor M. Stanković; Tamara R. Todorović; Christian D. Muller

8-Quinolinecarboxaldehyde selenosemicarbazone (H8qasesc) and its octahedral Co(III) complex were characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, spectroscopy methods and cyclic voltammetry. The antineoplastic activity of the ligand and the complex has been assessed on an acute monocytic leukemia cell line (THP-1) and AsPC-1 cancer stem cell (CSC) line derived from a patient suffering from pancreatic adenocarcinoma, with cisplatin (CDDP) as a reference compound. Evaluation involved determination of pro-apoptotic activity, changes in cell cycle distribution, the role of caspase activation in the process of cell death, and the ability of the investigated compounds to challenge reprogramming of the CSC phenotype. Compared to CDDP, treatment with H8qasesc induced a higher apoptotic response in both investigated cell lines. Apoptosis triggered by H8qasesc was highly caspase-dependent but did not include activation of either caspase-8 or -9. According to cell cycle changes H8qasesc delayed the transition of cells during DNA replication but in a manner different from that of CDDP. The ligand did not show nuclease activity on pUC19 plasmid, while docking studies disclosed that it does not have intercalating properties. Treatment of THP-1 cells with the Co(III) complex resulted in a strong toxic response, whereas cell death in the treated AsPC-1 line was not achieved for 24 h. Additionally, the complex concentration-dependently digested plasmid DNA which might be the cause of its cytotoxic activity. Finally, H8qasesc successfully initiated reprogramming of the CSC phenotype in the AsPC-1 cell line.

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Ettore Novellino

University of Naples Federico II

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Valeria Famiglini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Antonio Coluccia

Sapienza University of Rome

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Mariateresa Giustiniano

University of Naples Federico II

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Gian Cesare Tron

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ciro Mercurio

European Institute of Oncology

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Luciana Marinelli

University of Naples Federico II

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