18 research outputs found
Gold(III) dithiocarbamate complexes induce cell death triggered by thioredoxin redox system inhibition, mitochondrial permeability increase, and activation of ERK pathway
Gold(III) dithiocarbamate complexes induce cell death triggered by thioredoxin redox system inhibition, mitochondrial permeability increase, and activation of ERK pathway
Thioredoxin redox system inhibition and mitochondrial permeability increase by gold(III) dithiocarbamate complexes
Gold(III) dithiocarbamate complexes induce cell death triggered by thioredoxin redox system inhibition, mitochondrial permeability increase, and activation of ERK pathway
Thioredoxin redox system inhibition and mithocondrial permeability increase by gold(III) dithiocarbamate complexes
“Excommunicata generatione”: Christian imagery of mission and conversion of the muslim other between the first crusade and the early fourteenth century
Inhibitory effect by new monocyclic 4-alkyliden-beta-lactam compounds on human platelet activation
In the present study some new beta-lactam compounds were screened for their ability to inhibit human platelet activation. In particular four compounds differing in the group on the nitrogen atom of the azetidinone ring were investigated. A beta-lactam having an ethyl 2-carboxyethanoate N-bound group was demonstrated to inhibit, in the micromolar range, both the Ca(2+) release from endoplasmic reticulum, induced either by thrombin or by the ATPase inhibitor thapsigargin, and the Ca(2+) entry in platelets driven by emptying the endoplasmic reticulum. The compound also inhibited the platelet aggregation induced by a variety of physiological agonists including ADP, collagen, thrombin and thrombin mimetic peptide TRAP. The beta-lactam reduced the phosphorylation of pleckstrin (apparent MW 47 kDa), elicited by thrombin but not by the protein kinase C activator phorbol ester. Accordingly it did not significantly affect the aggregation evoked by phorbol ester or Ca(2+) ionophore. It was concluded that the beta-lactam likely exerts its anti-platelet-activating action by hampering the agonist induced cellular Ca(2+) movements. The beta-lactam concentration, which significantly inhibited platelet activation, only negligibly affected the cellular viability. Even if it is still premature to draw definitive conclusions, the present results suggest that this new compound might constitute a tool of potential clinical interest and the starting-point for the synthesis of new more beneficial anti-thrombotic compounds
