29 research outputs found
Second-generation nitazoxanide derivatives: thiazolides are effective inhibitors of the influenza A virus
Aim: The only small molecule drugs currently available for treatment of influenza A virus (IAV) are M2 ion channel blockers and sialidase inhibitors. The prototype thiazolide, nitazoxanide, has successfully completed Phase III clinical trials against acute uncomplicated influenza. Results: We report the activity of seventeen thiazolide analogs against A/PuertoRico/8/1934(H1N1), a laboratory-adapted strain of the H1N1 subtype of IAV, in a cell culture-based assay. A total of eight analogs showed IC50s in the range of 0.14–5.0 μM. Additionally a quantitative structure–property relationship study showed high correlation between experimental and predicted activity based on a molecular descriptor set. Conclusion: A range of thiazolides show useful activity against an H1N1 strain of IAV. Further evaluation of these molecules as potential new small molecule therapies is justified
Dalle Madri di Plaza de Mayo alle figlie di Ciudad Juarez
Il volume, che raccoglie le riflessioni emerse a partire dal Seminario interdisciplinare “L’individualità femminile”, si interroga sui temi di genere, mantenendo un focus privilegiato sull’educazione, e coprendo un percorso sulla storia delle donne che si snoda dal 1700 ad oggi
Dalle Madri di Plaza de Mayo alle figlie di Ciudad Juarez
Il volume, che raccoglie le riflessioni emerse a partire dal Seminario interdisciplinare “L’individualità femminile”, si interroga sui temi di genere, mantenendo un focus privilegiato sull’educazione, e coprendo un percorso sulla storia delle donne che si snoda dal 1700 ad oggi
La riscrittura di Lourdes Ortiz tra storia e mito
Da Oreste alla Gorgone Medusa, da Stanislavskij a Grace Ellison, passando dalla storia dell'arte medievale e moderna alla musica, dalla storia del cinema all'archeologia, dalla lingua e letterature inglese, russa e tedesca alla letteratura teatrale italiana, dalla filosofia all'etnomusicologia alla storia del teatro, alla numismatica, alla museologia: la presente miscellanea, nata come libro di studi in onore di Edo Bellingeri, ruota intorno al tema del mito antico e moderno investigato dai diversi autori secondo il proprio ambito disciplinare. Centrale il mito moderno di Don Giovanni, personaggio particolarmente amato e studiato da Bellingeri, illustrato per questo motivo da molti degli autori. Miti antichi e moderni si presenta così come magico caleidoscopio, per svelare all'occhio del lettore l'avvincente vicenda della storia del mito nel pensiero, nella musica, nella scrittura e in tutte le forme visive e performative che durante i secoli la fantasia dell'uomo ha saputo rappresentare
Antiviral activity of proteasome inhibitors in herpes simplex virus-1 infection: role of nuclear factor-kappaB
BACKGROUND: Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is a potent inducer of nuclear
factor-KB (NF-kappaB), a cellular transcription factor with a crucial role in
promoting inflammation and controlling cell proliferation and survival.
OBJECTIVES: On the basis of the recent demonstration that HSV-1-induced NF-kappaB is actively recruited to KB-binding sites in the HSV-1 infected-cell protein 0 (ICPO) promoter enhancing viral transcription and replication, we investigated the effect of proteasome inhibitors MG132, MG115 and epoxomicin, which block NF-kappaB function by preventing the degradation of the inhibitory proteins IkappaBalpha, on HSV-1-induced NF-kappaB activation and viral replication. METHODS: Antiviral activity of proteasome inhibitors was analysed in HSV-1-infected HEp2 cells by determining infective virus titres by CPE50%, viral RNA synthesis by RT-PCR, and viral protein synthesis by immunoblot analysis or immunofluorescence. ICPO transcription was studied in transient transfection experiments using the ICPO promoter-luciferase IE1-Luc construct. IkappaBalpha degradation and NF-kappaB activity were determined by immunoblot analysis and EMSA, respectively. RESULTS: Proteasome inhibitors were found to prevent HSV-1-induced NF-kappaB activation in the early phase of infection. Block of virus-induced NF-kappaB activation resulted in inhibiting HSV-1 ICPO gene expression, in decreasing the level of immediate-early and late viral proteins, and ultimately in greatly suppressing viral replication. The antiviral effect was lost if treatment was started after NF-kappaB activation, and appeared to be independent of the HSV-1-induced activation of the JNK pathway.CONCLUSIONS: Proteasome inhibitors possess NF-kappaB-dependent antiherpetic activity. The results described further identify the IKK/NF-kappaB pathway as a suitable target for novel antiherpetic drug