42 research outputs found

    ST 1535: a preferential A2A adenosine receptor antagonist.

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    Antagonism of the A2A adenosine function has proved beneficial in the treatment of Parkinson's disease, in that it increases L-dopa therapeutical effects without concomitant worsening of its side-effects. In this paper we describe a preferential A2A adenosine antagonist, ST 1535, with long-lasting pharmacodynamic effects. It competitively antagonizes the effects of the A2A adenosine agonist NECA on cAMP in cells cloned with the human A2A adenosine receptor (IC50=353+/-30 nM), and the effects of the A1 adenosine agonist CHA on cAMP in cells cloned with the human A1 adenosine receptor (IC50=510+/-38 nM). ST 1535, at oral doses of 5 and 10 mg/kg, antagonizes catalepsy induced by intracerebroventricular administration of the A2A adenosine agonist CGS 21680 (10 microg/5 microl) in mice. At oral doses ranging between 5 and 20 mg/kg, ST 1535 induces hypermotility and antagonizes haloperidol-induced catalepsy in mice up to 7 h. Oral ST 1535, at 1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg, potentiates L-dopa effects in reducing haloperidol-induced catalepsy. ST 1535 represents a potential new compound, with long-lasting activity, for the treatment of Parkinson's disease

    dysferlin in a hyperckaemic patient with caveolin 3 mutation and in c2c12 cells after p38 map kinase inhibition

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    Dysferlin is a plasma membrane protein of skeletal muscle whose deficiency causes Miyoshi myopathy, limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2B and distal anterior compartment myopathy. Recent studies have reported that dysferlin is implicated in membrane repair mechanism and coimmunoprecipitates with caveolin 3 in human skeletal muscle. Caveolin 3 is a principal structural protein of caveolae membrane domains in striated muscle cells and cardiac myocytes. Mutations of caveolin 3 gene (CAV3) cause different diseases and where caveolin 3 expression is defective, dysferlin localization is abnormal. We describe the alteration of dysferlin expression and localization in skeletal muscle from a patient with raised serum creatine kinase (hyperCKaemia), whose reduction of caveolin 3 is caused by a CAV3 P28L mutation. Moreover, we performed a study on dysferlin interaction with caveolin 3 in C2C12 cells. We show the association of dysferlin to cellular membrane of C2C12 myotubes and the low affinity link between dysferlin and caveolin 3 by immunoprecipitation techniques. We also reproduced caveolinopathy conditions in C2C12 cells by a selective p38 MAP kinase inhibition with SB203580, which blocks the expression of caveolin 3. In this model, myoblasts do not fuse into myotubes and we found that dysferlin expression is reduced. These results underline the importance of dysferlin-caveolin 3 relationship for skeletal muscle integrity and propose a cellular model to clarify the dysferlin alteration mechanisms in caveolinopathies

    Selective fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibitors as potential novel antiepileptic agents

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    Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common form of epilepsy, and current antiepileptic drugs are ineffective in many patients. The endocannabinoid system has been associated with an on-demand protective response to seizures. Blocking endocannabinoid catabolism would elicit antiepileptic effects, devoid of psychotropic effects. We herein report the discovery of selective anandamide catabolic enzyme fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitors with promising antiepileptic efficacy, starting from a further investigation of our prototypical inhibitor 2a. When tested in two rodent models of epilepsy, 2a reduced the severity of the pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus and the elongation of the hippocampal maximal dentate activation. Notably, 2a did not affect hippocampal dentate gyrus long-term synaptic plasticity. These data prompted our further endeavor aiming at discovering new antiepileptic agents, developing a new set of FAAH inhibitors (3a–m). Biological studies highlighted 3h and 3m as the best performing analogues to be further investigated. In cell-based studies, using a neuroblastoma cell line, 3h and 3m could reduce the oxinflammation state by decreasing DNA-binding activity of NF-kB p65, devoid of cytotoxic effect. Unwanted cardiac effects were excluded for 3h (Langendorff perfused rat heart). Finally, the new analogue 3h reduced the severity of the pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus as observed for 2a

    Clinical and molecular characterization of a cohort of patients with novel nucleotide alterations of the Dystrophin gene detected by direct sequencing

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Duchenne and Becker Muscular dystrophies (DMD/BMD) are allelic disorders caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene, which encodes a sarcolemmal protein responsible for muscle integrity. Deletions and duplications account for approximately 75% of mutations in DMD and 85% in BMD. The implementation of techniques allowing complete gene sequencing has focused attention on small point mutations and other mechanisms underlying complex rearrangements.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We selected 47 patients (41 families; 35 DMD, 6 BMD) without deletions and duplications in <it>DMD </it>gene (excluded by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and multiplex polymerase chain reaction analysis). This cohort was investigated by systematic direct sequence analysis to study sequence variation. We focused our attention on rare mutational events which were further studied through transcript analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We identified 40 different nucleotide alterations in DMD gene and their clinical correlates; altogether, 16 mutations were novel. DMD probands carried 9 microinsertions/microdeletions, 19 nonsense mutations, and 7 splice-site mutations. BMD patients carried 2 nonsense mutations, 2 splice-site mutations, 1 missense substitution, and 1 single base insertion. The most frequent stop codon was TGA (n = 10 patients), followed by TAG (n = 7) and TAA (n = 4). We also analyzed the molecular mechanisms of five rare mutational events. They are two frame-shifting mutations in the <it>DMD </it>gene 3'end in BMD and three novel splicing defects: IVS42: c.6118-3C>A, which causes a leaky splice-site; c.9560A>G, which determines a cryptic splice-site activation and c.9564-426 T>G, which creates pseudoexon retention within IVS65.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The analysis of our patients' sample, carrying point mutations or complex rearrangements in <it>DMD </it>gene, contributes to the knowledge on phenotypic correlations in dystrophinopatic patients and can provide a better understanding of pre-mRNA maturation defects and dystrophin functional domains. These data can have a prognostic relevance and can be useful in directing new therapeutic approaches, which rely on a precise definition of the genetic defects as well as their molecular consequences.</p

    A new approach to the protection of 1,2-diols

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    protection, deprotection; carbohydrates; alcohols (acyclic compounds); dioxole derivative

    Divergent synthesis of novel 9-deazaxanthine derivatives via late-stage cross-coupling reactions

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    A small library of 8-substituted 9-deazaxanthines has been prepared by late-stage diversification of an 8-bromo-9-deazaxanthine. By utilizing palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions a single key precursor can be transformed into a variety of 8-substituted-9-deazaxanthine compounds. Three key 8-bromo-9-deazaxanthine intermediates were efficiently prepared from commercially available 6-chlorouracil in six steps

    A New Approach to the Protection of 1,2-Diols

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