| Current
Drug Discovery Technologies
ISSN: 1570-1638

Current Drug Discovery Technologies
Volume 2, Number 1, March 2005
Contents

Combinatorial Chemistry and Fragment Screening –
Two Unlike Siblings? Pp.1-12
Hans Peter Nestler
[Abstract] [Full
text article]
Autocorrelation of Molecular Electrostatic Potential
Surface Properties Combined with Partial Least Squares Analysis
as Alternative Attractive Tool to Generate Ligand-Based 3D-QSARs
Pp.13-21
Stefano Moro, Magdalena Bacilieri, Cristina Ferrari, Giampiero
Spalluto
[Abstract] [Full
text article]
Preparation of Cherry-Picked Combinatorial Libraries
by String Synthesis Pp.23-27
Arpad Furka, Gabor Dibo and Naran Gombosuren
[Abstract] [Full
text article]
Protective Effect of Urate Oxidase on Uric Acid
Induced-Monocyte Apoptosis Pp.29-36
Valeria Bordoni, Massimo De Cal, Mario Rassu, Stefania
Cazzavillan, Chiara Segala, Monica Bonello, Rattanarat Ranishta,
Emilios Andrikos, Asuman Yavuz, Gabriella Salvatori, Elisabetta
Galloni, Irene Bolgan, Rinaldo Bellomo, Nathan Levin and Claudio
Ronco
[Abstract] [Full
text article]
The Characterisation of the Collagenolytic Activity
of Cardosin A Demonstrates its Potential Application for Extracellular
Matrix Degradative Processes Pp.37-44
Ana S. Duarte, Anabela O. Pereira, Antonio M. S. Cabrita,
Arthur J. G. Moir, Euclides M. V. Pires, and Marlene M. T.
Barros
[Abstract] [Full
text article
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Combinatorial Chemistry and Fragment Screening – Two
Unlike Siblings?
Hans Peter Nestler
[Full text
article]
Efficiently scouting the chemical space is one of the major
challenges for lead discovery for drug development. In recent
times some shifts have been made away from HTS and combinatorial
chemistry to more focused approaches. Combinatorial chemistry
was the starting point for the development of synthesis concepts
that were intended to cover and explore the chemical space
without having to prepare every individual compound. In this
review, these lead finding approaches will be discussed comparing
virtual and synthesized libraries. In addition we discuss
the concepts and relationships of evolutionary libraries using
genetic algorithms and dynamic combinatorial chemistries,
as well as templated fragment ligation concepts. Taking a
more abstract view of all approaches, the concepts may loop
back into Combinatorial Chemistry allowing a more educated
choice of building blocks and chemistries.
[Back to top]
Autocorrelation of Molecular Electrostatic Potential Surface
Properties Combined with Partial Least Squares Analysis as
Alternative Attractive Tool to Generate Ligand-Based 3D-QSARs
Stefano Moro, Magdalena Bacilieri, Cristina Ferrari,
Giampiero Spalluto
[Full text
article]
A database of 106 human A3 adenosine receptor antagonists
was used to derive two alternative PLS models: one starting
from CoMFA descriptors and the other starting from the autocorrelation
descriptors. The peculiarity of this work is the introduction
of autocorrelation vectors as molecular descriptors for the
PLS analysis. The autocorrelation allows comparing molecules
(and their properties) with different structures and with
different spatial orientation without any previous alignment.
In particular, Molecular Electrostatic Potential (MEP) was
the property computed and its information encoded in autocorrelation
vectors. The 3D spatial distribution and the values of the
electrostatic potential is in fact largely responsible for
the binding of a substrate to its receptor binding site. Validation
was done with an external test set and the results of the
two models were compared. Interestingly, our preliminary results
seem to indicate that this new alternative approach could
robustly compete with the already well consolidated CoMFA
approach. In particular, we have suggested that it could be
a very interesting tool to filter large structural database
in several virtual screening applications.
[Back to top]
Preparation of Cherry-Picked Combinatorial Libraries
by String Synthesis
Arpad Furka, Gabor Dibo and Naran Gombosuren
[Full text
article]
String synthesis [1-3] is an efficient and cheap manual method
for preparation of combinatorial libraries by using macroscopic
solid support units. Sorting the units between two synthetic
steps is an important operation of the procedure. The software
developed to guide sorting can be used only when complete
combinatorial libraries are prepared. Since very often only
selected components of the full libraries are needed, new
software was constructed that guides sorting in preparation
of non-complete combinatorial libraries. Application of the
software is described in details.
[Back to top]
Protective Effect of Urate Oxidase on Uric Acid Induced-Monocyte
Apoptosis
Valeria Bordoni, Massimo De Cal, Mario Rassu, Stefania
Cazzavillan, Chiara Segala, Monica Bonello, Rattanarat Ranishta,
Emilios Andrikos, Asuman Yavuz, Gabriella Salvatori, Elisabetta
Galloni, Irene Bolgan, Rinaldo Bellomo, Nathan Levin and Claudio
Ronco
[Full text
article]
Uremic patients have a higher risk of infection and malignancy
than normal subjects. Previous studies have deomonstrated
that monocytes isolated from uremic patients display an increased
apoptosis rate compared to normal subjects; furthermore uremic
plasma can increase apoptosis rates on U937, a human monocytic
cell line. In several pathological conditions, precipitation
of uric acid crystals can lead to renal insufficiency or acute
renal failure by different mechanisms. In recent studies uric
acid has been shown to induce inflammatory response from monocytes
and it has been suggested to be involved in cell dysfunction.
Rasburicase is a new recombinant urate oxidase developed to
prevent and treat hyperuricaemia in patients with cancer or
renal failure; it degrades uric acid to allantoin, a less
toxic and more soluble product.
In the present study, we aimed at determining whether uric
acid may be a factor affecting U937 apoptosis, and whether
urate oxidase may reduces or even prevent uric acid induced
cell apoptosis. Hoechst staining and internucleosome ledder
fragmentation of DNA showed that uric acid increased the percentage
of apoptotic cells comparing to the control and that when
the U937 cells were incubated with uric acid and urate oxidase
the percentage of apoptosis significantly decreased (from
43±7% to 19± 3%, p<0.05). Also, the activity
of caspase-8 and caspase-3 showed the same trend (caspase
3: from 2.7±0.53 to 1.6±0.42; caspase-8: from
2.2±0.43 to 1.3±0.57). A reduction of intracellular
reduced glutathione (GSH) concentration was found in uric
acid treated cells while the addition of urate oxidase in
the uric acid incubated cells decreased the GSH extrusion.
The concentration of TNF-α
was increased in the sample incubated with uric acid comparing
to the control. Uric acid is an inducer of apoptosis on U937
cell line, and therefore it may be a component of the mosaic
of uremic toxins both in acute and chronic renal disease.
We can hypothesize that uric acid might be directly involved
in the apoptotic process trough the activation of both death
receptor and mitochondrial-mediated pathways. We have, also,
demonstrated that urate oxidase is able to prevent at least
in part, the effect of uric acid on U937 apoptosis. This effect
might be a result of different mechanisms of action.
[Back to top]
The Characterisation of the Collagenolytic Activity of Cardosin
A Demonstrates its Potential Application for Extracellular
Matrix Degradative Processes
Ana S. Duarte, Anabela O. Pereira, Antonio M.
S. Cabrita, Arthur J. G. Moir, Euclides M. V. Pires, and Marlene
M. T. Barros
[Full text
article]
Type I collagen is the major fibrous protein of mammals being
needed to strengthen and organise the extracellular matrix
(ECM). Connective tissue components are modulated by matrix
metalloproteinases, which are critical for disintegration
and remodelling of ECM under physiological and pathological
conditions.
Cardosin A is an abundant aspartic proteinase (AP) from Cynara
cardunculus L. that has been shown to be able to hydrolyse
fibrillar collagen within the α-chains.
The aim of this work is the characterisation of collagen degradation
by cardosin A, since in the native state fibrillar collagen
is resistant to most proteolytic enzymes. The pattern of type
I collagen hydrolysis by cardosin A is defined and maintained
for at least 24 hours of digestion, suggesting that cardosin
A can hydrolyse collagen at a small number of specific peptide
bonds. N-terminal sequencing of hydrolysis products identified
one cleavage site as being Phe464-Gln465
in the a2 chain of collagen I. Two peptides were synthesised
correspondent to collagen I specific sequences, in order to
produce two polyclonal antibodies, that allowed the identification
of three collagen fragments following cardosin A cleavage.
Defining the mechanism of collagen cleavage by collagenases
and other enzymes, like cardosin A, is important for the comprehension
of physiological and pathological processes affecting the
ECM. To our knowledge, this is the first study of in vitro
collagenolytic activity of a plant AP. Therefore, in view
of the cardosin A restricted specificity towards collagen
this enzyme may be proposed for an eventual medical or technical
procedures assisting ECM remodelling.
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