ABSTRACT
Abstract Background: Adenine phosphoribosyl transferase (APRT) deficiency has great implications on graft survival in kidney transplant patients. This systematic review investigated the diagnostic pattern, treatment approach, and kidney transplant outcomes among kidney transplant patients with adenine phosphoribosyl transferase deficiency. Material and methods: Articles reporting the APRT enzyme deficiency and kidney allograft dysfunction were retrieved from PubMed/Medline, ScienceDirect, Cochrane library and Google scholar databases. Descriptive analysis was used to draw inferences. Results: The results from 20 selected studies covering 30 patients receiving 39 grafts had an average age of 46.37 years are presented. Graft survival time of more than 6 months was reported in 23 (76.7%) patients, while other 7 (23.3%) patients had graft survival time of less than 6 months. Only 4 (13.3%) patients had APRT deficiency before transplantation. After follow-up, one-third of the patients 10 (33.3%) had stable graft function, 1 patient had allograft loss, 8 (26.6%) patients had delayed graft function while the remaining 11 (36.6%) patients had chronic kidney graft dysfunction. Conclusions: APRT deficiency is an under-recognized, treatable condition that causes reversible crystalline nephropathy, leading to loss of allograft or allograft dysfunction. The study results showed that inclusion of genetic determination of APRT deficiency in the differential diagnosis of crystalline nephropathy, even in the absence of a history of nephrolithiasis, can improve renal outcomes and may improve allograft survival.
Resumo Antecedentes: A deficiência de adenina fosforibosiltransferase (APRT) tem grandes implicações na sobrevida do enxerto em pacientes transplantados renais. Esta revisão sistemática investigou o padrão diagnóstico, a abordagem de tratamento e os desfechos do transplante renal entre pacientes transplantados renais com deficiência de adenina fosforibosiltransferase. Material e métodos: Os artigos que relatam sobre a enzima APRT e a disfunção do aloenxerto renal foram recuperados do PubMed/Medline, ScienceDirect, Biblioteca Cochrane e bancos de dados do Google Acadêmico. Utilizou-se a análise descritiva para extrair inferências. Resultados: Foram incluídos participantes que receberam 39 enxertos, a maioria dos quais provenientes de doadores vivos seguidos por doadores falecidos e doadores cadáveres. Foi relatado tempo de sobrevida do enxerto superior a 6 meses em 23 (76,7%) pacientes, enquanto outros 7 (23,3%) pacientes tiveram tempo de sobrevida do enxerto inferior a 6 meses. Apenas 4 (13,3%) pacientes apresentaram deficiência de APRT antes do transplante. Após acompanhamento, um terço dos pacientes, 10 (33,3%) apresentaram função do enxerto estável, 1 paciente teve perda do aloenxerto, 8 (26,6%) pacientes apresentaram função retardada do enxerto, enquanto os 11 (36,6%) pacientes restantes tiveram disfunção crônica do enxerto renal. Conclusões: A deficiência de APRT é uma causa subestimada e reversível de nefropatia cristalina que leva à disfunção do aloenxerto renal ou à perda total do aloenxerto. Os resultados deste estudo pedem a inclusão desta condição no diagnóstico diferencial de nefropatia cristalina, mesmo na ausência de um histórico de nefrolitíase.
ABSTRACT
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Recent advances in the management of non-small cell carcinoma are focused on the discovery of targeted therapies and novel immunotherapy strategies for patients with advanced disease. Treatment with anti PD-(L)1 immune checkpoint inhibitors requires the development of predictive biomarkers to select those patients that can most benefit from these therapies. Several immunohistochemical biomarkers have been developed in different technological platforms. However, the most useful and accessible for the daily clinical practice need to be selected. The objective of this study was to compare PD-L1 expression by automated immunohistochemistry in lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) FFPE samples with clones 28-8 and SP263 performed with the BenchMark GX automated staining instrument. To further determine interobserver agreement between two pathologists, and to correlate the results with histologic and pathology variables. FFPE tissue from 40 samples obtained from patients with lung ADC were reviewed retrospectively. Among all studied specimens, 53% of samples presented <1% of positive tumor cells with the 28-8 clone and 50% had <1% of PD-L1 expression in tumor cells with the SP263 clone; PD-L1 expression between ≥1 and <5% was observed in 18% and 24%; ≥5 and <50% PD-L1 expression in 18% and 21%; and ≥50% PD-L1 expression in 11% and 5% of samples, respectively. Similar results between antibodies were observed in 84% of cases for each of the four PD-L1 cutoff groups (Pearson's score 0.90, p < 0.00001). The interobserver degree of agreement calculated with Kappa was 0.75 (95%CI: 0.57-0.93), z = 7.08; p < 0.001. Lepidic, acinar and mucinous patterns had predominantly <1% PD-L1 expression, and the solid pattern subtype had high levels of PD-L1 staining using both clones. PD-L1 expression in less than 1% of tumor cells was similar in stages I/II compared to III/IV. No significant differences were observed in PD-L1 staining and quantification pattern between IHC antibodies 28-8 and SP263.
ABSTRACT
Gallesia integrifolia (Phytolaccaceae) is native to Brazil and has a strong alliaceous odor. The objective of this study was to identify the chemical composition of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and evaluate fungicidal activity against the main food-borne diseases and food spoilage fungi. The essential oil was extracted by hydrodistillation and identified by GC-MS. From 35 identified compounds, 68% belonged to the organosulfur class. The major compounds were dimethyl trisulfide (15.49%), 2,8-dithianonane (52.63%) and lenthionine (14.69%). The utilized fungi were Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus ochraceus, Aspergillus versicolor, Penicillium funiculosum, Penicillium ochrochloron, Penicillium verrucosum var. cyclopium, and Trichoderma viride. Minimal fungicidal concentration for the essential oil varied from 0.02 to 0.18mg/mL and bifonazole and ketoconazole controls ranged from 0.20 to 3.50mg/mL. The lower concentration of the essential oil was able to control P. ochrochloron, A. fumigatus, A. versicolor, A. ochraceus and T. viride. This study shows a high fungicidal activity of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and can support future applications by reducing the use of synthetic fungicides.
Subject(s)
Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Oils, Volatile/pharmacology , Phytolaccaceae/chemistry , Plant Oils/pharmacology , Aspergillus/drug effects , Aspergillus/growth & development , Brazil , Fruit/chemistry , Fungicides, Industrial/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Oils, Volatile/chemistry , Penicillium/drug effects , Penicillium/growth & development , Plant Oils/chemistryABSTRACT
Chemotherapy is currently the only effective approach to treat all forms of leishmaniasis. However, its effectiveness is severely limited due to high toxicity, long treatment length, drug resistance, or inadequate mode of administration. As a consequence, there is a need to identify new molecular scaffolds and targets as potential therapeutics for the treatment of this disease. We report a small series of 1,2-substituted-1H-benzo[d]imidazole derivatives (9a-d) showing affinity in the submicromolar range (Ki = 0.15-0.69 µM) toward Leishmania mexicanaCPB2.8ΔCTE, one of the more promising targets for antileishmanial drug design. The compounds confirmed activity in vitro against intracellular amastigotes of Leishmania infantum with the best result being obtained with derivative 9d (IC50 = 6.8 µM), although with some degree of cytotoxicity (CC50 = 8.0 µM on PMM and CC50 = 32.0 µM on MCR-5). In silico molecular docking studies and ADME-Tox properties prediction were performed to validate the hypothesis of the interaction with the intended target and to assess the drug-likeness of these derivatives.
Subject(s)
Benzimidazoles/chemistry , Cysteine Proteases/metabolism , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/chemistry , Leishmania mexicana/enzymology , Protozoan Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Antiprotozoal Agents/chemical synthesis , Antiprotozoal Agents/metabolism , Antiprotozoal Agents/therapeutic use , Antiprotozoal Agents/toxicity , Benzimidazoles/metabolism , Benzimidazoles/therapeutic use , Benzimidazoles/toxicity , Binding Sites , Cell Line , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cysteine Proteases/chemistry , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/metabolism , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/toxicity , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Enzyme Assays , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Inhibitory Concentration 50 , Leishmaniasis/drug therapy , Molecular Docking Simulation , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Protozoan Proteins/metabolismABSTRACT
Gallesia integrifolia (Phytolaccaceae) is native to Brazil and has a strong alliaceous odor. The objective of this study was to identify the chemical composition of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and evaluate fungicidal activity against the main food-borne diseases and food spoilage fungi. The essential oil was extracted by hydrodistillation and identified by GCMS. From 35 identified compounds, 68% belonged to the organosulfur class. The major compounds were dimethyl trisulfide (15.49%), 2,8-dithianonane (52.63%) and lenthionine (14.69%). The utilized fungi were Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus ochraceus, Aspergillus versicolor, Penicillium funiculosum, Penicillium ochrochloron, Penicillium verrucosum var. cyclopium, and Trichoderma viride. Minimal fungicidal concentration for the essential oil varied from 0.02 to 0.18 mg/mL and bifonazole and ketoconazole controls ranged from 0.20 to 3.50 mg/mL. The lower concentration of the essential oil was able to control P. ochrochloron, A. fumigatus, A. versicolor, A. ochraceus and T. viride. This study shows a high fungicidal activity of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and can support future applications by reducing the use of synthetic fungicides.(AU)
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Gallesia integrifolia (Phytolaccaceae) is native to Brazil and has a strong alliaceous odor. The objective of this study was to identify the chemical composition of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and evaluate fungicidal activity against the main food-borne diseases and food spoilage fungi. The essential oil was extracted by hydrodistillation and identified by GC-MS. From 35 identified compounds, 68% belonged to the organosulfur class. The major compounds were dimethyl trisulfide (15.49%), 2,8-dithianonane (52.63%) and lenthionine (14.69%). The utilized fungi were Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus ochraceus, Aspergillus versicolor, Penicillium funiculosum, Penicillium ochrochloron, Penicillium verrucosum var. cyclopium, and Trichoderma viride. Minimal fungicidal concentration for the essential oil varied from 0.02 to 0.18 mg/mL and bifonazole and ketoconazole controls ranged from 0.20 to 3.50 mg/mL. The lower concentration of the essential oil was able to control P. ochrochloron, A. fumigatus, A. versicolor, A. ochraceus and T. viride. This study shows a high fungicidal activity of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and can support future applications by reducing the use of synthetic fungicides.
Subject(s)
Plant Oils/pharmacology , Oils, Volatile/pharmacology , Phytolaccaceae/chemistry , Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Penicillium/growth & development , Penicillium/drug effects , Aspergillus/growth & development , Aspergillus/drug effects , Plant Oils/chemistry , Brazil , Oils, Volatile/chemistry , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Fruit/chemistry , Fungicides, Industrial/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryABSTRACT
Doenças causadas por agentes infecciosos e parasitários são chamadas negligenciadas por não despertarem interesse das indústrias farmacêuticas para o desenvolvimento de novas alternativas terapêuticas. Essas doenças são responsáveis por levar milhões de pessoas à morte todos os anos e afetam principalmente os países pobres e em desenvolvimento. Dentre estas, a doença de Chagas e as leishmanioses, parasitoses causadas por parasitas flagelados pertencentes à família Trypanosomatidae, T. cruzi e Leishmaina sp., respectivamente, se apresentam como um sério problema de saúde pública mundial. Endêmicas em vários países e causando milhões de mortes anualmente, ainda hoje não existem fármacos eficientes e seguros para o tratamento dessas doenças. Este panorama torna eminente a necessidade de pesquisa e desenvolvimento de novos fármacos para essas parasitoses. A busca por agentes quimioterápicos envolve a seleção de vias metabólicas essenciais à sobrevivência dos parasitas. Dentre estas, destacamse cisteíno-proteases presentes nesses tripanossomatídeos, deste modo a cruzaína no T. cruzi, e a CPB2.8 na Leishmania mexicana, se mostram como alvos bioquímicos promissores. A disponibilidade de estruturas cristalográficas da cruzaína e do sequenciamento genômico da CPB2.8, nos permite utilizar estratégias de planejamento de fármacos baseado no receptor (SBDD) na identificação de candidatos a fármacos para essas doenças. Entre as técnicas modernas de SBDD utilizadas, a triagem virtual possibilita identificar promissores candidatos a novos fármacos. Assim neste trabalho, obteve-se por meio da técnica de modelagem comparativa o modelo da enzima CPB2.8 de L. mexicana, visto a indisponibilidade da estrutura cristalográfica no Protein Data Bank (PDB). De modo a refinar o modelo construído realizou-se a simulação por dinâmica molecular de 100ns, apresentando estabilização a partir de 80ns. A simulação por dinâmica molecular foi validada por meio do gráfico de Ramachandran, gráfico de raio de giro, RMSD, gráfico de superfície hidrofóbica. Foram calculados os mapas de interação molecular no programa GRID das seguintes proteínas: cruzaína, CPB2.8, catepsina B e catepsina L, e, posteriormente, foi construído um modelo farmacofórico baseado no sítio ativo das enzimas cruzaína e CPB2.8. O modelo farmacofórico da cruzaína foi validado por curva ROC apresentando valor de AUC 61%. A triagem virtual foi realizada para ambas as proteínas e foram obtidos 369 compostos para a cuzaína e 225 compostos para a CPB2.8. Foi realizado o ancoramento molecular desses compostos obtidos pela triagem virtual a fim de diminuir a quantidade de compostos a serem avaliados experimentalmente
Neglected diseases are caused by parasites and infectious agents and affect mainly people in poor areas being prevalent in 149 countries and causing 534,000 deaths per year. Among neglected diseases we can highlight Chagas Disease and Leishmaniasis, both have a high rate of morbidity and mortality and both are addressed in this project in the search of new drugs against a NTD. Nowadays, the search for new drugs involves the selection of biological pathways essential for parasite survival, in this class of parasites we can suggest the cysteine proteases, a proteases family present in Trypanosoma cruzi and and Leishmania ssp. In order to obtain a new agent against Neglected Disease in this work was obtained the model of the enzyme CPB2.8 of L. mexicana using the comparative modeling technique, due to the unavailability of the crystallographic structure in the Protein Data Bank (PDB). In order to refine the constructed model was performed the molecular dynamics simulation of 100ns, stabilization was achieved from 80ns. Molecular dynamics simulation was validated using the Ramachandran graph, radius of rotation graph, RMSD, hydrophobic surface area graph. The molecular interaction fields were calculated in the GRID program to cruzain, CPB2.8, cathepsin B and cathepsin L. Based on molecular interaction fields generated pharmacophoric models were constructed using information about the active site of the enzymes cruzain and CPB2.8. The pharmacophoric model of cruzain was validated by ROC curve presenting AUC value of 61%. Virtual screening was performed for both proteins and 369 compounds were obtained for cuzain and 225 compounds for CPB2.8. Docking studies of these compounds was performed in order to decrease the amount of compounds to be evaluated experimentally
Subject(s)
Trypanosoma cruzi/classification , Triage , Cysteine Proteases/analysis , Neglected Diseases/prevention & control , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Trypanosomatina/classification , Drug Discovery , Leishmania/classificationABSTRACT
ABSTRACT Gallesia integrifolia (Phytolaccaceae) is native to Brazil and has a strong alliaceous odor. The objective of this study was to identify the chemical composition of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and evaluate fungicidal activity against the main food-borne diseases and food spoilage fungi. The essential oil was extracted by hydrodistillation and identified by GCMS. From 35 identified compounds, 68% belonged to the organosulfur class. The major compounds were dimethyl trisulfide (15.49%), 2,8-dithianonane (52.63%) and lenthionine (14.69%). The utilized fungi were Aspergillus fumigatus, Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus ochraceus, Aspergillus versicolor, Penicillium funiculosum, Penicillium ochrochloron, Penicillium verrucosum var. cyclopium, and Trichoderma viride. Minimal fungicidal concentration for the essential oil varied from 0.02 to 0.18 mg/mL and bifonazole and ketoconazole controls ranged from 0.20 to 3.50 mg/mL. The lower concentration of the essential oil was able to control P. ochrochloron, A. fumigatus, A. versicolor, A. ochraceus and T. viride. This study shows a high fungicidal activity of G. integrifolia fruit essential oil and can support future applications by reducing the use of synthetic fungicides.
ABSTRACT
Cysteine proteinases (cathepsins) from Leishmania spp. are promising molecular targets against leishmaniasis. Leishmania mexicana cathepsin L is essential in the parasite life cycle and a pivotal in virulence factor in mammals. Natural products that have been shown to display antileishmanial activity were screened as part of our ongoing efforts to design inhibitors against the L. mexicana cathepsin L-like rCPB2.8. Among them, agathisflavone (1), tetrahydrorobustaflavone (2), 3-oxo-urs-12-en-28-oic acid (3), and quercetin (4) showed significant inhibitory activity on rCPB2.8 with IC50 values ranging from 0.43 to 18.03 µM. The mechanisms of inhibition for compounds 1-3, which showed Ki values in the low micromolar range (Ki = 0.14-1.26 µM), were determined. The biflavone 1 and the triterpene 3 are partially noncompetitive inhibitors, whereas biflavanone 2 is an uncompetitive inhibitor. The mechanism of action established for these leishmanicidal natural products provides a new outlook in the search for drugs against Leishmania.